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- STEM Education at the Two-Year College
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- 2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Cynthia Kay Pickering, Arizona State University; Mara Lopez, Arizona State University; Elaine L. Craft, Florence-Darlington Technical College; Sarah Belknap, Westchester Community College; Caroline VanIngen-Dunn, Arizona State University; Laurie S. Miller McNeill, Westchester Community College; Juan R. Rodriguez, Westchester Community College
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Diversity
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Two-Year College Division (TYCD)
studying Human and Social Dimensions of Science and Technology in the School for the Future of Innovation in Society in ASU’s College of Global Futures. She practices Socio-technical Integration Research as an embedded social scientist who collaboratively works with technologists (STEM students, STEM faculty, and Tech Com- panies) to increase reflexive learning during technology development and implementation to pro-actively consider the impact of technology decisions on local communities and society at large. This work creates spaces and processes to explore technology innovation and its consequences in an open, inclusive and timely way.Mara Lopez, Arizona State University Dr. Mara Lopez is a full-time Research
- Conference Session
- Two-Year College Division Poster Session
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- 2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Ibrahim F. Zeid, Northeastern University; Jennifer Ocif Love, Northeastern University; Claire Duggan, Northeastern University
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Diversity
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Two-Year College Division (TYCD)
meetings with mentors; extensiveprofessional development seminars; formal research training including daily reflection journals,poster presentations and technical writing with a faculty member. REU students completed twodeliverables: a research project and an open-ended Arduino engineering design project. Initially,students chose their research projects from a list of available opportunities. Once a match wassecured, students worked in their research labs daily with their graduate student and facultymentors.A list of students’ engineering research projects included:1. Accelerating Operations on Graph Neural Network2. Computational Design of Single Atom Catalysts for Electrochemical CO2 Reduction3. Information Theory to Pinpoint Causal Links
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- Two-Year College Potpourri
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- 2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Chris A. O'Riordan-Adjah, Durham Technical Community College
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Two-Year College Division (TYCD)
obtained in labs, research facilities, and testing facilities, allowing students toactually apply what they learn in the classroom to practical real-life situations. For example, inthe architectural technology program, students can design their dream home with all the requiredspecifications and codes, and it will be ready to build whenever the opportunity presents itself.As another example, students taking carpentry and welding courses can actually build andconstruct something of practical use, and not just test it to see if it works, like you would in alaboratory situation at a four-year institution. All of this allows students to actually experiencethe things they want to do, not just visualize or theorize about them.Table 4 shows the required
- Conference Session
- Engineering and Engineering Technology Transfer and the Two-Year College Student Part 1
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- 2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Shannon Conner; Olivia Anne DiSilvestre; Marcus Lee Ridlehuber, Clemson University; Louise Averitt, Clemson University; D. Matthew Boyer, Clemson University
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Diversity
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Two-Year College Division (TYCD)
impact, and this project, you know, impacting others in a good way. So, I think that will be the best defining moment.”DiscussionThough SPECTRA is in early practice, several important themes are already shown in dataderived from student interviews. The most compelling of these findings is how students interactwith their cohort and the overall benefits they feel they are getting from participating in theprogram. These findings correlate strongly with research done by similar transfer programs.Interacting and making connections with others is a vital part of the college experience andsomething that is particularly important for transfer students, who may have a more difficult timeforming connections than students who began at a four-year
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- STEM Education at the Two-Year College
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- 2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Gabe Hanzel-Sello, Growth Sector; Janet Yowell, University of Colorado, Boulder; Cheryl Martinez, Growth Sector; Ivanna Abreu
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Diversity
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Two-Year College Division (TYCD)
scienceprograms and, ultimately, achievement of bachelor’s degrees (Wang, 2020). The need for financialsupport, resulting in most community college students needing to work while pursuing degrees, iscited as a major barrier for many community college students (Mendoza, 2009), particularly forthose who could benefit from full-time enrollment. Just-in-time academic support is one strategyfor improving student persistence in STEM, among many other researched best practices.Growth Sector, the backbone organization for the NSF Eddie Bernice Johnson INCLUDES Initiative’sSTEM Core Expansion Alliance (#1834628), along with partner institutions, has developed andimplemented the STEM Core at 30+ partner colleges in seven states, serving over 3,000 studentssince
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- Two-Year College Potpourri
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- 2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Ariel Chasen, University of Texas, Austin; Lea K. Marlor, University of Michigan; Cynthia J. Finelli, University of Michigan; Maura Borrego, University of Texas at Austin; Jenefer Husman, University of Oregon; Michael J. Prince, Bucknell University; Matthew Charles Graham
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Two-Year College Division (TYCD)
revolt?”—Considering Student Resistance: Origins, Options, and Opportunities for Investigation," CBE—Life Sciences Education, vol. 12, no. 4, pp. 586-595, 2013/12/01 2013, doi: 10.1187/cbe-13-09-0190.[23] S. E. Shadle, A. Marker, and B. Earl, "Faculty drivers and barriers: laying the groundwork for undergraduate STEM education reform in academic departments," International Journal of STEM Education, vol. 4, no. 1, p. 8, 2017/04/13 2017, doi: 10.1186/s40594-017-0062-7.[24] C. J. Finelli, S. R. Daly, and K. M. Richardson, "Bridging the Research-to-Practice Gap: Designing an Institutional Change Plan Using Local Evidence," Journal of Engineering Education, https://doi.org/10.1002/jee.20042 vol. 103, no