Asee peer logo
Displaying all 5 results
Conference Session
Liberal Education/Engineering & Society Division (LEES) Technical Session 6: LEES Works in Progress
Collection
2025 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Brian P Kirkmeyer, Miami University
Tagged Divisions
Liberal Education/Engineering & Society Division (LEES)
introducing GenAI into student assessments. This study is standaloneand preliminary; it is not planned to be part of a broader research program.BackgroundOver the past few years, text-based chatbots based on Generative Artificial Intelligence (GenAI)large language models (LLMs) have soared in both public availability and usage [1] [2]. Themost popular of these, ChatGPT, has grown in popularity at growth rates never seen in theinternet age [3]. This growth has driven advances in usability and functionality, while alsoraising questions of legal ethics and morality [2]. The consistent viewpoint is that GenAI is hereto stay and humans need to adapt to this new reality. Educators have shifted from awe ofGenAI’s capabilities, to fear of academic integrity
Conference Session
Liberal Education/Engineering & Society Division (LEES) Technical Session 3: Identity, Professionalization, and Belonging II
Collection
2025 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Clay Walker, University of Michigan; Mariel Krupansky, University of Michigan; Robin Fowler, University of Michigan; Kenneth M. Alfano, University of Michigan; Colleen Hart, University of Michigan
Tagged Divisions
Liberal Education/Engineering & Society Division (LEES)
expertise [1] and to develop ideas [2]. Findings from early studies afterthe public release of ChatGPT have found that students see GenAI as a useful but limited tool[3-6]. GenAI tools saturate digital writing ecologies and continue to gain power with eachiteration, yet student use of GenAI remains an understudied aspect of generative AI uptake inhigher education literacy [7]. Engineering education has unique features (e.g., coding,calculations, design processes, technical communication) and deserves its own empiricalresearch on student writing practices in relation to GenAI, not yet done to our knowledge.Additionally, it is still unclear how generative AI technologies will shape the engineeringeducation landscape as students grapple with the
Conference Session
Liberal Education/Engineering & Society Division (LEES) Technical Session 6: LEES Works in Progress
Collection
2025 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Gary P. Halada, Stony Brook University; Lori Scarlatos, Stony Brook University
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Liberal Education/Engineering & Society Division (LEES)
. "Beyond Colonial Hegemonies: Writing Scholarship andPedagogy with Nya ̄yasutra." Rhetorics Elsewhere and Otherwise: ContestedModernities, Decolonial Visions, 169-195 (2019).13 OpenAI, “Is ChatGPT Biased?”, https://help.openai.com/en/articles/8313359-is-chatgpt-biased14 Teboho Pitso, “Invitational Pedagogy: An Alternative Practice in DevelopingCreativity in Undergraduates”, in Booth, Shirley, and Laurie Woollacott."Introduction to the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning." The Scholarship ofTeaching and Learning in Higher Education–On Its Constitution andTransformative Potential, 2015.15 Riegle-Crumb, Catherine, Barbara King, and Yasmiyn Irizarry. "Does STEMstand out? Examining racial/ethnic gaps in persistence across postsecondaryfields
Conference Session
Liberal Education/Engineering & Society Division (LEES) Technical Session 8: Communication and Liberal Education
Collection
2025 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Amanda Dawn Hilliard, The Johns Hopkins University
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Liberal Education/Engineering & Society Division (LEES)
-5ct7-54du.[13] S. A. Athaluri, S. V. Manthena, V. S. R. K. M. Kesapragada, V. Yarlagadda, T. Dave, and R. T. S. Duddumpudi, “Exploring the Boundaries of Reality: Investigating the Phenomenon of Artificial Intelligence Hallucination in Scientific Writing Through ChatGPT References,” Cureus, Apr. 2023, doi: 10.7759/cureus.37432.[14] A. E. Greene, Writing Science in Plain English, Chicago, IL, USA: The University of Chicago Press, 2013.[15] G. R. Hess and E. N. Brooks, “The Class Poster Conference as a Teaching Tool,” Journal of Natural Resources and Life Sciences Education, vol. 27, no. 1, pp. 155–158, 1998, doi: 10.2134/jnrlse.1998.0155.[16] J. Schimel, Writing Science: How to Write Papers that Get Cited and Proposals
Conference Session
Liberal Education/Engineering & Society Division (LEES) Technical Session 1: Critical Reflections on Teaching and Learning
Collection
2025 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Jennifer Howcroft, University of Waterloo; Kate Mercer, University of Waterloo; Julie Vale, University of Guelph; D'andre Jermaine Wilson-Ihejirika P.Eng., University of Toronto; Stephen Mattucci, University of Guelph
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Liberal Education/Engineering & Society Division (LEES)
with participants in my research and to acknowledge thebiases I bring. From my early struggles with homesickness in first year, to my passion foroutreach and advocacy developed through NSBE, to finally securing my first internship in theOil Sands during my master’s degree which I felt ultimately validated my identity as an engineer,my career pathway has been shaped and informed by the experiences in my undergraduatedegree. These reflections ground me in focus of my PhD research: to illuminate the factorsshaping diverse career paths in engineering and to foster environments where all students canthrive.1 The author identified she used ChatGPT as part of her writing process for this section to synthesize similar writingsshe had previously done