primecandidates for benchmarking purposes.In developing Sacramento State’s HLP program, an effort was undertaken to benchmarkestablished engineering leadership education programs of various sizes and scope beforedesigning a curriculum which fits our needs. Our primary goal was to take inventory ofbest practices regardless of their size and scope.Benchmarking Various Engineering Leadership Development ProgramsThe MIT-Gordon Leadership program [7], Northeastern-Gordon Leadership program [14],University of California, San Diego-Gordon Leadership Center [8], and the University ofKansas-Engineering Fellows Program [11] were considered for the in-depth benchmarkingstudy. The ASEE conference (LEAD Division, 2019) also enabled us to benchmark over 40
, Teamwork, and Leadership Skills for Graduate Students,” presented at the 2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access, Jun. 2020. Accessed: Oct. 27, 2020. [Online]. Available: https://peer.asee.org/stemambassadors-developing-communications-teamwork-and-leadership-skills-for- graduate-students[12] K. Luchini-Colbry, C. McComb, J. Rojewski, A. Briliyanti, and D. J.-L. Colbry, “Engineering Futures: Updating a Successful Professional Development Program to Address New Challenges,” presented at the 2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Jun. 2019. Accessed: Oct. 27, 2020. [Online]. Available: https://peer.asee.org/engineering-futures-updating-a-successful-professional-development-program-to- address-new
technology entrepreneurspresenting in the past year. Four of the largest engineering departments have since joined theinitiative by requiring their new GTAs to complete the program as part of their on-boardingprocess. With an initial cohort of 13 graduate students in Spring 2017, the program has nowgrown to over 190 in Fall 2019. To assess the perception of transferability between teachingskills and leadership skills among participants in the program, a comparison group versustreatment group study was conducted in Fall 2018. The comparison group is comprised ofnew engineering GTAs who did not participate in the program and the treatment groupis comprised of participants in the program. This paper will present the result of thestudy and discuss
was a professor at Bellevue University (Bellevue, Nebraska) for 26 years. She is an officer in the Engineering Leadership Development (LEAD) and Engineering Management (EMD) divisions of ASEE, and also active in the American Society for Engineering Management (ASEM).Dr. Meg Handley, Pennsylvania State University Meg Handley is currently the Associate Director for Engineering Leadership Outreach at Penn State University. Previously, Meg served as the Director of the Career & Corporate Connection’s office at the Smeal College of Business at Penn State University. Meg completed her PhD in Workforce Education at Penn State, where she focused on interpersonal behaviors and their impact on engineering leadership
words from the prompt including project, group, andgroups were removed from analysis.Results and Discussion In order to understand the impact of the experiential learning PM course, studentreflections were analyzed to determine whether students emphasized the skills discussed in SkillsTheory of Leadership (complex problem solving, solution construction, and social judgement) oras discussed by hiring companies (strong communication, teamwork, and interpersonalinteraction skills). Twenty-four reflection assignments (see Table 1 for assignment questions)from Fall 2019 (12 students) and Fall 2020 (12 students) were analyzed with NVivo. Courses inboth semesters were taught by the same instructor in the same format. Fall 2019 was conductedin a
allowed ‘assimilation time’ for students to understand the concepts, put them intopractice, and reflect on their learning.Details of the courses have been previously covered in many other ASEE documents[6,7,8,9]and other publications. [16] While the specific learning tools and instructionaltechniques in the LLL course series evolved somewhat over time, its core course structure,objectives and components remained stable. A summary of the objectives and student learningoutcomes, as originally conceived, for each of the LLL course series segments is provided here: Leveraging Leadership for a Lifetime I (ETLS 550) (offered as the initial course in the MSTM program). This course provides a comprehensive orientation to the newly accepted student
Paper ID #32864Faculty Members’ Perceptions of Engineering Students’ Preparedness forLeadership CompetenciesMr. Hwangbo Bae, University of Florida Hwangbo Bae joined Simmons Research Lab at the University of Florida in August 2019 as a Ph.D. student. He received a Bachelor of Science and a Master of Science degrees in Civil & Environmental Engineering at Virginia Tech in 2018 and 2019, respectively. His major interest in research is under- standing professional values of construction workforce and the role of leadership that promote employee motivation for work, as well as job satisfaction and wellbeing.Dr. Madeline
correspond to the two different study cohorts consisting of the ELDM alumni and CoEComparison group. The ELDM alumni cohort was surveyed in 2018 and reported on previouslyby Gehr (2019) and Lang et al. (2020). Within the ELDM cohort, contact information wasavailable for 451 alumni. A recruitment email was sent with a link to the study survey and 136responded, resulting in a response rate of 30.2%.The College of Engineering non-ELDM cohort was surveyed in 2019. Contact information wasobtained through three LinkedIn alumni groups where an initial group of 600+ individuals werecontacted to make initial connections. All contacts were consolidated from the followingLinkedIn groups: “Penn State Engineering Alumni Society (Official)”, “Penn State
American Society for En- gineering Education (ASEE). Gregg received his PhD in Educational Leadership and Higher Education from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln with a Master of Technology Management degree and a BS in Manufacturing Engineering Technology, from Brigham Young University.Major Blandon Prowse, Micron Technology Inc. 15 years working with leaders in building their personal and team effectiveness in military and high tech industries. Currently leading executive and leadership development for Micron Technologies.Mr. Wai-Leong Mook, Micron Technology Inc. Wai-Leong, Mook received the B.Sc. degree in Microelectronics Engineering from the Louisiana State University (US) in 2001 and the Master of Business