Paper ID #31431Ohio Technology Education Status Study (Fundamental)Joanne Baltazar Vakil, The Ohio State University Joanne Baltazar Vakil is a STEM Education PhD Candidate at The Ohio State University. She holds a Masters in Mathematics for Educators from Worcester Polytechnic Institute. She has taught middle school/high school for sixteen years, with a focus of mathematics and science, in which she had students implement the engineering design process with challenge-based learning.Dr. Paul E. Post, The Ohio State University Ph.D. in Industrial Technology, Purdue University M.S. in Industrial Education, Purdue University B.S
strategies to assist incoming freshmen cope with first year mathematics classes. She developed teaching modules to improve students’ learning in mathematics using technology.Dr. M. Javed Khan, Tuskegee University Dr. M. Javed Khan is Professor and Head of Aerospace Science Engineering Department at Tuskegee University. He received his Ph.D. in Aerospace Engineering from Texas A&M University, M.S. in Aero- nautical Engineering from the US Air Force Institute of Technology, and B.E. in Aerospace Engineer- ing from the PAF College of Aeronautical Engineering. He also has served as Professor and Head of Aerospace Engineering Department at the National University of Science and Technology,Pakistan. His research
Paper ID #28382Advancing High School STEM Education: Implications for EngineeringTechnologyDr. Anne M Lucietto, Purdue Polytechnic Institute Dr. Lucietto has focused her research in engineering technology education and the understanding of engineering technology students. She teaches in an active learning style which engages and develops practical skills in the students. Currently she is exploring the performance and attributes of engineering technology students and using that knowledge to engage them in their studies.Dr. MESUT AKDERE, Purdue University Mesut Akdere is an Associate Professor of Human Resource Development
Paper ID #30679Code + Chords: Targeting Self-Efficacy in Music Technology (WIP)Alyssa Marie Eggersgluss, Playful Learning Lab Alyssa Eggersgluss is a K-12 Vocal Music Education Major from the University of St. Thomas. Passionate about interdisciplinary learning, she works as a part of Dr. AnnMarie Thomas’ Playful Learning Lab to create learning opportunities for students. She is currently focused on exploring different ways to engage students with sound.Dr. AnnMarie Thomas, University of St. Thomas AnnMarie Thomas is a professor in the School of Engineering and the Opus Colluege of Business at the University of St
Paper ID #30692Code + Chords: Engaging with Coding, Music, Art, and Technology(Resource Exchange)Alyssa Marie Eggersgluss, Playful Learning Lab Alyssa Eggersgluss is a K-12 Vocal Music Education Major from the University of St. Thomas. Passionate about interdisciplinary learning, she works as a part of Dr. AnnMarie Thomas’ Playful Learning Lab to create educational opportunities for students. She is currently focused on exploring different ways to engage students with sound.Dr. AnnMarie Thomas, University of St. Thomas AnnMarie Thomas is a professor in the School of Engineering and the Opus Colluege of Business at the
Paper ID #29743Work in Progress: A Summer Outreach Program in Chemical EngineeringEmphasizing Sustainable Technologies Related to Plastic MaterialsDr. Diane L Nelson, Carnegie Mellon University Diane Nelson is a Presidential Postdoctoral Fellow and a Burroughs Welcome Fund Postdoctoral Fellow in Chemical Engineering who is committed to exploring the unique properties of fluorinated materials and harnessing those properties to improve drug delivery vehicles to the lung. She has spent the last six years creating and testing her delivery system on various lung diseases and is currently defining the process of droplet
Paper ID #29229The Effectiveness of Using Robotics for Career Technology Education in aMiddle School STE(A)M Course (Fundamental)Dr. Jennifer Parham-Mocello, Oregon State University I am interested in computer science education research related to K-12 curriculum, diversity in computer science, undergraduate computer science learning, and adult and teacher training.Mr. Ernie Bodle, Oregon State University I am interested in incorporating more STEM topics in K-12 education to prepare future generations to our ever advancing world. American c Society for Engineering
structure and gene expressions of proteins. Jasmine is currently pursuing her Masters in Public Health with a concentration in Epidemiology at Georgia State University. Currently, Jasmine works as an Educational Outreach Manager at Center for Education Integrating Science, Mathematics, and Computing (CEISMC) at Georgia Tech and manages the K12 InVenture Prize which is an engineering education and invention competition.Dr. Roxanne A Moore, Georgia Institute of Technology Roxanne Moore is currently a Research Engineer at Georgia Tech with appointments in the school of Mechanical Engineering and the Center for Education Integrating Mathematics, Science, and Computing (CEISMC). She is involved with engineering education
Paper ID #29872All-inclusive outreach - A long-term co-operation process between aFinnish mid-sized university and a mid-sized town (Work in Progress)Dr. Johanna Kristiina Naukkarinen, Lappeenranta-Lahti University of Technology LUT Johanna Naukkarinen received her M.Sc. degree in chemical engineering from Helsinki University of Technology in 2001, her D.Sc. (Tech) degree in knowledge management from Tampere University of Technology in 2015, and her professional teacher qualification from Tampere University of Applied sci- ences in 2013. She is currently working as a post-doctoral researcher and project manager with the School
Paper ID #29584Work. Study. Play!James R McCusker PhD, Wentworth Institute of Technology James R. McCusker is an Associate Professor at Wentworth Institute of Technology in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering. Since joining Wentworth in 2010, he has been heavily involved with an array of interdisciplinary design courses that range from introductory to capstone courses.Mr. Alex Spiro BurchMs. Jasmine Maya Andrade, Wentworth Institute of Technology American c Society for Engineering Education, 2020 Work in Progress: WORK. STUDY. PLAY
Paper ID #31035Computer Coding Scavenger Hunt using Quick Response Codes (ResourceExchange)Dr. Stephany Coffman-Wolph, Ohio Northern University Dr. Stephany Coffman-Wolph is a Visiting Assistant Professor at Ohio Northern University in the Depart- ment of Electrical, Computer Engineering, and Computer Science (ECCS). Research interests include: Artificial Intelligence, Fuzzy Logic, Game Theory, Teaching Computer Science, STEM Outreach, In- creasing diversity in STEM (women and first generation), and Software Engineering.Dr. Kimberlyn Gray, West Virginia University Institute of Technology Dr. Kimberlyn Gray is an Assistant
in Minneapolis, MN.Ms. Alison Haugh, University of St. Thomas Alison is a fifth grade educator at Glacier Hills Elementary School of Arts and Sciences in Eagan, Min- nesota. She completed degree programs in STEM education with an emphasis in engineering, and in Elementary Education at the University of St. Thomas. Currently, Alison is pursuing a Ph.D in STEM Education at the University of Minnesota in and continues to provide insight to undergraduate research students in the Playful Learning Lab.Mrs. Tami Brass, University of St. Thomas and St. Paul Academy and Summit School Director of Instructional Technology, St Paul Academy and Summit School K12 Collaboration Liaison, Center for Engineering Education, St
Paper ID #29575The Formation and Dynamics of Teacher Roles in a Teacher-StudentGroupwork during a Robotic Project (Fundamental)Pooneh Sabouri, New York University Pooneh Sabouri received her Ph.D. in Teaching and Learning, focusing on science education at New York University. She has a master’s degree in mathematics education and statistics from The University of Texas at Austin and earned her bachelor’s degree in Electrical Engineering from Sharif University of Technology in Iran. Pooneh is interested in teacher learning and how to co-develop theoretical tools with teachers to inform and expand their teaching practices
Paper ID #29597Assessing the Effects of a Robotics Workshop with Draw-a-Robot Test(Fundamental)Mr. Abhidipta Mallik, New York University Tandon School of Engineering Abhidipta Mallik received his B.Tech. degree in Electronics and Communication Engineering from the West Bengal University of Technology, Kolkata, India, and M.Tech. degree in Mechatronics from the Indian Institute of Engineering Science and Technology, Shibpur, West Bengal, India. He has one year and ten months of research experience at the CSIR-CMERI, India. He is currently a Ph.D. student in Mechanical Engineering at NYU Tandon School of Engineering
- cently, as Vice Chair of ACM SIGSOFT and General Chair of the 38th International Conference on Soft- ware Engineering. Laura was a founding adviser of MSU Women in Computing; a founding organizer of the Michigan Affiliate NCWIT Aspirations in Computing Award; and a founding organizer of the Michi- gan Celebrations of Women in Computing and General Chair of the first one. Laura co-led TechKobwa, a technology camp for secondary-school teachers and female students in Rwanda, for three summers. She was awarded the ACM SIGSOFT Distinguished Service Award in 2017.Prof. Maureen Doyle, Northern Kentucky University Maureen Doyle is a Professor of Computer Science and Chair of the Computer Science department at Northern
. Thomas where she is the innovation director of the UST Center for Engineering Education. Her research group, the Playful Learning Lab, focuses on engineering and design education for learners of all ages.Mr. Collin John Goldbach, Playful Learning Lab American c Society for Engineering Education, 2020 Paper ID #30638 Collin Goldbach is a mechanical engineering student at the University of St. Thomas in St. Paul Min- nesota with research interests in environmental sustainability, clean power and aerospace technology. He is guided by his passion to inspire the next
Paper ID #29312A Study of Secondary Teachers’ Perceptions of Engineers and Conceptionsof EngineeringEmel Cevik, Texas A&M UniversityDr. Michael Johnson, Texas A&M University Dr. Michael D. Johnson is a professor in the Department of Engineering Technology and Industrial Distribution at Texas A&M University. Prior to joining the faculty at Texas A&M, he was a senior product development engineer at the 3M Corporate Research Laboratory in St. Paul, Minnesota. He received his B.S. in mechanical engineering from Michigan State University and his S.M. and Ph.D. from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Dr
National Leadership Advisory Board of the StriveTogether Network during its affiliation with the KnowledgeWorks Foundation (Cincinnati). He is currently a Senior Fel- low of the American Leadership Forum (Houston/Gulf Coast Chapter) and is serving on the Executive Committee of its Board of Trustees.Dr. Jean S Larson, Arizona State University Jean Larson, Ph.D., is the Educational Director for the NSF-funded Engineering Research Center for Bio- mediated and Bio-inspired Geotechnics (CBBG), and Assistant Research Professor in both the School of Sustainable Engineering and the Built Environment and the Division of Educational Leadership and Innovation at Arizona State University. She has a Ph.D. in Educational Technology
practices in technology-enhanced learning environments. Prior to beginning doctoral work, she taught secondary mathematics for four years as well as created and implemented an interdisciplinary, project-based mathematics, science, and principles-of-technology curriculum for fresh- men and sophomore high school students in Albemarle County, Virginia.Ms. Anne Marguerite McAlister, University of Virginia Anne McAlister is a PhD student in the Department of Curriculum, Instruction and Special Education in the Curry School of Education at the University of Virginia. She holds a BS in Chemical Engineering from The Ohio State University. Her research centers on engineering education, focusing on identity development in higher
design problems and evaluating students’ design arti- facts. Her outreach work focuses on creating resources for K-12 educators to support engineering edu- cation in the classroom. She is also the founder of STOMP (stompnetwork.org), LEGOengineering.com (legoengineering.com) and the Teacher Engineering Education Program (teep.tufts.edu).Michael Forte, Tufts UniversityMr. Russell Lincoln Shute, I am a Technology Education teacher, who teaches classes that introduce students to engineering concepts, at Silver Lake Regional High School, in Kingston, MA. I have a Bachelors from University of Rochester in Chemical Engineering and a Masters in STEM Education from Tufts University. c American Society
Mahmoud, Wartburg College Murad is an Assistant Professor at the Engineering Science Department at Wartburg College. He has a Ph.D. in Engineering Education from Utah State University. Research interests include recruitment into STEM, diversity in STEM as well pedagogy and instruction.Prof. Kurt Henry Becker, Utah State University - Engineering Education Kurt Becker is the current director for the Center for Engineering Education Research (CEER) which examines innovative and effective engineering education practices as well as classroom technologies that advance learning and teaching in engineering. He is also working on National Science Foundation (NSF) funded projects exploring engineering design thinking. His areas
may not have a lot of discretionary time to devoteto formal out-of-school STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics) programs,which foster the subsequent pursuit of STEM careers.1 Moreover, working youth may not haveextra disposable income to devote to many STEM activities such as attendance at sciencemuseums or the purchase of STEM magazines and materials, which also foster the pursuit ofSTEM careers.2, 3 High school students’ workplaces may thus be promising sites for fosteringequitable STEM learning because they are sites inhabited by many youth who do not have thesame access to formal STEM learning opportunities as youth from more affluent families.The purpose of this study was to identify the types of engineering-related
believed to be accessible to a population with limitedengineering training. Both authors had engineering training and engineering education expertise, Social: often team-based; develops through X X X client, peer, and colleague feedback and insightthe first author also had career experience in engineering. The questions were designed to beauthentic enough that engineers with expert knowledge relevant to the scenarios may have space Interdisciplinary: science, technology, and X X
school students maintained by the MassachusettsInstitute of Technology (MIT) Office of Engineering Outreach Programs includes 14 free or low-cost science and engineering summer programs, 15 programs with tuition/fees under $1,000, and11 more-extensive programs with tuition/fees greater than $1,000 [2]. Common goals for manyof these camps include: introducing students to engineering as a possible career path; engagingstudents in collaborative, problem-based learning assignments that integrate mathematics,science, and engineering; and providing examples of how engineers engage in engineeringdesign to solve problems [3]–[6]. Some programs choose to specifically target women as anunderrepresented minority in engineering, such as the New Jersey
retention and motivation, the dynamics of cross-disciplinary collaboration in both academic and industry design environments, and gender and identity in engineering.Dr. Jacob R Grohs, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Jacob Grohs is an Assistant Professor in Engineering Education at Virginia Tech with Affiliate Faculty status in Biomedical Engineering and Mechanics and the Learning Sciences and Technologies at Virginia Tech. He holds degrees in Engineering Mechanics (BS, MS) and in Educational Psychology (MAEd, PhD).Dr. Liesl M Baum, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Dr. Liesl Baum is the Associate Director for Professional Development at the Center for Excellence in Teaching and
/Ecobricks-transforms-plastic- MS-ETS1-3 Engineering Design: Analyze data from tests to waste-to-building-blocks/ determine similarities and differences among several design Materials + Technology solutions to identify the best characteristics of each that can be combined into a new solution to better meet the criteria for success. ● Engineering design process visual aid for easy reference Students will be able to… ● A copy of Rosie Revere, Engineer OR Computer and
Paper ID #28914Engineering Outreach: Ambassador Girls Empowering Girls in the Field(Evaluation)Dr. Sarah Hug, CERC Dr. Sarah Hug is director of the Colorado Evaluation & Research Consulting. Dr. Hug earned her PhD in Educational Psychology at the University of Colorado, Boulder. Her research and evaluation efforts focus on learning science, technology, engineering, and mathematics, with a special interest in communities of practice, creativity, and experiences of underrepresented groups in these fields across multiple contexts.Dr. Suzanne Eyerman, Fairhaven Research and Evaluation Suzanne Eyerman, Ph.D. is a researcher
have been critiques regarding the use of designprocess models for teaching in technology education based on its simplicity and misalignmentwith the way design is undertaken in professional practice [17]. For preservice teachers’ who arealso charged with learning how to teach engineering design, research has considered howpreservice teachers may be supported in creating engineering design pedagogy [18], facilitatingstudent-teacher interactions in design experiences [19], [20], and enacting engineering practices[21]. While the literature summarized above enhances our understanding of what the practicesare and what the teaching of the practices is intended to achieve in terms of student outcomes,current work does not characterize other
First Year Experiential Education and Learning. Through this position, he develops and implements the curriculum for USF’s Foundations of Engineering Lab course. He is also the Principle Investigator for Bulls Engineering Youth Experience (Bulls-EYE Mentoring) a Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math based outreach program that uses undergraduate students to mentor middle school youth.Mrs. Ahmirah Samayah Muhammad, BullsEYE Head Program Coordinator Undergraduate engineering student at the University of South Florida. Mentor, President, Program Coor- dinator, and Head Program Coordinator over 3 consecutive years for the Bulls Engineering Youth Expe- rience under the guide and leadership of Dr. Johnathan Gaines
commotion:” Re-imagining Urban Elementary Students’ Participation in Engineering Design Practices. International Journal of Education in Mathematics Science and Technology, 6(3), 285-301.Appendix A: Interview QuestionsThe following questions were asked in Phase 1 of the individual student interviews. ● Can you please tell me about your design? ● How did you come up with this design? ● Have you ever seen or done anything before that made you think of your solution? ● What do you consider to be good about your design? Why? ○ Follow-up: What things do you like about your design? Why? ● Can you explain how your design solves the problem? ow was your design supposed to