- Conference Session
- Committee on Educational Policy Presents: Holistic Program Topics
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- 2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Venktesh Pandey, North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University; Maranda McBride, North Carolina A&T State University (CoE); Hyoshin Park
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Diversity
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Civil Engineering Division (CIVIL)
article and discuss the ongoing/future work.2 Literature ReviewEngineering and technology education is often criticized for producing students without some ofthe most critical skills required to succeed in the workforce. While technical skills are essentialand must be among the primary outcomes of any STEM education program, they are not the soleskills needed by STEM graduates. Upon graduation, STEM students should be equipped with theskills necessary to communicate both orally and in written form, work in and lead diverse teams,think creatively and critically, and adapt to the ever-changing work environment. Thesetransferrable skills are commonly referred to as soft skills [10-12]. Transferrable skills weredeemed vital enough to the STEM
- Conference Session
- Civil Engineering Division (CIVIL) Poster Session
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- 2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Afeefa Rahman, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign; Casey J Rodgers, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign; Jacob Henschen, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
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Civil Engineering Division (CIVIL)
Computer Science 14.3% Modeling 14.3% No response 14.3%For Question 8, students stated what engineering skills or technologies they learnedindependently during the course of the project. The responses varied but seem to be able to beroughly divided into four main themes: experimental design skills, experimental testing skills,specific softwares, and soft skills. Experimental design skills encompass skills required to designan experiment such as drawings and mix designs, while experimental testing skills involves skillsrequired to execute an experiment such as 3D printing, testing concrete, and analyses. Specificsoftwares cover softwares
- Conference Session
- Committee on Educational Policy Presents: Pillars of Professional Development
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- 2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Ellen Zerbe, Georgia Institute of Technology; Adjo A. Amekudzi-Kennedy, Georgia Institute of Technology; Kevin Haas, Georgia Institute of Technology; Robert Benjamin Simon, Georgia Institute of Technology; Janece Shaffer
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Civil Engineering Division (CIVIL)
understanding different perspectives, build connectionsbetween their ideas and those of their teammates, and can more effectively create value through adeeper understanding of how individual and community values shape the human experience.Despite its recognized importance [42], teamwork skills (and other inter- and intrapersonal skills)are often relegated to the realm of “soft skills,” considered separate from “technical” engineeringskills, and potentially neglected in favor of more “rigorous” content [43]. Similarly, the role thatreflection and internalization play in skill and mindset development is often undervalued inengineering [44] despite engineering education’s increasing study of their value [45]–[47]. SDLencourages students to engage in
- Conference Session
- ASCE Liasion Committee Presents: All Things ASCE
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- 2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Matthew K. Swenty, Virginia Military Institute; Benjamin Z. Dymond, University of Minnesota Duluth
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Diversity
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Civil Engineering Division (CIVIL)
answering the question “Are new graduates and rising professionals with an undergraduate degree adequately prepared when entering the [structural engineering] workforce?,” 72% of practitioners replied no, which is related to both technical skills and “soft skills” (e.g., technical communication). A list of additional “soft skills” noted by practitioners in the 2021 survey [7] included communication, creativity, flexibility, leadership, public speaking, and engineering teamwork. ● In the 2021 survey [7], practitioners were also asked to rate the importance of the additional courses/topics shown below, which were identified and listed by the BEC. The five most important additional topics identified by practitioners are
- Conference Session
- Committee on Educational Policy Presents: Pillars of Our Classrooms
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- 2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Nirmala Gnanapragasam, Seattle University
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Civil Engineering Division (CIVIL)
://www.abet.org/accreditation/accreditation-criteria/criteria-for- accrediting-engineering-programs-2019-2020/#GC3 (accessed Jan. 31, 2023).[5] P. Miller, J. Bausser, A. Fentimen, “Responding to Technical Writing in an Introductory Engineering Class: the Role of Genre and discipline”, Technical Communications Quarterly, Vol 7 (4), pp 443-461, Fall 1998.[6] M. Itani, I. Srour, “Engineering students’ perceptions of soft skills, industry expectations, and career aspirations”, Journal of Professional Issues in Engineering Practice, Vol 142 (1), 2016.[7] J. Lang, S. Cruse, F. D. McVey, J. McMasters, “Industry expectations of new engineers: A survey to assist curriculum designers”, ASEE Journal of Engineering