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Conference Session
College Industry Partnerships Division (CIP) Technical Session 3
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Christina A. Pantoja, Campbell University; Joyce B. Main, Purdue University at West Lafayette (COE)
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
College Industry Partnerships Division (CIP)
womenprofessionals (script, growth stage). Her mom was a teacher but left her career to stay at homewith her when she was born (script, growth stage). Her mom had a friend who was a lawyer andran for office. She recalls her mom sometimes questioning her friend’s decisions, but other timesshe was very proud of her. Even though her mom left teaching to stay home, Louise thought shewould continue working once she had children (script, exploration stage). However, she didn’thave any role models or examples to guide her in how this could work. When graduating fromcollege, a pregnant woman interviewed her for a job. She vividly remembers thinking it wasgood that this woman could balance working and being a mom (script, exploration stage). Onceshe started working
Conference Session
College Industry Partnerships Division (CIP) Technical Session 2
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Kerrie Danielle Hooper, Florida International University; Trina L. Fletcher, Florida International University; Edward Collins, National Society of Black Engineers; Rochelle L Williams, Graduate Fellowships for STEM Diversity; Ahlam Alharbi, Imam Abdulrahman Bin Faisal University
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
College Industry Partnerships Division (CIP)
towards thehighest level of quality within research projects. This paper presents the approach of how auniversity team (professor and graduate students) collaborated with the National Society of BlackEngineers (NSBE) to conduct a longitudinal analysis of a summer engineering program fundedthrough an Early CAREER faculty award from the National Science Foundation’s EngineeringEducation Broadening Participation (BPE) program. According to the literature, there is a greatneed for longitudinal analysis of STEM outreach programs, especially informal ones, and supportstudents from historically excluded backgrounds. This paper contributes to the academia-non-profit partnership literature within the context of longitudinal studies by mapping out the
Conference Session
College Industry Partnerships Division (CIP) Technical Session 1
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Chun Kit Chan, The University of Hong Kong; H.H. Cheung, University of Hong Kong; Match Ko, University of Hong Kong; Chun Kit Chui, University of Hong Kong; LEI YANG, The University of Hong Kong
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
College Industry Partnerships Division (CIP)
Paper ID #41767Preparing Students for Successful Industrial Collaborations in Engineering(Work in progress)Mr. Chun Kit Chan, The University of Hong Kong Mr. Ryan Chun Kit Chan is a Senior Technical Assistant in the Tam Wing Fan Innovation Wing, Faculty of Engineering at the University of Hong Kong after graduation. Before graduation, Ryan served as an undergraduate research assistant in Innovation Wing and has involved in the design and implementation of a world-record-holding robotic fish. Ryan received his Bachelor’s degree in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Hong Kong. Ryan’s research focuses on robotic
Conference Session
College Industry Partnerships Division (CIP) Technical Session 1
Collection
2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Martha Cervantes, Johns Hopkins University ; Sydney Danielle Floryanzia, University of Washington and Johns Hopkins University; Jackie Sharp; William Roberts Gray-Roncal; Erik C. Johnson, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
College Industry Partnerships Division (CIP)
conducted with pro-gram alumni and a member of CIRCUIT leadership; and the second-round interview is with twoadditional stakeholders (e.g., alumni, mentors). We standardize our questions but retain the abilityto explore topics and details relevant to individual applicants. Each interview lasts approximately30 minutes. At the end of the process, each interviewer fills out a rubric recording their detailedand overall impressions, in an effort to minimize bias and normalize acceptance criteria. Finaladmission decisions are made by program leadership, ensuring consistency. The values of the stu-dents chosen to participate match the core mission of the CIRCUIT program. Students are notmere beneficiaries of the program but rather are partners with
Conference Session
College Industry Partnerships Division (CIP) Technical Session 1
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Nga Hin Ben Fong, Purdue University at West Lafayette (COE); Patrick Brunese, Purdue University at West Lafayette (COE)
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
College Industry Partnerships Division (CIP)
project team might spend less than 10 weeks of actual engineering activities. b) Limited support of the university faculty – relied too much on the industry sponsor mentor. It is not common to see the objective and the deliverables are altered throughout the semester. Students are not capable to negotiate with the project sponsor or stakeholder. c) The Size of the project team, a large project teams (5-8 students) tend to have underperforming team members that result in an overall negative team culture [19,20,21]. Unfortunately, for some of the top public engineering schools, it may be a real challenge to identify 50+ industry sponsored Capstone Project to accommodate 300-400 graduating seniors. d) Team