- Conference Session
- Electrical and Computer Division Poster Session
- Collection
- 2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
- Authors
-
Corrine M. Schwarting, Iowa State University ; Kent A. Crick, Iowa State University; Mack Shelley, Iowa State University; Elise A. Frickey, Iowa State University; Madelyne Losby, Iowa State University; Lisa M. Larson, Iowa State University
- Tagged Topics
-
Diversity
- Tagged Divisions
-
Electrical and Computer
engineering(ECpE), a large Midwestern university developed a multidisciplinary S-STEM: Scholarships forScience, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics National Science Foundation (NSF)program. This program supports students financially, professionally, and interpersonally viascholarship funding, leadership development, and scholar seminars. Future research shouldexplore the long-term academic outcomes compared to matched peers to better understand thelasting impact of program supports.Method Participants. Program scholars were matched to a control group of similar ECpE peers.Student data were obtained from the Office of the Registrar and matched by academic outcomes(high school GPA, standardized test scores) and demographic variables (sex
- Conference Session
- Insights for Teaching ECE Courses
- Collection
- 2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
- Authors
-
Kent A. Crick, Iowa State University; Matthew T. Seipel, Iowa State University; Lisa M. Larson Ph.D., Iowa State University; Mack Shelley, Iowa State University
- Tagged Topics
-
Diversity
- Tagged Divisions
-
Electrical and Computer
[8] as well as courses utilizing active learning rather than a lecture-based approach have beenshown to predict GPA among engineering students [9]. In a further effort to close this divide, a multidisciplinary Scholarships for Science,Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (S-STEM) National Science Foundation (NSF)program was undertaken to recruit, retain, and develop leadership skills in underrepresentedstudents majoring in electrical, computer, and software engineering (ECSE) at a largeMidwestern university (computer science majors were not housed in this department). It washypothesized that the program would result in higher academic performance among programparticipants than in their non-participating peers, as indicated by their