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- Track: Special Topic - Identity Technical Session 10
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- 2019 CoNECD - The Collaborative Network for Engineering and Computing Diversity
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Andrea Haverkamp, Oregon State University; Ava Butler, Oregon State University; Naya Selene Pelzl; Michelle Kay Bothwell, Oregon State University; Devlin Montfort, Oregon State University; Qwo-Li Driskill, Oregon State University
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Diversity, Special Topic: Identity
to hostileclimate in science, technology engineering, and mathematics (STEM) which results in adiminished sense of belonging in their field [2-5]. Student experiences of discrimination on thebasis of gender and race also lead to lower trust in their department and greater disidentificationwith their programs [6]. A sense of belonging – which can be described as comradery, positiverelationships, and identification with peers – is a critical component to persistence in engineeringeducation [7-9]. Studies which seek to describe a universal LGBTQ+ experience may overlookexperiences surrounding gender which are specific to the transgender and gender nonconforming(TGNC) population. Lesbian, gay, and bisexual identities primarily revolve
- Conference Session
- Track: Special Topic - Identity Technical Session 13
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- 2019 CoNECD - The Collaborative Network for Engineering and Computing Diversity
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Catherine E. Brawner, Research Triangle Educational Consultants; Susan M. Lord, University of San Diego; Catherine Mobley, Clemson University; Michelle M. Camacho, University of San Diego; Joyce B. Main, Purdue University, West Lafayette
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Diversity, Special Topic: Identity
Paper ID #25003Race, Veteran, and Engineering Identities among Black Male Student Veter-ansDr. Catherine E. Brawner, Research Triangle Educational Consultants Catherine E. Brawner is President of Research Triangle Educational Consultants. She received her Ph.D.in Educational Research and Policy Analysis from NC State University in 1996. She also has an MBA from Indiana University (Bloomington) and a bachelor’s degree from Duke University. She specializes in eval- uation and research in engineering education, computer science education, and technology education. Dr. Brawner is a founding member and former treasurer of
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- Track : Special Topic - Identity Technical Session 7
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- 2019 CoNECD - The Collaborative Network for Engineering and Computing Diversity
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Michael Lorenzo Greene, Arizona State University, Polytechnic campus; Nadia N. Kellam, Arizona State University; Brooke Charae Coley, Arizona State University, Polytechnic campus
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Diversity, Special Topic: Identity
engineering pedagogy.Dr. Nadia N. Kellam, Arizona State University Dr. Nadia Kellam is Associate Professor in the Polytechnic Engineering Program at Arizona State Uni- versity. Prior to this position, she was an Associate Professor at the University of Georgia, where she was co-director of the interdisciplinary engineering education research Collaborative Lounge for Un- derstanding Society and Technology through Educational Research (CLUSTER). In her research, she is interested in understanding how engineering students develop their professional identity, the role of emo- tion in student learning, and synergistic learning. A recent research project uncovers the narratives of exemplary engineering faculty who have
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- Track: Special Topic - Identity Technical Session 12
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- 2019 CoNECD - The Collaborative Network for Engineering and Computing Diversity
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Cara Margherio, University of Washington; Coleen Carrigan, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo; Joyce Yen, University of Washington; Marie Claire Horner-Devine; Eve A. Riskin, University of Washington; Julie Ivy, North Carolina State University; Christine S. Grant, North Carolina State University
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Diversity, Special Topic: Identity
research interests include community cultural wealth, counterspaces, intersectionality, and institutional change.Dr. Coleen Carrigan, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Dr. Coleen Carrigan is an assistant professor of Anthropology and Science, Technology and Society (STS) at California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo. Using ethnography, she investigates the historical and cultural dimensions of science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM), with a particular emphasis on Computer Science and Engineering, and why these high-status fields appear impervious to desegregation. Dr. Carrigan shares the findings from her research to foster welcoming environments for underrepresented
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- Track : Special Topics - Identity Technical Session 8
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- 2019 CoNECD - The Collaborative Network for Engineering and Computing Diversity
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Stephen Secules, Purdue University, West Lafayette ; Cassandra J. Groen-McCall, Virginia Tech
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Diversity, Special Topic: Identity
. degrees in Civil Engineering from the South Dakota School of Mines & Technology. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2019 To Be or Not to Be: A Dialogic Discussion of Two Researchers’ Hidden and Transitioning Identities Introduction Simplicities are enormously complex. Consider the sentence “I am”. With this opening adapted from a poem by Richard O. Moore (2010), we emphasize howsome of the simplest aspects of the human experience contain vast complexity: identity;belonging; education; justice. The CoNECD community focuses on these aspects and centers thescholarship and practice of equity and