. Netemeyer, W. O. Bearden, and S. Sharma, Scaling procedures: Issues and applications, Nachdr. Thousand Oaks, Calif: Sage Publ, 2001.[2] S. Mersand, “The state of makerspace research: A review of the literature,” TechTrends, vol. 65, no. 2, pp. 174–186, Mar. 2021, doi: 10.1007/s11528-020-00566-5.[3] S. Timotheou and A. Ioannou, “On making, tinkering, coding and play for learning: A review of current research,” in Human-Computer Interaction – INTERACT 2019, vol. 11747, D. Lamas, F. Loizides, L. Nacke, H. Petrie, M. Winckler, and P. Zaphiris, Eds., in Lecture Notes in Computer Science, vol. 11747. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019, pp. 217–232. doi: 10.1007/978-3-030-29384-0_14.[4] M. Tomko, M. Alemán, R. Nagel, W
and arts-based research methods paper seeks to make visible the mechanismsand linkages between institutional prestige seeking, engineering education’s disciplinary culturalnotions of rigor, and the invisible and unexamined impacts on engineering students’ mentalhealth, particularly among underrepresented students. Our purpose is to increase awareness,generate new decolonizing discourses, and support action and activism in engineering educationtoward improving student mental health and the inclusion and support of underrepresentedstudents. Through examining these linkages and mechanisms (Apple, 2019; Riley, 2017),engineering educators and researchers can further explore the unforeseen consequences ofunquestioned–and sometimes invisible
: Cultivating hope, resistance, and action,” Am. Psychol., vol. 74, no. 1, pp. 49–62, 2019, doi: 10.1037/amp0000289.[9] C. L. Chee, G. Shorty, and S. E. Robinson Kurpius, “Academic stress of Native American undergraduates: The role of ethnic identity, cultural congruity, and self-beliefs,” J. Divers. High. Educ., vol. 12, no. 1, pp. 65–73, 2019.[10] R. Carter and A. Pieterse, Measuring the effects of racism: Guidelines for the assessment and treatment of race-based trauma-stress injury. 2020.11[11] E. O. McGee, “Devalued Black and Latino Racial Identities: A By-Product of STEM College Culture?,” Am. Educ. Res. J., vol. 53, no. 6, pp. 1626–1662, 2016, doi: 10.3102/0002831216676572.[12] E. L. Wright, C. J
- October 23, 2019, Hannover, Germany, 2020, pp. 13–19. [Online]. Available: http://greyguide.isti.cnr.it/index.php/greyguideportal/document-share/gl-proceedings-1993.[5] N. Waters, E. Kasuto, and F. McNaughton, “Partnership between engineering libraries: Identifying information literacy skills for a successful transition from student to professional,” Sci. Technol. Libr., vol. 31, no. 1, pp. 124–132, Jan. 2012, doi: 10.1080/0194262X.2012.648104.[6] C. Leachman and J. W. Leachman, “If the engineering literature fits, use it! Student application of grey literature and engineering standards,” in 2015 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Jun. 2015, pp. 26.881.1-26.881.10. [Online]. Available: https://peer.asee.org
-367, 2000.[6] L. Hausmann, J. Schofield and R. Woods, "Sense of Belonging as a Predictor of Intentions to Persist among African American and White First-Year College Students," Research in Higher Education, pp. 803-839, 2007.[7] E. Seymour and N. M. Hewitt, Talking about Leaving: Why Undergraduates Leave the Sciences, Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1997.[8] E. Tate and M. Linn, "How Does Identity Shape the Experiences of Women of Color Engineering Students," Journal of Science Education and Technology, vol. 14, no. 5/6, pp. 483-493, 2005.[9] L. Nadelson, I. Villanueva, J. Bouwma-Gearhart, K. Youmans, S. Lanci and C. Lenhart, "Knowledge in the making: what engineering students are learning in the makerspaces.," in ASEE
education address equity, the climate crisis, and its own moral infrastructure?. Advances in Engineering Education, 25. [6] Riley, D. (2017). Rigor/Us: Building boundaries and disciplining diversity with standards of merit. Engineering Studies, 9(3), 249-265. [7] Claussen, S., Tsai, J., Boll, A., Blacklock, J., & Johnson, K. (2019, January). Pain and gain: Barriers and opportunities for integrating sociotechnical thinking into diverse engineering courses. In Proceedings of the 2019 ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition. [8] Gupta, A. (2017, June). A practitioner account of integrating macro-ethics discussion in an engineering design class. In 2017 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition. [9] Hess
Medicine lab (https://yenkiekm.com). Her teaching methodology to incorporate computational tools for explaining theoretical concepts led to her selection as one of the 20 Outstanding Young Chemical Engineering Educators by CACHE (Computer Aids for Chemical Engineering) Committee in 2019. Her ongoing research on machine learning, solvent recovery, optimizing lube-oil operations, and water utilities energy and asset management are funded by the USEPA, ExxonMobil, AstraZeneca, Atlantic County Utilities Authority and American Water. She won the 2022 AIChE Environmental Division Early Career Award for her contributions to solving challenging environmental chemical engineering problems. She also won the 2023 AIChE-Delaware
. [Online] Available: https://www.asce.org/career-growth/ethics/code-of-ethics. [2] ABET, Criteria for Accrediting Engineering Programs, 2022-2023. Baltimore, MD: ABET Inc, 2022. [Online] Available: https://www.abet.org/accreditation/accreditation-criteria/criteria-for-accrediting- engineering-programs-2022-2023/. [3] Library of Congress, A Century of Racial Segregation, 1849-1950. [Online] Available: https://www.loc.gov/exhibits/brown/brown-segregation.html. [4] D.B. Oerther, “Using Nursing Theory to Improve the Teaching of Engineering Practice,” in ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Columbus, Ohio, June 25-28, 2017. [Online] Available: https://www.doi.org/10.18260
2010 he has been a Visiting Associate Professor at the Electrical and Computer Engineering Department, Michigan State University. From 2014 to 2016, he has been a Visiting Professor with the Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Department, University of Missouri. Currently, he is Associate Professor with the Engineering Department, Colorado State University-Pueblo. He is the author of two book chapters, more than 73 articles. His research interests include artificial intelligence systems and applications, smart material applications, robotics motion, and planning. Also, He is a member of ASME, ASEE, and ASME-ABET PEV.Dr. Nebojsa I Jaksic P.E., Colorado State University, Pueblo NEBOJSA I. JAKSIC earned the Dipl. Ing
Industry and Education Collaboration.8. Fewings, P., & Henjewele, C. (2019). Construction Project Management: An Integrated Approach. Routledge.9. Hardin, B., & McCool, D. (2015). BIM and Construction Management: Proven Tools, Methods, and Workflows. John Wiley & Sons.10. Hauhart, R. C., & Grahe, J. E. (2015). Designing and Teaching Undergraduate Capstone Courses. John Wiley & Sons.11. Holdsworth, A., Watty, K., & Davies, M. (2009). Developing Capstone Experiences. Deakin University.12. Lee, N. (2013), A Conceptual Framework for Technology-Enhanced Problem-Based Learning in Construction Engineering and Management Education. 2013 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition.13. Lee, N. & Kim, S. J. (2020). A
San Marcos. He earned his B.S. in Electrical Engineering from Shiraz University in Iran, and his M.S.E. and Ph.D. in Electrical and Computer Engineering from the University of Alabama in Huntsville. As an active participant in IEEE and ASEE, his research has received funding from the National Science Foundation (NSF), the Office of Naval Research (ONR), and various industry partners.Prof. Jairo Giraldo, University of Utah Dr. Jairo Giraldo received a B.Sc. degree in Electronic Engineering from the National University of Colombia in 2010 and an M.Sc. and Ph.D. degree from the University of the Andes, Colombia in 2012 and 2015, respectively. Dr. Giraldo is currently a Research Assistant Professor at the Department of
indicators of the likelihood that students will complete theirengineering education and stay in the engineering profession over the long run. We can theninfer whether the intern program is contributing toward the two DoE goals and the Justice40objective. The survey results will also provide an indirect ABET assessment of our engineeringprograms.Over the coming years, our team will establish a cadence of candidate recruitment, programoperation, survey administration, and analysis of survey results. Survey results will be used toimprove program operations, improve data collection, and inform our evaluation of the DoE andJustice40 goals. Our team will follow up on this WIP with subsequent ASEE publications thatreport on the assessment
, and L. Lee Ramsey,"Engineering supplemental instruction: Impact on sophomore level engineering courses,"Proceedings of the ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, pp. 1-13, 2015. [Online]. Available.https://peer.asee.org/engineering-supplemental-instruction-impact-on-sophomore-level-engineering-courses. [Accessed: Nov 5, 2019].
Ann Sychterz. 177. Works Cited[1] A Estes, S Ressler, C Saviz, B Barry, C Considine, N Dennis, S Hamilton, D Hurwitz, T Kunberger, T Lenox, T Nilsson, J O’Brien Jr., R O’Neill, D Saftner, K Salyards, R Welch, D Coward, & L Nolen, “The ASCE ExCEEd Teaching Workshop: Assessing 20 Years of Instructional Development.” International Journal of Engineering Education 35 (6): 1758- 1786, 2019.[2] A Morse, P Clayton, C Rodak, J Henschen, P Omur-Ozbek, C Riley, D Saftner, & A Cioffi, “ASCE’s Response to the Pandemic: Development of a Remote ExCEEd Teaching Workshop.” In 2022 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Minneapolis, MN, USA, June 26
National Science Foundation (NSF) ADVANCE Catalyst grant. OurCatalyst grant team is comprised of a multi-disciplinary group of researchers leveraging expertisein quantitative and qualitative assessment in the social sciences, engineering, policy, and academicleadership. Our comprehensive data gathering effort seeks to assess equity in recruitment, hiring,renewal, promotion, and tenure activities at a large R1 public institution for both tenure-line andterm (contingent) faculty. We place an intersectional emphasis on this analysis, examining whetherinstitutional practices yield disparate outcomes on faculty not just along lines of gender and race,but also unique combinations thereof.The prior ASEE paper [1] focused on the data gathering effort for
female. Although fewer female students are in ESSthan Wright College, 20.3% is higher than the national average of 15% [34]. The higher femalepopulation of Wright College also serves as an opportunity for Engineering. Race/Ethnicity 2018-2019 2019-2020 2020-2021 2021-2022 2022-2023 Hispanic 59.17 59.30 58.16 58.80 59.16 White 22.63 22.25 22.88 21.70 20.77 Asian 7.62 8.06 8.56 8.85 8.84 Black 7.05 6.52 6.88 7.21 7.75 Other 3.22 3.36 3.52 3.43 3.44 Gender/Identity Female
Proceedings of the 2016 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, 2016. 10.18260/p.26444[23] T. Lancaster and C. Cotarlan, “Contract cheating by STEM students through a file sharing website: a Covid-19 pandemic perspective,” International Journal for Educational Integrity vol. 17, 3, 2021. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40979-021-00070-0[24] C. Luks, “Saving Time In and Out of Class: Video Exam Solutions,” In Proceedings of the 2019 ASEE Midwest Section Conference, 2019. https://peer.asee.org/33918[25] K.Z. Mejia and J.A. Turns, “Creating Capacity to Explore what Students Learn from Reflection Activities: Validating the Knowledge-gain Survey,” In Proceedings of the 2021 ASEE Annual Conference, Virtual Event, 2021. https
in the cohort met with an assigned engineering facultymentor individually twice a semester and interacted with all faculty mentors for the program atseminars held twice a semester. Two cohorts operated concurrently with one starting in Fall of 2019 and a second startingin Fall of 2020. At the time of this study, the first cohort had completed eight semesters of theirengineering program and cohort two had completed six semesters. For comparison across thetwo cohorts, only data from the first six semesters of each cohort was used for this study. As thiscohort is an outward-facing program, major enrollment and demographic information includinggender and race/ethnicity are removed to protect the identities of our participants
the agent and students’ interactions. See Figure 1.Figure 1 - Tripartite Framework for Creating Instructional Design Agents. Adapted from Schimpf, C., Huang, X., Xie,C., Sha, Z., & Massicotte, J. (2019). Developing instructional design agents to support novice and K-12 DesignEducation. In ASEE annual conference & exposition.The present work builds on past research in front-end design, engineering design in K-12 and AI ineducation and design to analyze how a collaborative learning environment with an AI-powered designmentor can support middle and high school students to engage in the messy, iterative, and open-endednature of front-end design challenges.Theoretical FrameworksThe two core frameworks guiding this work are 1) situated
. Fatehiboroujeni, and A. Akera, “From ”leaky pipelines” to ”diversity of thought”: What does ”diversity” mean in engineering education?” in 2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition. ASEE Conferences, June 2019. [Online]. Available: https://peer.asee.org/32861 [8] M. Mitchell, M. Leachman, and M. Saenz, “State higher education funding cuts have pushed costs to students, worsened inequality,” Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, vol. 24, pp. 9–15, 2019. [9] K. Babineau, “Closing the gap: An overview of the literature on college persistence and underrepresented populations.” Cowen Institute, 2018.[10] T. Mitropoulos and D. Bairaktarova, “Why engineering?–Exploring the link between students’ self-concepts and their person or
component of engineering education: International design projects,” American Society for Engineering Education Conference Paper, 2019.[29] M. C. Alves, “Preparing engineering college students for a culturally diverse global job market,” ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition, Conference Proceedings, vol. 2018- June, no. December 2003, 2018, doi: 10.18260/1-2--30885.[30] A. Goncher and J. Devitt, “Development of global competencies through humanitarian engineering experiences,” 28th Annual Conference of the Australasian Association for Engineering Education, 2017.[31] J.-A. Panzardi, K. Disney, N. Cordoba-Velasquez, B. Faria, S. Kalman, and P. Mojica, “Development of the whole student through an engineering
, BS), architecture (MArch), and civil engineering (PhD, MS, MPhil) facilitates systems-level research intersecting disciplinary boundaries. She specializes in implementing Lean-Integrated Project Delivery / Target Value Design simulation gaming tools to effectively address complex, multidisciplinary challenges, and has delivered a TEDx talk about illuminating lean efficiency principles and aligning multidisciplinary teams toward common goals. For her research in interdisciplinary systems thinking, Dr. Rybkowski has been awarded the J. Thomas Regan Interdisciplinary Faculty Prize, the Harold L. Adams Interdisciplinary Professorship in Construction Science, and in 2019 was named by Texas A&M as a prestigious
social justice movements, including if and how students and practitioners are addressing global inequality and the SDGs in career pathways, especially now, when activists are calling for the development sector to implement decolonized and anti-racist structures. Emma graduated from the California Polytechnic with a B.S. in Mechanical Engineering in 2019 and an M.S. in Irrigation Engineering in 2020.Prof. Amy Javernick-Will, University of Colorado Boulder Amy Javernick-Will is a Professor at the University of Colorado, Boulder in the Civil, Environmental, and Architectural Engineering Department. ©American Society for Engineering Education, 2024 How Decolonial and Anti
communication: How engineering students per- ceive gender typical speech acts in teamwork. Journal of Engineering Education, 98(1):5–16, 2009.[10] Karen L Tonso. On the outskirts of engineering: Learning identity, gender, and power via engineering practice, volume 6. Brill, 2007.[11] Anita Williams Woolley, Christopher F Chabris, Alex Pentland, Nada Hashmi, and Thomas W Malone. Ev- idence for a collective intelligence factor in the performance of human groups. science, 330(6004):686–688, 2010.[12] Behzad Beigpourian and Matthew W Ohland. A systematized review: Gender and race in teamwork in under- graduate engineering classrooms. In 2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, 2019.[13] Jenni Buckley, Amy Trauth, Sara Bernice
, vol. 49, no. 3, pp. 221-234, 2019.[3] K. L. Morgan, C. L. Bell-Huff, J. Shaffer and J. M. LeDoux, "Story-Driven Learning: A Pedagogical Approach for Promoting Students' Self-Awareness and Empathy for Others," in ASEE , Virtual Conference, 2021.[4] J. Adler, "Living into the Story: Agency and Coherence in a Longitudinal Study of Narrative Identity Development and Mental Health Over the Course of Psychotherapy," Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, vol. 102, no. 2, pp. 367-389, 2012.[5] J. M. Adler, A. F. Turner, K. M. Brookshier, C. Monahan, I. Walder-Biesanz, L. H. Harmeling, M. Albaugh, D. P. McAdams and T. F. Oltmanns, "Variation in Narrative Identity is Associated with Trajectories of Mental Health Over
, 14]. Loyola University Chicago (LUC)Engineering took a different direction in creating situative learning experiences [15, 16] thatincrease retention [17], specifically open-ended first-year design projects that solve problems foruniversity sponsors such as nursing professors. For sponsors who are nursing professors only,the design process utilized is human-centered design, which focuses on meeting the needs of theintended users.Human-Centered DesignHuman-centered design engineering standard ISO 9241-210:2019 defines human-centereddesign as “an approach to systems design and development that aims to make interactive systemsmore usable by focusing on the user of the system and applying human factors/ergonomics andusability knowledge and
scholars in the program. Current scholars identify as 21male, 10 female, 18 white, 7 Hispanic, 1 Black, and 5 Asian. Program numbers mirror similarenrollment trends to the College with the following exceptions: higher female and students of colorenrolled. The scholars in both cohorts participated in curricular and co-curricular activities thatincluded enrollment in a summer bridge program, proactive advising, tutoring in engineeringcourses, peer and faculty mentoring, career and graduate school guidance, cohort buildingactivities, theme seminars, funded undergraduate research experiences, and goals workshops. Theprogram did not have a comparison/control group. Cohort 1 started during the fall 2019 semester and cohort 2 started a year later
Engineering Education from the School of Engineering Education, Purdue University, USA. The Department of Energy, National Science Foundation, and industry sponsors fund her research. Her research potential and the implication of her work are recognized through national and international awards, including the 2023 NSTA/NARST Research Worth Reading award for her publication in the Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2023 New Faculty Fellow award by IEEE ASEE Frontiers in Education Conference, 2022 Apprentice Faculty Grant award by the ERM Division, ASEE, and 2020 outstanding researcher award by the School of Engineering Education, Purdue University. Dr. Anwar has over 20 years of teaching experience at various national
Employment in the Southeast: Examining the Last 30 Years. Mon. Labor Rev. 2021, 144 (7), 1–13.(6) Smith, J. D.; Lohani, V. K. An Interdisciplinary RET Program: Assessment with Concerns-Based Adoption Model (RTP), 2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Tampa, Florida. 10.18260/1- 2--32075.
. Pellegrino, and V. Berry, “Impacts of implementing up-to-date industry problems on engineering identity development,” in 2022 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, 2022. Accessed: Jan. 24, 2024. [Online]. Available: https://peer.asee.org/41707.pdf[2] J. Baughman, L. Hassall, and X. Xu, “Comparison of student team dynamics between non- flipped and flipped versions of a large-enrollment sophomore design engineering course,” J. Eng. Educ., vol. 108, no. 1, pp. 103–118, 2019, doi: 10.1002/jee.20251.[3] A. Godwin and B. W. Boudouris, “Fostering motivation for chemical engineering students’ academic success: An example from a sophomore materials and energy balances course,” Chem. Eng. Educ., vol. 54, no. 3, pp. 121–128, 2020.[4