Paper ID #45658The Role of Practicing Engineers in Recognizing Students’ IdentitiesDr. Kelsey Scalaro, Cornell University Kelsey is a postdoctoral scholar with the STRIDE group at Cornell University. She recently graduated with PhD in Engineering Education from the University of Nevada, Reno. She has a BS and MS in mechanical engineering and worked in the aerospace industry for four years before returning to academia to complete her doctoral degree. Her research focuses on undergraduate engineering identity and is interested in exploring how it can be equitably supported through pedagogical practices.Dr. Indira Chatterjee
classroom, and graduate education.Catherine G. P. Berdanier, The Pennsylvania State University Catherine G.P. Berdanier is an Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering at Pennsylvania State University. She earned her B.S. in Chemistry from The University of South Dakota, her M.S. in Aeronautical and Astronautical Engineering and her PhD in Engineering Education from Purdue University. Her research expertise lies in characterizing graduate-level attrition, persistence, and career trajectories; engineering writing and communication; and methodological development. ©American Society for Engineering Education, 2025 Characterizing Interactions Between Master's Engineering Students and Their
agreed. Similarly,engineering coursework does not frequently require students to work on interdisciplinary or largeteams. Students on project teams routinely work with students who are not in their courses ormajors. On multiple diagrams, students wrote about learning how to work and communicate witheveryone on the team. In addition, during the focus groups, students discussed how they oftenhave to work with students they did not agree with or even got along with. In courses, studentsoften have the luxury of choosing who they work with. However, students on project teams haveto learn how to navigate and work on teams where they do not pick their colleagues. Studentsmust get experiences where they can develop their professional skills during their
Panuganti, Purdue Engineering Education Sowmya Panuganti is a graduate student at Purdue University in the Engineering Education department. She is passionate about understanding engineering culture and the effects it has on engineers’ mental health and well-being.Dr. Justin Charles Major, Rowan University Dr. Justin C. Major (they/them) is an Assistant Professor of Experiential Engineering Education at Rowan University where they leads ASPIRE Lab (Advancing Student Pathways through Inequality Research in Engineering). Justin’s research focuses on low-income students, engineering belonging and marginalization mechanisms, adverse childhood experiences, and feminist approaches to EER, and connects these topics to
’ engineering identity development and critical incidents related to thetransfer process.The participants arrived at community college at various life stages. Approximately three-fourthswere recent high school graduates, while the others had pursued careers that did not require aformal degree such as military service or construction. Those older students were more uncertainabout starting a STEM degree program which would require considerable math.About half of the participants identified as first-generation college students and had limitedexposure to the engineering profession beyond related high school coursework. They may havecompleted technical courses such as CAD or a pre-engineering program such as Project Lead theWay in high school. Other
?) b. Can you tell me about your well-being over this time period? Physical, emotional, psychological? c. Tell me about the highs and lows for stress and well-being? Fluctuations vs a consistent build as quals approached? d. Looking more broadly, do you have any throughs on how your well-being and stress compared to your peers? 6. Are there other things you would like to add to what’s been said? a. How did the QEs go? b. We’re planning a study that explores changes in well-being and engineering identity over the quals period. We were thinking of conducting interviews ~3months before, 2–3 weeks before, and then shortly after. Do you think these
Information System Security Professional (CISSP®) certification with security architecture focus (ISSAP®) from ISC2®.Tracey Sulak, Baylor UniversityDr. Anne Marie Spence, Baylor University Clinical Professor Mechanical Engineering ©American Society for Engineering Education, 2025 Investigating Perceptions of Engineering in First- and Third-Year StudentsThis empirical research brief investigates undergraduate students’ perceptions of engineering asa career. Guided by theory on developing engineering perceptions [1], [2] and the 2024 InclusiveMindset Report’s challenge to create pathways “toward professional practice, graduate school,and challenges not yet known” [3, p. 39
center around national identity, engineering culture, acculturation, and inclusion of colonial migrants from the U.S. territories who are looking to pursue engineering careers in the contiguous United States.Mr. Matthew Bahnson, Purdue University at West Lafayette (COE) Matthew Bahnson completed his Ph.D. in the Applied Social and Community Psychology program in at North Carolina State University. His previous training includes a B.A. in Psychology from the University of Northern Iowa and an M.A. in Social Sciences from the University of Chicago. Matthew’s research focuses on sociocultural inequality in engineering graduate education with the intention of increasing diversity, equity, inclusion, and justice in STEM
Chemical and Materials Engineering at the University of Kentucky. She completed her bachelor’s degree at Rowan University in New Jersey before attending graduate school for her PhD at the University of Massachusetts. ©American Society for Engineering Education, 2025Analysis of Student Survey Responses for use in Focus Groups Addressing Engineering Student Mental HealthIntroductionEngineering Student Mental HealthCollege students across all fields experience common stressors such as changes in sleep or eatinghabits, demanding course loads, fear of poor grades, and adjusting to new environments [1], [2],[3]. However, engineering students face additional challenges that
Paper ID #47092Engineering Persistence: Assessing Initiatives for First-Year Engineering StudentsMr. Matthew Currey, Rowan University Matthew Currey is a graduate student pursing his Ph.D. degree in Engineering Education. Matthew graduated with his bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering technology in the May of 2024 and is now on his first year of graduate school. Matthew is also currently an adjunct professor at his community college teaching First-Year students. He has a passion in helping First-Year students and working on new initiative programs to help support undergraduate students.Dr. Juan M Cruz, Rowan
McCormick Teaching Excellence Institute Research Fellow. Her research focuses on how identity, among other affective factors, influences diverse groups of students to choose engineering and persist in engineering. She also studies how different experiences within the practice and culture of engineering foster or hinder belonging, motivation, and identity development. Dr. Godwin graduated from Clemson University with a B.S. in Chemical Engineering and Ph.D. in Engineering and Science Education. Her research earned her a National Science Foundation CAREER Award focused on characterizing latent diversity, which includes diverse attitudes, mindsets, and approaches to learning to understand engineering students’ identity