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Kelly Patsavas; Barrett S. Caldwell, Purdue University, West Lafayette
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Paper ID #10619Exploring the Development of Undergraduate Research ExperienceKelly PatsavasProf. Barrett S Caldwell, Purdue University, West Lafayette Prof. Caldwell is a researcher in the area of human factors engineering, with a specialty in cognitive ergonomics. He was named in 2008 as a Fellow of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society (HFES, the leading scientific body in this area in the US and one of the premier ergonomics societies in the world). Prof. Caldwell was also asked to co-organize the 2008 session on Cognitive Ergonomics for the National Academy of Engineering US Frontiers of Engineering (FOE
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Gurlovleen K. Rathore, Texas A&M University; Alexandra Coso Strong, Georgia Institute of Technology; Adam R. Carberry, Arizona State University
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professional development topics within the eightranked professional development areas (Table 2) on a Likert scale from 1 to 4. Respondents areprimarily interested in topics related to research and job acquisition. Of lower importance wereservice related topics, work-life balance, public speaking, and navigating office politics. Thisorder of ranking is similar to one seen in previous study on student expectations from aprofessional society in environmental engineering.5 Page 24.487.6Table 2: Mean interest of respondents (n = 46) in professional development topics (a-s) on aLikert scale from 1 (not at all interested) to 4 (very interested
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Jennifer A. Turns, University of Washington; Brook Sattler, University of Washington; Kathryn Ann Mobrand, University of Washington; Drew Paine, Human Centered Design & Engineering, University of Washington
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thearticle? • Rhetorical strategy: Did the rhetorical strategies feel appropriately stated, given the actions? • Location: Are the implications for action statements discoverable? Are they clustered together (so that they are likely to be discovered by the reader) or scattered? • Action: Does the action stem from a finding? Is the action appropriately warranted from the finding(s) offered? Is the action realistic or concrete? For possibly ambiguous actions, are they elaborated in a way that makes them more actionable? • Actors: Would the appropriate actor recognize that the authors are offering them an implication? Is the actor appropriately targeted and/or constrained, or is it generic?Imagine: What
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Martha E. Grady, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign; Ryan Christopher Reuer Gergely, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
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Paper ID #8913What’s stopping them? Perspectives of teaching assistants on incorporatingdiverse teaching methodsMs. Martha E. Grady, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Martha E. Grady is a doctoral candidate within the department of Mechanical Science and Engineering at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. She holds a B. S. degree in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Central Florida and an M.S. degree in Theoretical and Applied Mechanics from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. She intends to finish her doctoral degree in Theoretical and Applied Mechanics in the Spring of 2014. Her
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Rachel Louis Kajfez, Ohio State University; Colleen Marie Croyle, The Ohio State Univeristy ; Alison N. Snyder; Mahnas Jean Mohammadi-Aragh, Mississippi State University
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: Intersections, extensions, and lessons learned among three researchers’ stories. In Proceedings of the International Conference on Research in Engineering Education (ICREE), Honolulu, HI.3. Adams, R., & Cummings-Bond, R. (2004). Career trajectories in engineering education—Where are they now? Paper presented at the 111th American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference and Exposition, Salt Lake City, UT.4. Borrego, M. (2006). The higher education job market for M.S. and Ph.D. engineering education program graduates. Paper presented at the 113th American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference and Exposition, Chicago, IL.5. Felder, R. M., Sheppard, S. D., & Smith K. A. (2005). A new journal
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joshua jude heeg; Kyle Flenar, University of Cincinnati; Jordan Alexander Ross; Taylor Okel, University of Cincinnati; Tejas Abhijit Deshpande, University of Cincinnati; Gregory Warren Bucks, University of Cincinnati; Kathleen A. Ossman, University of Cincinnati
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that inorder to get the most benefit out of these different methods, they should be used in conjunctionwith each other.References1. McCracken M, Almstrum V, Diaz D, et al. A multi-national, multi-institutional study ofassessment of programming skills of first-year CS students. ACM SIGCSE Bulletin.2001;33(4):125-180.2. Thomas L, Ratcliffe M, Woodbury J, Jarman E. Learning styles and performance in theintroductory programming sequence. ACM SIGCSE Bulletin. 2002;34(1):33-37.3. Carini, R, Kuh, G, Klein, S. Student engagement and student learning: testing the linkages.Research in Higher Education. 2006; 47(1):1-32.4. Chabay, R. Self-perception and social-perception processes in tutoring: Subtle social controlstrategies of expert tutors. Self