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Jennifer Mott, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo; Steffen Peuker, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo
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Diversity
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Paper ID #42650Integrating Ethics into Engineering Education: A Case-Based Learning ApproachDr. Jennifer Mott, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Jennifer Mott is an Assistant in Mechanical Engineering at Cal Poly San Luis Obispo. Her research interests include Thermal Comfort, using Team Based Learning in engineering courses and improving teaching for engineers.Dr. Steffen Peuker, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Dr. Peuker holds the James L. Bartlett, Jr. Professor position in the Mechanical Engineering Department at the California Polytechnic State University in San Luis
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Quamrul H. Mazumder, University of Michigan, Flint; Sunzia Sultana, University of Michigan, Flint
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New Engineering Educators Division (NEE)
attention and prompting areconsideration of whether this form of education aligns adequately in terms of content,structure, and process to effectively prepare scholars and researchers to address the current andfuture needs of society [8]. In the process of interconnection between fields and contexts,different agents intervene, each with their roles. For instance, [9] the discussion addresses threedistinct agents in interaction—the research producers, the research users, and theintermediaries—and underscores the persistence of a gap among them [10]. It has been shown inprevious studies that copyright compliance and ethical use of research reports are an integral partof scholarly publishing [11]. This is because copyright violation is assumed to be
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- 2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Gokce Akcayir, University of Alberta; Marnie V Jamieson, University of Alberta; Kristian Basaraba, University of Alberta; Duncan Buchanan, University of Alberta; Qingna Jin; Mijung Kim, University of Alberta; Janelle McFeetors, University of Alberta; Kerry Rose, University of Alberta
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Timothy A Wood, The Citadel; Stephanie Laughton, The Citadel
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assess high school graduates forcompetency in mathematics, reading or writing in the name of DEI [16], [17], [18].In this milieu, the new engineering professor enters the American university. Alongside the needto research, serve the college and profession, mentor graduate students, and publish, theengineering professor has an ethical responsibility to help shape the next generation ofinnovative engineers. Meanwhile, many of their students, through no personal fault, enter collegewithout the habits of mind or self-control expected of previous generations of collegeundergraduates. New educators may find students who struggle to adapt to the model of highereducation that produced the educators. Further, college graduates must self-direct their