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Conference Session
Graduate Education Track - Technical Session V
Collection
2018 CoNECD - The Collaborative Network for Engineering and Computing Diversity Conference
Authors
Heather Doty, University of Delaware; L. Pamela Cook, University of Delaware
Tagged Topics
Diversity, Graduate Education
engineering graduate school: why they may beinterested, what are the benefits, what it is like to be a graduate student, and how they shouldprepare.We also bring in external speakers to lead professional-development workshops. Examplesinclude one on using social media to build your professional identity and expand opportunities;an AWIS (Association for Women in Science) workshop on work-life satisfaction; and aleadership workshop for STEM graduate students, focusing on communications and negotiations.These external workshops are among our most expensive activities, but they are well worth it.Registration tends to fill quickly, which indicates an ongoing need for this type of information.Post-event surveys of participants indicate a high level of
Conference Session
Undergraduate Track - Technical Session II
Collection
2018 CoNECD - The Collaborative Network for Engineering and Computing Diversity Conference
Authors
Asha Godbole, Oregon State University; Beverly Miller, University of Virginia; Michelle Kay Bothwell, Oregon State University; Devlin Montfort, Oregon State University; Susannah C. Davis, Oregon State University
Tagged Topics
Diversity, Undergraduate Education
’ Perceptions of Belonging through the Lens of Social IdentityAbstractResearch shows that students who feel that they belong in an engineering department are morelikely to develop a strong engineering identity and become situated in the engineeringcommunity. Perceptions of an unwelcoming academic culture are particularly detrimental forstudents from populations that are currently underrepresented. Additional research investigatingstudents’ perceptions of engineering culture, engineering identity, and their own sense ofbelonging is needed. This study explored undergraduate engineering students’ perceptions oftheir sense of belonging in their engineering program, particularly as these related to their socialidentities. It
Conference Session
Undergraduate Track - Technical Session VII
Collection
2018 CoNECD - The Collaborative Network for Engineering and Computing Diversity Conference
Authors
Carlotta A. Berry, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology; Janice Fenn, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology
Tagged Topics
Diversity, Undergraduate Education
Paper ID #241002018 CoNECD - The Collaborative Network for Engineering and ComputingDiversity Conference: Crystal City, Virginia Apr 29STEM Success Stories: Strategies for women and minorities to thrive, notjust survive, in engineeringDr. Carlotta A Berry, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology Dr. Carlotta A. Berry is an associate professor in the department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology. She is the director of the multidisciplinary minor in robotics and co-director of the Rose building undergraduate diversity scholarship and professional development program. She has been the
Conference Session
Disability Track - Technical Session IV
Collection
2018 CoNECD - The Collaborative Network for Engineering and Computing Diversity Conference
Authors
Cassandra J. Groen, Virginia Tech; Marie C. Paretti, Virginia Tech; Lisa D. McNair, Virginia Tech; Denise Rutledge Simmons P.E., Virginia Tech; Ashley Shew, Virginia Tech
Tagged Topics
Disability
Experiencing Disability in Undergraduate Civil Engineering Education: An Initial Examination of the Intersection of Disability and Professional IdentitiesAbstractWhile recent calls throughout the engineering education community have focused on increasingdiversity and broadening participation in STEM, these conversations typically center on race andgender with little to no work addressing disability. But research in higher education broadlysuggests that cognitive, physical, and learning disabilities can markedly impact the ways inwhich students perceive and experience school, develop professional identities, and move intothe engineering workforce. To address this gap, we build on emerging conversations that explorethe
Conference Session
Undergraduate Track - Technical Session VII
Collection
2018 CoNECD - The Collaborative Network for Engineering and Computing Diversity Conference
Authors
Nancy Mariano, Seattle University; Agnieszka Miguel, Seattle University; Mara Rempe, Seattle University; J. McLean Sloughter, Seattle University
Tagged Topics
Diversity, Undergraduate Education
are over 100 full-time and part-time faculty and more than 1,100undergraduate and graduate students. In addition to rigorous technical educations where theory isbalanced with hands-on, laboratory-based work, our students experience emphasis on leadership,teamwork, and oral and written communication.All engineering and computer science students participate in a year-long senior design project which issponsored by local industry. Teams of students mentored by a faculty member and a liaison engineersolve real-world engineering problems. Students design, build and test their own solution, writeproposals and reports, and present the result to their sponsors. By bridging the gap between academiaand industry, the senior design project prepares
Conference Session
Undergraduate Track - Technical Session II
Collection
2018 CoNECD - The Collaborative Network for Engineering and Computing Diversity Conference
Authors
Donald Winiecki Ph.D., Boise State University; Noah Salzman, Boise State University; Timothy Andersen, Boise State University; Amit Jain, Boise State University; Dianxiang Xu, Boise State University
Tagged Topics
Diversity, Undergraduate Education
of EngineeringIntroductionIn the summer of 2016, the Boise State University Computer Science (BSU CS) department was arecipient of a grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF) under the program titled`Revolutionizing Engineering Departments` (RED).1 In our proposal, we documented our very uniqueposition as a well-established computer science department that has just expanded the number oftenured and tenure-track faculty nearly two-fold, that has an excellent relationship with area industriesthat commonly employ BSU CS graduates, and a strong desire to increase enrollment and retention ofstudents who are members of traditionally underrepresented groups in Computer Science education andComputer Science professions. With a nod to the
Conference Session
LGBTQ+ Track - Technical Session IV
Collection
2018 CoNECD - The Collaborative Network for Engineering and Computing Diversity Conference
Authors
Kristin Boudreau, Worcester Polytechnic Institute; David DiBiasio, Worcester Polytechnic Institute; Paula Quinn, Worcester Polytechnic Institute; Zoe Reidinger
Tagged Topics
Diversity, LGBTQ+
institutions to advance work on project-based learning. She believes project- based learning holds significant potential for increasing the diversity of students who succeed in college and who persist in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) fields, and she views her work with the Center as contributing to education reform from the inside out. She holds an M.A. in Developmental Psychology from Clark University and a B.A. in Psychology from Case Western Reserve University. Her background includes working in the field of education evaluation, where she focused primarily on the areas of project-based learning; STEM; pre-literacy and literacy; student life; learning communities; and professional development. She has
Conference Session
Potpourri
Collection
2018 CoNECD - The Collaborative Network for Engineering and Computing Diversity Conference
Authors
Ilmi Yoon, San Francisco State University
Tagged Topics
Diversity, Diversity Research
Paper ID #212802018 CoNECD - The Collaborative Network for Engineering and ComputingDiversity Conference: Crystal City, Virginia Apr 29Promoting Inclusivity in Computing (PINC) via Computing Application Mi-norProf. Ilmi Yoon, SFSU Professor Ilmi Yoon, Professor of Computer Science at San Francisco State University (SFSU), is an expert in gamification and game development, particularly in interactive media, 3D over the Internet, and network information visualization. She has developed ”DeBugger” Multiplayer Online Game for Educating Computer Science since 2011 and started to focus on various computational education research