influence studentˆa C™s experience, affect retention rates, and the factors that determine the overall long term succesDaniel Lapsley, University of Notre Dame ©American Society for Engineering Education, 2023 A Program to Engage Undergraduate and High School Students in Community-based ResearchAbstractCommunity-based research (CBR) is a practice that engages researchers in collaborative,change-oriented, and inclusive projects in the community. One common example of CBR isuniversity-community collaboration in which students and researchers come up with ideas,perspectives, and knowledge at each stage of the project with the goal to address communityneeds. The community is
these participants. We will also enhanceour recruiting strategies and assess what prevents students from volunteering. We will continueto expand our data size and we will continue to collaborate with more local community partnersand student organizations within Wright College to organize volunteering opportunities. Withmore activities and larger data size, we will compare the impact of all terms on the STEMidentity and STEM efficacy of volunteers.V. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTSThis material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant No.DUE-1832553. Any opinions, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in thismaterial are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the NationalScience
, F. Aqlan, J. Brockman, D. Lapsley, and K. L. Meyers, "Building andReplicating a Community-Engaged Educational Ecosystem - a STEM Learning Commons,"presented at the National Science Foundation Improving Stem Undergraduate EducationSummit, Washington, D.C, June 1-3 2022, 2022.[10] D. Wood, A. Gura, and J. Brockman, "Critical Findings in the Development of theCommunity-Engaged Educational Ecosystem," in American Society for Engineering Educationproceedings: ASEE, 2020.[11] D. Wood, A. Gura, J. Brockman, A. Rayna Carolan-Silva, S. Boukdad, and J. C. Alarcon,"Informing Replication of the Bowman Creek Educational Ecosystem Pilot," in American Societyfor Engineering Education proceedings, A. Genau Ed.: ASEE, 2019.[12] D. Wood, A. Gura, J
partnerships are embraced worldwide [5, pp. 121–138] addressing a widerange of topics. Examples of engineering and water related projects include urban design [6, pp.48–56], geography and urban studies [7, pp. 43–57], water supply in rural communities [8, No.15], groundwater contamination on reservations [9], and sustainability and water conservation[10, No. 2]. Organizations like EPIC-N and Campus Compact serve to foster community-university partnerships and civic engagement [11] [12].Environmental justiceCommunity-university partnerships have played a role in advancing environmental justice sincethe inception of the movement in the 1980’s and continue to do so through community-engagedscholarship [13, p. 412] [14, p. 173]. Environmental justice is
participation of students, faculty, and staff in a visit from the public school. Overthe course of several planning meetings, the team outlined a rotation schedule that achieved 3main objectives: (1) Provide exposure to the campus infrastructure; (2) Engage in hands-onactivities related to civil and/or environmental engineering; and (3) Interact with college studentsthat may have shared their identities and experiences. Table 1 presents an overview of theschedule outlined.Table 1: Outreach Event Schedule Time Agenda Topic Speaker(s) Location CEE Chair Architectural Building 10:00 AM Welcome and Introductions
frameworkto use when promoting community-engagement among engineering students asdemonstrated through a specific case-study of raising awareness of antibiotic resistance.Future efforts should include “scaling-up” this approach to include additional instructorsas well as “expanding” this approach to explore additional subject matter such as thefood-energy-water nexus, zero waste, and climate resilience among other topics forenvironmental health literacy.References 1. R. Aminov, R”A brief history of the antibiotic era: Lessons learned and challenges for the future,” Front. Microbiol., vol. 1, no. 134, 2010. [Online] Available: https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2010.00134. 2. S. Oerther and D.B. Oerther, “Antimicrobial resistance
research mentors to attend outreach events with their students at the start of the student’s program as a sign of encouragement and commitment to broader impacts.AcknowledgmentsThis work was supported by NSF awards #1914490 and #2115169. We would also like to thankDr. Lynn Nordstrom, external evaluator for both CWE and TN, for her knowledge andcontributions to the survey development and data visualization.References[1] L. R. Sandmann and D. O. Jones, Eds., Building the field of higher education engagement: foundational ideas and future directions. Sterling, Virginia: Stylus Publishing, LLC, 2019.[2] S. M. Watts, M. D. George, and D. J. Levey, “Achieving Broader Impacts in the National Science Foundation, Division of Environmental
or collaborative Legobuilds that span an entire day or two engage many people and promote social interactionacross grade years. Individual activities such as coloring or origami promote mindfulness.Having one or more graduate or undergraduate student assistant(s) that work with a faculty orstaff organizer for the wellness programming is beneficial to not only assist with overseeingprogramming content, but they also serve as a friendly face to welcome and encourage otherstudents to engage in the activities. When faculty and staff engage in the activities itdemonstrates to the students the value of making time for wellness, which helps to integrate itinto the organizational culture.Offering food, especially pre-packaged snacks, is a great way
academic programs that focus on academic and community partnerships would appeal to a wider range of high school students, hence increasing interest in these degrees with higher retention and graduation rates.Integrating project-based service learning with courses can introduce challenges that would nottypically exist in regular traditional academic courses, some of these challenges are: • The community project purpose and timeline need to align with the course(s) learning outcomes and deliverables. Some organizations would have urgency to complete projects 5 within a certain time frame that will not fit with the progress of courses. For this reason, during the partnership
–13, 2022, doi: 10.1080/17441692.2022.2102202.[2] J. Evert, “Teaching Corner: Child Family Health International: The Ethics of Asset-Based Global Health Education Programs,” J Bioeth Inq, vol. 12, no. 1, pp. 63–67, 2015, doi: 10.1007/s11673- 014-9600-x.[3] Q. G. Eichbaum, L. v. Adams, J. Evert, M. J. Ho, I. A. Semali, and S. C. van Schalkwyk, “Decolonizing Global Health Education: Rethinking Institutional Partnerships and Approaches,” Academic Medicine, vol. 96, no. 3, pp. 329–335, 2021, doi: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000003473.[4] L. Hammersley, “Community-based service-learning: Partnerships of reciprocal exchange?,” Asia-Pacific Journal of Cooperative Education, vol. 14, no. 3, pp. 171–s4
/j.1746-1561.2010.00534.xBrown, T. (2008). Design Thinking. Harvard Business Review, 86(6), 1–9.Brown, T., & Katz, B. (2011). Change by Design. Journal of Product Innovation Management, 28(3), 381–383. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1540-5885.2011.00806.xBuchanan, R. (1992). Wicked Problems in Design Thinking. Design Issues, 8(2), 5–21.Chen, Y. W., Johnson, B., Pool, M., Shehab, S., & Johnson, B. (2022, August), Engagement in Practice:Toward Building University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign's Multi-Disciplinary Service-LearningEcosystem Paper presented at 2022 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Minneapolis, MN.https://peer.asee.org/41184Edens, K., Toner, T., and Shirley, J. (2001), Sustaining a Professional Development School
, entrepreneurship projects of their ownideation, or competition projects (such as the Baja Society of Automobile Engineerscompetition). Additionally, each year a handful of teams out of the several dozen across thecollege work on community projects. By ‘community projects’ we refer to projects that emergedout of a community partnership and need/desire that the team will work to address in partnershipwith the community, which often entails community partner(s) serving as project mentors.Capstone design instructors guide the teams working on industry, entrepreneurship, andcommunity projects as a whole cohort, with all teams engaging in roughly the same projectmanagement and engineering design course activities, and subject to the same deadlines andanalogous
school… Unfortunately, I feel like I don’t speak up when I hear racist or sexist comments because I don’t like to argue with people.”The student’s response prior to participation in a HEP shows some recognition of discriminationwith respect to race and ethnicity but no mention of personal responsibility to act or behave in aninclusive way. The post-HEP response shows a recognition of diversity and that there should besome action or behavior to challenge discrimination, but the student’s personal desire restrictsthem from enacting those behaviors. Student 17’s comments provide an interesting perspectivethat the researchers hope to investigate further through interview: that recognition and awarenessof DEI values does not always
US schools,” Environmental Education Research, 13:2, p. 171-188, 2007, DOI: 10.1080/13504620701284944.[5] R. Archibald, “Black Belt students perform far worse in stem than rest of Alabama,” al.com, 2022. [Online]. Available: https://www.al.com/news/2022/03/black- belt-k-12-students-perform-far-worse-in-math-science-than-rest-of-alabama.html.[6] Alabama STEM Council, “Annual Report 2021,” Alabama STEM Council, 2022. [Online]. Available: https://stemcouncil.alabama.gov/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/Stem- Annual-Report-FINAL-1.pdf[7] M. de Guzman, S. Kim, S. Taylor, I. Padasas, “Rural communities as a context for entrepreneurship: Exploring perceptions of youth and business owners,” Journal of Rural Studies
Methodology: The Affective Labors of Intervention in theLudic Economy. Games and Culture (2018), 1555412018764992[5] Manning, L. (1988). Erikson's psychosocial theories help explain early adolescence. NASSP Bulletin,72(509), 95-100.[6] Next Generation Science Standards, (2022). Next Generation Science Standards: Engineering Designaccessed from https://www.nextgenscience.org/pe/ms-ets1-1-engineering-design on 2/13/2023[7] Narvaez, D., Lapsley, D. K., Hagele, S., & Lasky, B. (2006). Moral chronicity and social informationprocessing: Tests of a social cognitive approach to the moral personality. Journal of Research in Personality, 40(6),966-985.[8] Progression of Computers Science Teachers Science Standards Retreived fromhttps://csteachers.org
students withlearning disabilities and students in the LGBTQIA+ community. Additionally, it is possible thatmore functionality could be added to provide more tools to help students in dealing with mentalhealth issues.6.0 Works Cited[1] P. Birch, M. Driban, R. Ebbs, J. Iffert, R. Jaeger and M. N. Tzou, "Technological Solutions to Foster Student Mental Well-Being," [Online]. Available: https://academy.psu.edu/documents/current/policy-proposals/2016/tech_solutions.pdf. [Accessed 1 January 2022].[2] S. Kutcher, Y. Wei and C. Morgan, "Mental health literacy in post-secondary students," Health Education Journal, vol. 75, no. 6, pp. 689-697, 2016.[3] Z. R. Patterson, R. L. Gabrys, R. K. Prowse, A. B. Abizaid, K. G. C. Hellemans and R. J
.[7] Vygotsky, L. S. (1978). Socio-cultural theory. Mind in society, 6, 52-58.[8] Huang, W., Wang, P.-C., & Pearl, S. (2021, November). A Pilot Interdisciplinary Robotic Mentorship Project to Study Engineering Soft Skill Development. In 2021 Fall ASEE Middle Atlantic Section Meeting.[9] National Council of Teachers of English (2013). Read Write Think. Oral Presentation Rubric. Available: https://www.readwritethink.org/sites/default/files/resources/printouts/30700_rubric.pdf [Accessed Feb. 7, 2023].
Construction, ISEC 2017., E. Pellicer, J. M. Adam, V. Yepes, A. Singh, and S. Yazdani, Eds., ISEC Press., 2017, pp. 1–6. doi: 10.14455/ISEC.res.2017.127.[5] Y. Yanagawa et al., “Disaster Imagination Game at Izunokuni City for preparedness for a huge Nankai Trough earthquake,” SJAMS, vol. 4, no. 6, pp. 2129–2132, Jun. 2016, doi: 10.21276/sjams.2016.4.6.53.[6] Gifu Prefectural Government, “Disaster Imagination Game (DIG) Guidebook for Leaders.” Gifu-shi, Japan., 2012.[7] M. Reyes Gallardo and F. Miura, “Guía Metodológica para la Implementación del Método DIG en Chile.” Proyecto de Investigación para el Mejoramiento de Tecnología para desarrollar una Comunidad Resiliente ante los Tsunamis (Proyecto SATREPS Tsunami
, while the term post-assessment will only refer to the work being described in this paper.Flood outreach studyThe objective of the research study was to capture perspectives on flooding from rural residents,particularly in unincorporated communities of Region 1. Region 1’s large size required work tobe divided based on areas in close proximity to the university partners—WTAMU PIs andstudents surveyed residents generally in the Texas Panhandle, while MSU surveyed residents inthe Upper Red River Region. Figure 1 provides a general map of the flooding planning regionwith highlights of communities to be covered by each institution [4]. Figure 2 presents a fewexample images of historical flooding observed within Region 1 that were obtained from
exploratory study offer next steps for university-communitypartnerships and service learning research and practice.This research is supported by a grant from the National Science Foundation ImprovingUndergraduate STEM Education: Education and Human Resource (IUSE: EHR) program,award number 1915100.References[1] J. Botelho, “Uncovering the quality of STEM service-learning course implementation and essential elements across the California State University system,” Mich. J. Community Serv. Learn., vol. 26, no. 2, Sep. 2020, doi: 10.3998/mjcsloa.3239521.0026.201.[2] M. Salam, D. N. Awang Iskandar, D. H. A. Ibrahim, and M. S. Farooq, “Service learning in higher education: A systematic literature review,” Asia Pac. Educ. Rev., vol. 20, no. 4
course.Patrick Sours, The Ohio State University Patrick is a lecturer and PhD candidate in Food, Agricultural, and Biological Engineering. Patrick received a B.S. in Civil Engineering from The Ohio State University with a minor in Humanitarian Engineering. Patrickˆa C™s graduate research focus is internatDr. Adithya Jayakumar, The Ohio State University Dr. Adithya Jayakumar is currently a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Engineering Education at The Ohio State University (OSU). He received his Masters and PhD in Electrical and Computer Engineering from OSU.Mrs. Rachel Marie Tuttle Rachel serves as the Humanitarian Engineering Scholars Program Manager and an Engineering Unde- clared Academic Advisor at The Ohio State
between the groups, additional face-to face course and COIL courses could be run tocollect further data for comparison.Citations[1] Tejada, A. H., & Stanton, S. (2021). An Impact Study of the 100,000 Strong in the AmericasInnovation Fund.[2] A. Brown and L. De Regil Sanchez, “Structure and Outcomes of a Virtual InternationalHumanitarian Engineering Collaborative Program with Workshop,” Diversity Abroad, 21-Dec-2021. [Online]. Available: https://www.diversitynetwork.org//DIVaPublic/Articles/Article-Items/Structure-and-Outcomes-Intl-Humanitarian-Engineering-Program.aspx. [Accessed: 08-Feb-2023].[3] Boretti, A., & Rosa, L. (2019). Reassessing the projections of the world water developmentreport. NPJ Clean Water, 2(1), 15.[4] World Health