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- Engineering Ethics Division Poster Session: Neuroethics and Secondary STEM Classrooms
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- 2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
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Kristen Clapper Bergsman, University of Washington ; Sara Goering, University of Washington; Eric H. Chudler, University of Washington
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Diversity
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Engineering Ethics
theintersection of ethics, science, technology, and engineering for precollege audiences. This papershares the results of this partnership between education staff, teachers, and philosophers,including educational resources produced as artifacts of the program which integrated a diversityof pedagogical approaches to teaching ethics in secondary STEM classrooms.Framing literatureThe study of ethics, including neuroethics, is increasingly being integrated into engineeringeducation at the college and graduate level. At the precollege level, ethics are sometimesincorporated into the curriculum in humanities and science classrooms, however less is knownabout neuroethics education within these precollege contexts. This section presents guidingliterature about
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- Cross-cultural Sensitivity, Moral Imagination, and Diversity in Engineering Ethics Education
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- 2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
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Jani C. Ingram, Northern Arizona University; Angelina E. Castagno, Northern Arizona University; Ricky Camplain; Davona D Blackhorse, Northern Arizona University
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Diversity
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Engineering Ethics
Careers in the Chemical Sciences. She received an associate degree from Yavapai College, a bachelor of science degree in chemistry from New Mexico State University, and a doctoral degree in chemistry from the University of Arizona. She was a staff scientist at the Idaho National Laboratory for twelve years before joining the faculty at Northern Arizona University.Dr. Angelina E. Castagno, Northern Arizona University Angelina E. Castagno, PhD, is the Director of the Din´e Institute for Navajo Nation Educators, and a Pro- fessor of Educational Leadership and Foundations at Northern Arizona University. Her teaching, research, and consulting focus on equity and diversity in U.S. schools, with a focus on Indigenous education
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- Understanding Students' Authentic and Reflective Experiences of Ethics Education
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Stephanie Claussen, San Francisco State University; Shiloh James Howland, Brigham Young University; Swetha Nittala, Purdue University, West Lafayette; Brent K. Jesiek, Purdue University, West Lafayette; Carla B. Zoltowski, Purdue University, West Lafayette
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Engineering Ethics
Paper ID #33812Longitudinal Qualitative Case Study of One Engineering Student’sPerceptions of Ethics and Social Responsibility: Corvin’s StoryDr. Stephanie Claussen, San Francisco State University Stephanie Claussen is an Assistant Professor in the School of Engineering at San Francisco State Univer- sity. Previously, she spent eight years as a Teaching Professor in the Engineering, Design, and Society Di- vision and the Electrical Engineering Department at the Colorado School of Mines. She obtained her B.S. in Electrical Engineering from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 2005 and her M.S. and Ph.D. from