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Displaying all 29 results
Conference Session
Community Engagement Division Technical Session 1
Collection
2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Malinda S Zarske, University of Colorado, Boulder; Michael A Soltys, University of Colorado, Boulder; Jennifer Kracha, University of Colorado Boulder
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Community Engagement Division
Paper ID #30265Engagement in Practice: Practicing Empathy in Engineering for theCommunity CourseDr. Malinda S Zarske, University of Colorado, Boulder Malinda Zarske is a faculty member with the Engineering Plus program at the University of Colorado Boulder. She teaches undergraduate product design and core courses through Engineering Plus as well as STEM education courses for pre-service teachers through the CU Teach Engineering program. Her primary research interests include the impacts of project-based service-learning on student identity - es- pecially women and nontraditional demographic groups in engineering - as well
Conference Session
Community Engagement Division Technical Session 5
Collection
2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Adetoun Yeaman, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University ; Diana Bairaktarova, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University; Kenneth Reid, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
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Community Engagement Division
understanding of empathy has also been pursued in the fields ofengineering and technology for purposes relating to the ability of robotic technologies to imitatehuman abilities [8]–[10]. In our study, we focus on the aspect of empathy research concernedwith the ability of people to consider how their decisions affect others.Service learning (S-L) is a well-studied approach to teaching and learning [11]–[16]. It is one ofseveral pedagogies for engaging students in learning. In this study, by service learning we meana learning environment where students are taking a course for credit, serving a community aspart of the course and reflecting on their experience also as a component of the course [12], [17].S-L has been identified as a helpful pedagogy for
Conference Session
Community Engagement Division Technical Session 6
Collection
2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Jessica L. Murphy Ph.D., Jackson State University; Dawn Bishop McLin, jackson state university
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Diversity
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Community Engagement Division
render more loss of life anddestruction of property. As an example, large fires have destroyed highly affluent neighborhoods acrossCalifornia, Texas, and Florida. Floods and flash floods have killed hundreds of people around the worldeach year, more than any other weather event. Catastrophic flooding, as a result of Hurricane Harvey,left many people stranded. Tornadoes cause widespread property damage, clearing slabs and flippingmobile homes. Tornadoes are also most common in the central part and Great Plains regions of theUnited States; thus, including Mississippi (U. S. Tornadoes, 2016).As researcher Quarentelli has predicted (1996 and 2001) the increase of disasters and the emergence ofnew and more impactful disasters, there would be an
Conference Session
Community Engagement Division Technical Session 7
Collection
2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
M. Loraine Lowder, Kennesaw State University; Christina R Scherrer, Kennesaw State University; Kevin Stanley McFall, Kennesaw State University; David R Veazie P.E., Kennesaw State University
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Diversity
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Community Engagement Division
learning by the university, smaller experiencesthat do not last the majority of a semester are still valuable. For example, Attanayake foundthat the incorporation of a three-week service learning project into an introductory mathematicscourse had a measurable impact on students [20]. Construction management students whoparticipated in 10-day service-learning class acknowledged a “responsibility to use their gifts tomake the world a better place” after visiting Ecuador [21]. Our college is currently exploringopportunities to utilize guest speakers with knowledge of needs in the community to developshort-duration, service learning projects.BIBLIOGRAPHY: 1. J. S. Eyler, D. E. Giles, C. M. Stenson, and C. J. Gray, “At A Glance: What We Know about
Conference Session
Community Engagement Division Technical Session 1
Collection
2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Ajay P. Malshe, Purdue University; Kevin M Fitzpatrick, University of Arkansas; Salil Bapat, Purdue University
Tagged Divisions
Community Engagement Division
has also worked extensively with high schools to advance student learning success. Malshe’s notable honors include: Membership in the National Academy of En- gineering (NAE) for ”For innovations in nanomanufacturing with impact in multiple industry sectors”; Society of Manufacturing (SME)’s David Dornfeld Blue Sky Manufacturing Idea Award for ”Factories- In-Space”; SME-S.M. Wu Research Implementation Award; three Edison Awards for Innovation; Tibbett Award by the US Small Business Association sponsored by EPA for successful technology transfer; R&D 100 Award, (the ”Oscar” of innovation); Fellowships to the International 1. Academy of Production Engineering (CIRP), 2. the American Society of Materials (ASM), 3
Conference Session
Community Engagement Division Technical Session 6
Collection
2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Joan B Schuman, Missouri University of Science and Technology
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Diversity
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Community Engagement Division
Paper ID #30102Evaluating the Impact of Training on Increasing Cross Culture CompetencyDr. Joan B Schuman, Missouri University of Science and Technology Dr. Joan Schuman is an Associate Teaching Professor in the Engineering Management and Systems Engineering Department at Missouri S&T. She earned her Bachelor of Science degree in Mechanical Engineering from University of Arkansas and completed her Ph.D. in Polymer Science and Engineering from the University of Southern Mississippi. Schuman is a Project Management Professional (PMP) certified through the Project Management Institute. She worked for several years in the
Conference Session
Community Engagement Division Technical Session 6
Collection
2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Cristiano Cordeiro Cruz, Aeronautics Technological Institute
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Diversity
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Community Engagement Division
Paper ID #28670Brazilian Grassroots Engineer’s Education: Achievements, Flaws, andChallengesDr. Cristiano Cordeiro Cruz, Aeronautics Technological Institute I currently develop a post-doctorate research at the Aeronautics Technological Institute (ITA) with a schol- arship from FAPESP (#2018/20563-3). I hold a PhD degree in Philosophy (University of S˜ao Paulo, 2017), a bachelor degree in Philosophy (Jesuit Faculty of Philosophy and Theology, 2008), a master degree in Electrical Engineering (University of Campinas, 2002), and a bachelor degree in Electrical Engineering (University of Campinas, 1999). My research area
Conference Session
Community Engagement Division Technical Session 4
Collection
2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Melissa Morris, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University - Worldwide
Tagged Divisions
Community Engagement Division
consider adopting carefully curatedcommunity collaborative projects from the start of engineering education programs and onthroughout, rather than only at the end.References 1. N.W. Klingbeil, R.E. Mercer, K.S. Rattan, M. L. Raymer, and D.B. Reynolds, “Rethinking engineering mathematics education: A model for increased retention, motivation and success in Engineering,” in Proceedings of the 2004 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference and Exposition, paper 2465, 2004. 2. S. Cai and W. Grebski, “Improving retention through implementation of ‘toy fun’ projects into fundamental engineering classes,” in Proceedings of the 2011 IAJC-ASEE International Conference, Paper 104, Eng 103, 2011. 3. S. Cai
Conference Session
Community Engagement Division Technical Session 5
Collection
2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Lauren Anne Cooper, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo; Amanda Johnston, Purdue University-Main Campus, West Lafayette (College of Engineering); Emily Honor Hubbard, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo; Brian P. Self, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo
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Diversity
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Community Engagement Division
model variance.Table 2: Results of the 2-Way ANOVAAnalysis of Variance Source DF Adj SS Adj MS F-Value P-Value ID 6 0.12534 0.020890 3.68 0.010 CON 4 0.05776 0.014440 2.54 0.066Model Summary S R-sq R-sq(adj) R-sq(pred) 0.0753658 57.32% 39.54% 9.24%Post-hoc analysis using a Tukey test was performed to determine which variables in the datawere likely contributing to differences in means as indicated by ANOVA. Means that do notshare a letter are statistically different, with a 95% confidence interval. Table 3. Tukey test to
Conference Session
Community Engagement Division Technical Session 6
Collection
2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Cristiano Cordeiro Cruz, Aeronautics Technological Institute
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Diversity
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Community Engagement Division
Paper ID #28669Assessing Grassroots Engineering Applications in BrazilDr. Cristiano Cordeiro Cruz, Aeronautics Technological Institute I currently develop a post-doctorate research at the Aeronautics Technological Institute (ITA) with a schol- arship from FAPESP (#2018/20563-3). I hold a PhD degree in Philosophy (University of S˜ao Paulo, 2017), a bachelor degree in Philosophy (Jesuit Faculty of Philosophy and Theology, 2008), a master degree in Electrical Engineering (University of Campinas, 2002), and a bachelor degree in Electrical Engineering (University of Campinas, 1999). My research area encompasses philosophy of
Conference Session
Community Engagement Division Technical Session 2
Collection
2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Julee Farley, Montgomery County Public Schools and Virginia Tech; Lisa D. McNair, Virginia Tech
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Diversity
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Community Engagement Division
majority of boundary-spanning liaison positions between schools and universitiesare short-term or project-based (e.g., Castelli, Centeio, Boehrnsen, Barclay, & Bundy, 2012;Hoppey, 2016). In contrast, the role we discuss is a long-term position that spans multipleprojects and was constructed explicitly for boundary spanning between the organizations.MethodsTo determine whether the educational liaisons who facilitate partnerships between a researchuniversity and formal education sites fit the criteria of a boundary spanner, we designed aqualitative study in which we analyzed documents such as activity reports using ​a priori c​ odesadapted from Jesiek, et al.’s synthesized model. The data originates from our own reflectivepractice, so we
Conference Session
Community Engagement Division Technical Session 3
Collection
2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Camilo Andrés Navarro Forero P.E.; Odesma Onika Dalrymple, University of San Diego
Tagged Topics
Diversity
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Community Engagement Division
same characteristics given the current state of the system, as proposed by Ackoff´s“Interactive Planning methodology”[11] . The Idealized Design model proposed by Ackoff,allows the participants to establish the existing gaps between reality and their ideal modeland begin to co-create projects focused on eventually achieving those goals, planning in theshort, middle and long term. They are also asked to do a subsequent exercise ofprioritization of objectives to know which are the most important for the actors as a group.The final outcome of STW#2 is another set of agreements among stakeholders on the mostimportant variables to be addressed through any proposed project.STW#3The third social transformation workshop STW # 3, “Critical Systems
Conference Session
Community Engagement Division Technical Session 2
Collection
2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Yanjun Yan, Western Carolina University; Mary Anna LaFratta, School of Art and Design, Western Carolina University; Lane Graves Perry III, Western Carolina University; Hugh Jack P. Eng. P.E., Western Carolina University
Tagged Divisions
Community Engagement Division
client s/heworked with was not interested in it. The seven clients that the students worked with signed up todo this project voluntarily. The clients are on the Autism spectrum, and we want to use art andtechnology to bring forth their creativity. We are not sure if it is the way of communication thatcaused this misunderstanding, or if the client that the student worked with was truly unhappy tobe there. During the second meeting, the clients all presented their Arduino programming work,and the helpers to the clients were amazed and said that they wouldn’t normally do so. When oneclient missed a meeting, that client would work at home and bring back the work to us. On theexhibit day, the clients dressed up and visited their project with
Conference Session
Community Engagement Division Technical Session 3
Collection
2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Juan C. Lucena, Colorado School of Mines
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Diversity
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Community Engagement Division
., vol. 2, no. 1, Mar. 2010.[4] J. Lucena, J. Schneider, and J. A. Leydens, Engineering and Sustainable Community Development. San Rafael, CA: Morgan & Claypool, 2010.[5] Does America Need More Innovators? .[6] C. Struckmann, “A postcolonial feminist critique of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development: A South African application,” Agenda, vol. 32, no. 1, pp. 12–24, Jan. 2018, doi: 10.1080/10130950.2018.1433362.[7] D. Moyo and N. Ferguson, Dead Aid: Why Aid Is Not Working and How There Is a Better Way for Africa. Macmillan, 2010.[8] B. E. Goldstein, Collaborative Resilience: Moving Through Crisis to Opportunity. MIT Press, 2012.[9] N. R. Council, D. on E. and L. Studies, B. on E. S. and Resources, G. S. Committee, and C
Conference Session
Community Engagement Division Technical Session 4
Collection
2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Maija A Benitz, Roger Williams University; Li-Ling Yang, Roger Williams University
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Diversity
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Community Engagement Division
. Finally, we plan to incorporate more individual reflection activities before, during,and after the project to enhance students’ growth and self-evaluation.AcknowledgmentsThe authors would like to acknowledge their research assistants for their work on this project; TessAlexandre, Kristen Brien, Barry Dunn, Olivia Ryan, and Nathan Wilson. This work was supportedby grants from the Hassenfeld Community Projects fund and the RWU Foundation to PromoteScholarship & Teaching, as well as a gift from TPI Composites in Warren, RI.References1. B. Jacoby and Associates (1997) Service Learning in Higher Education. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass, 1997.2. G. Bucks, W. Oakes, C. Zoltowski, F. Rego, and S. Mah. “Facilitating Multidisciplinary Teams in a
Conference Session
Community Engagement Division Technical Session 7
Collection
2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Stacey V Freeman, Boston University; Sandra Lina Rodegher, Boston University
Tagged Topics
Diversity
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Community Engagement Division
, to inform and assess culturally-relevant,hands-on, interactive activities focused on engineering broadly. Working closely with 10museum partners and educators in Ontario, Portland, Los Angeles, Fort Lauderdale, Detroit,Miami, Ann Arbor, Boston and Buenos Aires, kits were tested, feedback was collected, andevaluation results were used to continuously iterate on the kits to ensure they work well indiverse settings.Perspective(s) or theoretical framework A national crisis will emerge if the United States cannot amplify the number anddiversity of K-12 students who pursue degrees and careers in engineering. Many of society’schallenges impact a broad spectrum of peoples, communities, and systems. Addressing thesechallenges require
Conference Session
Community Engagement Division Technical Session 3
Collection
2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
John Bernhard Kleba, ITA - Aeronautics Technological Institute (Brazil); Cristiano Cordeiro Cruz, Aeronautics Technological Institute (Brazil)
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Community Engagement Division
2014 he was awarded by FAPESP with a post-doctoral research at the Centre for Ethics, Law and Public Affairs at the same university. His research focus relies on Engineering and Community Services; Socio-Legal Studies, Science and Technology Studies, Political philosophy, Sociology of Environment and Intellectual Property Rights.Dr. Cristiano Cordeiro Cruz, Aeronautics Technological Institute (Brazil) I currently develop a post-doctorate research at the Aeronautics Technological Institute (ITA) with a schol- arship from FAPESP (#2018/20563-3). I hold a PhD degree in Philosophy (University of S˜ao Paulo, 2017), a bachelor degree in Philosophy (Jesuit Faculty of Philosophy and Theology, 2008), a master degree in
Conference Session
Community Engagement Division Technical Session 3
Collection
2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
James L. Huff, Harding University; Degnan William Lawrence; Amanda Coleman
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Diversity
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Community Engagement Division
Conference Session
Community Engagement Division Technical Session 6
Collection
2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Julie Fogarty, California State University, Sacramento; Nathan E Canney P.E., CYS Structural Engineers Inc.; Benjamin V Fell P.E., California State University, Sacramento
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Diversity
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Community Engagement Division
Partners: Service Learning as Route to Authority for Basic Writers,” Journal of Basic Writing (CUNY), 28(1), 50-70.Geisinger, B. and Raman, D. (2013). “Why They Leave: Understanding Student Attrition from Engineering Majors,” International Journal of Engineering Education, 29(4), 914-925.Gillis, C. (1994). “Writing Partners: Expanding Audiences for Student Writing,” The English Journal, 83(3); 64-67.Griffith, A. (2010). “Persistence of Women and Minorities in STEM Field Majors: Is it the School that Matters?” Economics of Education Review, 29, 911-922.Hayford, B., Blomstrom, S., and DeBoer B. (2014). “STEM and Service-Learning: Does Service- Learning Increase STEM Literacy.” International Journal of Research on
Conference Session
Community Engagement Division Technical Session 3
Collection
2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Whitney Gaskins, University of Cincinnati; Tracy Pritchard, University of Cincinnati; Delano White; Keri K. Eason
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Diversity
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Community Engagement Division
learning outside of the classroom.Parents, guardians and church members will be trained by college student and faculty volunteersto lead STEM courses within the EPICC STEMulation Zones.References[1] Henderson, Anne T., “The Evidence Continues to Grow: Parent Involvement ImprovesStudent Achievement. An Annotated Bibliography.”, National Committee for Citizens inEducation Special Report, 1987.[2] Jeynes, William H., "A meta-analysis: The effects of parental involvement on minoritychildren’s academic achievement." Education and urban society 35.2: 202-218, 2003.[3] Walker, Joan MT, Susan S. Shenker, and Kathleen V. Hoover-Dempsey, "Why do parentsbecome involved in their children's education? Implications for school counselors." ProfessionalSchool
Conference Session
Community Engagement Division Technical Session 1
Collection
2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Ben Ralph Bernard, North Dakota State University; Jeremy Straub, North Dakota State University; Pranay Kumar Marella, Mississippi State University
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Community Engagement Division
://cybersecurityventures.com/only-3-percent-of-u-s-bachelors- degree-grads-have-cybersecurity-related-skills/. [Accessed: 18-Dec-2019].[7] “What is EE.” [Online]. Available: https://www.aee.org/what-is-ee. [Accessed: 01-May- 2020].[8] D. Efstratia, “Experiential Education through Project Based Learning,” Procedia - Soc. Behav. Sci., vol. 152, pp. 1256–1260, 2014.[9] J. W. Thomas, “A REVIEW OF RESEARCH ON PROJECT-BASED LEARNING The Autodesk Foundation 111 McInnis Parkway San Rafael, California 94903 (415) 507-6336 Fax (415) 507-6339 http://www.autodesk.com/foundation,” 2000.[10] “GenCyber - FAQ.” [Online]. Available: https://www.gen-cyber.com/faq/. [Accessed: 03- Feb-2020].[11] T. ; Abegaz and K. Antonia, “Planning and
Conference Session
Community Engagement Division Technical Session 7
Collection
2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Elizabeth Johnson, Playful Learning Lab; Elise Rodich, University of St. Thomas; Hannah French; Annmarie Thomas, University of St. Thomas
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Diversity
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Community Engagement Division
constraints (e.g. space limit, regulations, etc.) 4. DESIGN REQUIREMENTS: • List the design requirements you have identified for this project, based on what you learned doing the background information phase. Prioritize by which requirements are a must-have versus those which would be nice to have. • Each requirement must be complete, unambiguous, consistent, verifiable, and independent of the specific design. • Separate requirements into categories based on form, function, performance, reliability, maintenance, etc. • For each requirement, list the user need(s) which are satisfied if this requirement is met. Note that this document is not an essay – it should be short, to
Conference Session
Community Engagement Division Technical Session 1
Collection
2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Patrick John Sours, Ohio State University; Michael J Hagenberger P.E., Ohio State University
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Diversity
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Community Engagement Division
;.McCabe, J. T., Leslie, P. W., & DeLuca, L. (2010). Adopting Cultivation to Remain Pastoralists:The Diversification of Maasai Livelihoods in Northern Tanzania. Human Ecology, 38(3), 321–334.https://doi.org/10.1007/s10745-010-9312-8Greene, H., Eldridge, K. and Sours, P. (2019). Engagement in Practice: The Vocabulary ofCommunity Development as an Indicator of a Participatory Mindset. ASEE Annual ConferenceProceedings, American Society for Engineering Education. Paper No. AC 2019-26610. 7 p. (Peerreviewed)Browning, S. A. (1997). Understanding Non-Western Cultures: A Strategic IntelligencePerspective.: https://doi.org/10.21236/ADA326929Community participation in development: nine plagues and twelve commandments,Community Development Journal
Conference Session
Community Engagement Division Technical Session 2
Collection
2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Rob Rouse, Southern Methodist University; Juan Torralba, University of Miami; Kathryn Krummeck; DiMitri Higginbotham, Good Shepherd Episcopal School
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Diversity
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Community Engagement Division
quality of partnerships weenter into. Our goal is to develop more sustained encounters. We also plan to focus on measuringthe effectiveness of the partnerships we enter into by collecting feedback from the educators andstudents who we work with and by assessing how eductors’ attitudes, beliefs, and knowledgechange in response to partnership. Our goal is to improve our methods for supporting educatorsand to share our results with a wider audience. Finally, we plan to create opportunities forundergraduate engineering students to join the project. Our goal is to form a dedicated group ofstudent workers and volunteers to design maker activities and operate the MakerTruck.References1. K. Peppler, and S. Bender, “Maker movement spreads innovation one
Conference Session
Community Engagement Division Technical Session 5
Collection
2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Romeo Ballinas-Gonzalez, Tecnologico de Monterrey; Benjamin Sanchez, Tecnologico de Monterrey; Miguel X. Rodriguez-Paz, Tecnologico de Monterrey (ITESM); Juan Arturo Nolazco-Flores, Tecnologico de Monterrey
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Community Engagement Division
of Writing Lab, TecLabs, Tecnologico deMonterrey, Mexico, in the production of this work.References[1] S. Ghanta, "Augmenting soft skills in engineering students," J. Adv. Res. Dyn. Control. Syst., vol. 11,(Special Issue 6), pp. 1720-1722, 2019.[2] M. Debnath et al, "4 - Role of soft skills in engineering education: students' perceptions andfeedback," pp. 61-82, 2012. . DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/B978-1-84334-645-6.50004-5. 9[3] M. Abdous, B. R. Facer and C. Yen, "Academic effectiveness of podcasting: A comparative study ofintegrated versus supplemental use of podcasting in second language classes," Computers & Education,vol. 58, (1), pp. 43-52, 2012. . DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016
Conference Session
Community Engagement Division Technical Session 7
Collection
2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Flor Angela Bravo, Pontificia Universidad Javeriana; Juan M Cruz, Rowan University; Jairo Alberto Hurtado JAH, Pontificia Universidad Javeriana
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Community Engagement Division
, in Higher education and civic engagement. 2009, Ashgate: Aldershot, England. p. 37-52.3. Jin, S.-H., Collaborative instructional models for teaching community service to engineering students. The International Journal of Engineering Education, 2018. 34(6): p. 1897-1909.4. Bravo, F.A., et al. Promoviendo el aprendizaje de áreas steam en instituciones educativas de comunidades vulnerables, a través del diseño e implementación de proyectos de robótica educativa por parte de los estudiantes de ingeniería como parte de su proyecto social. in Encuentro Internacional de Educación en Ingeniería ACOFI 2018. Cartagena, Colombia.5. ABET, 2017-2018 Criteria for Accrediting Engineering Programs. 2018
Conference Session
Community Engagement Division Technical Session 7
Collection
2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Shreya Gupta, Bit Project, College of Engineering, UC Davis; Dong Gyun Kim, Bit Project, College of Engineering, UC Davis; Victoria Kang Li Xu, Bit Project, College of Engineering, UC Davis
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. 2015. Science Teachers' Learning: Enhancing Opportunities, Creating SupportiveContexts. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. [Online]. Available:https://www.nap.edu/read/21836/chapter/6#72. [Accessed Jan. 27, 2020].[3] “Assessment of Diversity in America’s Teaching Force: A Call to Action,” NationalCollaborative on Diversity in the Teaching Force, Washington, D.C., October 2004.[4] NGSS Lead States “Next Generation Science Standards: For States, By States (insert specificsection title(s) being used if not referring to the entirety of the NGSS),” Washington, DC: TheNational Academies Press. [Online]. Available:https://www.nextgenscience.org/understanding-standards/understanding-standards. [AccessedJan. 21, 2020].[5] National Research
Conference Session
Community Engagement Division Technical Session 6
Collection
2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Angela R Bielefeldt, University of Colorado, Boulder; Greg Rulifson PE, USAID
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Diversity
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Community Engagement Division
technical, professional, and personallearning outcomes can result, regardless of whether the activity is embedded within courses asservice-learning or conducted by students for pay or as volunteer activities.AcknowledgementsThis material is based on work supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant#1158863. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in thismaterial are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the NationalScience Foundation.References[1] Jeffers, A.T., A.G. Safferman, S.I. Safferman. 2004. Understanding K-12 Engineering Outreach Programs. Journal of Professional Issues in Engineering Education and Practice, 130 (2), 95-108.[2] Yowell, J.L., M.S. Zarske, D. Knight
Conference Session
Community Engagement Division Technical Session 4
Collection
2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Chelsea Cefalu, Lafayette College ; Arthur D. Kney, Lafayette College
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Diversity
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Community Engagement Division
uncover more reliabledata in future iterations of the program. Modifying these questions will allow students to providemore honest and relevant feedback. Current questions, the indicator they are meant to measure,and their proposed modifications are outlined in Table 8. Table 8: Comparison of current and proposed modification to questions Current Indicator(s) Proposed It has been said that one Civic Learning Explain some methods you doesn't truly understand Civic Efficacy employed to make the something until they can academic material explain it to someone else. understandable to