- Conference Session
- Environmental Engineering Division (ENVIRON) Technical Session 2 - Engineering for One Planet (EOP)
- Collection
- 2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
- Authors
-
David Brian Dittenber P.E., Cedarville University; Mackenzie Booth, Cedarville University
- Tagged Topics
-
Diversity
- Tagged Divisions
-
Environmental Engineering Division (ENVIRON)
introduces globalization and the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) [14]. Thegoal of this module is to help students recognize the implications their design decisions mayhave outside of their immediate community and identify ways their careers as designers couldinclude work toward addressing some of the SDGs.The lesson plan for this module first introduces the concept of globalization, including bothpositive aspects like economic growth and cultural exchange and negative aspects likeoverconsumption and exploitation. The UN SDGs are then presented as an international effort toalign countries and major organizations toward positive globalization outcomes. After a briefhistory of the development of the SDGs, students are encouraged to evaluate the
- Conference Session
- Environmental Engineering Division (ENVIRON) Technical Session 1 - Sustainability & Environmental Justice
- Collection
- 2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
- Authors
-
Michelle Henderson, University of South Florida; Maya A. Trotz, University of South Florida; E. Christian Wells, University of South Florida; Maya Elizabeth Carrasquillo, University of California, Berkeley; Ruthmae Sears; Katherine Ann Alfredo, University of South Florida; Deirdre Cobb-Roberts, University of South Florida
- Tagged Topics
-
Diversity
- Tagged Divisions
-
Environmental Engineering Division (ENVIRON)
timeline that reflects theresearcher’s tenure at the university. At this level, faculty members can tailor meaningful projectsfor researchers over a set period. The last and broadest level of participation is short-termengagement through undergraduate and graduate courses. For short-term engagement, studentsparticipate in community-based class projects for one semester or can take elective courses thatoffer community-based research. With short-term engagement, students apply concepts ofcommunity-based research. This participatory approach serves as an opportunity for students toconduct research and advance into mid-term engagement opportunities (Figure 1). These levels ofengagement provide a more diverse audience that is engaged in community-based
- Conference Session
- Environmental Engineering Division (ENVIRON) Technical Session 2
- Collection
- 2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
- Authors
-
Victoria Matthew, Engineering for One Planet; Cynthia Anderson, Alula Consulting; Cindy Cooper, The Lemelson Foundation; Surbhi Godsay Lipkin-Moore, Amplify Evaluation
- Tagged Topics
-
Diversity
- Tagged Divisions
-
Environmental Engineering Division (ENVIRON)
and even regenerative.Integral to this work is fundamentally and systemically changing who will want to become anengineer, graduate as a trained engineer, and pursue a career as a professional engineer; Black,Hispanic, American Indian/Alaska Native, and Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander students are stillmarkedly underrepresented within engineering education at the undergraduate and graduatelevels.9 Additionally, it is imperative that the marginalized communities —who bear much of theburden and harm due to human-caused impacts on the planet— are able to and encouraged toshare their perspectives, knowledge, and lived experiences.10,11 Their leadership andcontributions must be sought, respected, and integrated into future technological and