Caroline Baillie

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Caroline Baillie
Occupation(s)Materials scientist and specialist

Caroline Baillie is a materials scientist and specialist in engineering education, since 2017 the inaugural Professor of Praxis in the School of Engineering at the University of San Diego, USA.

Background

Baillie was born and educated in south-east UK. She has a Bachelors in Materials Technology, University of Surrey (1985). Her first job after undergraduate study was in public relations, and she resigned when asked to promote asbestos despite its carcinogenic properties.[1] She returned to Surrey for a PhD in materials science and engineering (1991).[2] She has one son born in 2012.[3]

Career

Her first lectureship in materials was in the Dept. of Mechanical and Mechatronic Engineering,

Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada.[4]

In 2009 she moved back to Australia, to the University of Western Australia in Perth where she held a Chair in Engineering Education and was Director of the Faculty Academy for the Scholarship of Education.[5] In 2017 she became Professor of Praxis in the School of Engineering, University of San Diego.[6][7]

Media

Baillie was the host of Building the Impossible, a four-part documentary commissioned by the BBC in which a team of experts undertook the challenge of building historical inventions to their original specification to see if they really worked.[8]

Awards and memberships

Caroline is co-founder and co-director, along with Eric Feinblatt, of Waste for Life, a network of scientists, engineers, academics, designers, and local communities working together to research, implement, and disseminate poverty-reducing solutions to specific environmental problems.[9]

Baillie is also a member of Critical Stage Company, which is "committed to new writing, or tackling established pieces in a new way..." Through Critical Stage and the Integrated Learning Centre at Queen's University, she put on several productions using student and members of the Kingston community that linked to the themes of engineering and society.

She is also an associate editor of the Journal of Engineering Education.[10]

Publications

References

External links