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Conference Session
International Division (INTL) Technical Session #3: Student Perspectives
Collection
2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Manuel José Alejandro Baquero-Sierra, Purdue University at West Lafayette (PPI); Cristián Eduardo Vargas-Ordóñez, Purdue University at West Lafayette (COE); Jacqueline E McDermott; Stephen Mark McBride, Purdue University
Tagged Divisions
International Division (INTL)
theirinternational graduate students to ensure they thrive at their institutions. Previous studies haveinvestigated the historical, cultural, and social factors that have impacted the construction ofGES's academic identities. However, broader efforts are needed to understand the population ofengineering graduate students with a strong engineering focus at universities. This Work inProgress study presents the results of a pilot survey developed that seeks to understand thefactors that impact the well-being of international and domestic graduate engineering students.For this, we selected a survey that evaluates this population's social resources. The socialresources component assesses social and institutional support, their relationships with advisors
Conference Session
International Division (INTL) Technical Session #1: Global Competency
Collection
2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Patrick Tunno; Dr. Angela Rothrock, Pennsylvania State University; Robert J. Rabb P.E., Pennsylvania State University; Christine B. Masters, Pennsylvania State University
Tagged Divisions
International Division (INTL)
navigate diverse cultures and places, learning and applying the course content in afamiliar setting before departing. Engineering students who implement some of the skills andcontent typically see an immediate return during the experience. The reflective final project thatthey complete once they return reinforces the awareness and skills that are a link betweenclassroom theory and concepts and real-time impacts.Through a continuous improvement feedback model, this paper also seeks to identify the rangeof content that can be refined and leveraged for various locations. Quantitative results indicatethat global/cultural skills are relevant immediately, requiring little reinforcement from othercourses. This study provides a baseline of data and