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- Student Division (STDT) Technical Session 6: Underserved Student Experiences
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- 2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Anne Victoria Wrobetz, Front Range Community College, Colorado
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., 2014), it is important that every interaction establishes an inclusive community. Informalcommunity-building and relationships with faculty and staff help students develop a sense ofbelonging in college (Myers et al., 2015). Additionally, students should be encouraged tointegrate their outside lives with academics. Community involvement in research projects canhelp engage students in problem-solving (Loeser et al., 2021). This is important particularly forstudents who have a strong sense of cultural and community identity. At United Tribes TechnicalCollege, a primarily residential college, the entire community gets involved in STEM education,joining in on environmental research projects led by students (Bahnson, 2020). Qaqish et al.(2020
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- Student Division (STDT) Technical Session 6: Underserved Student Experiences
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- 2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Nicole Adia Jefferson, Virginia Tech ; Jeremi S. London, Virginia Tech
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andimportance of milestones in the Ph.D. program, it is imperative that engineering programs keeppreparation for milestones in mind when thinking about students’ transition into the program. The NSF-funded Dissertation Institute (DI) is one of few nationally-scaled examples inthe engineering community that is focused on graduate student success on a milestone (i.e. thedissertation proposal) (Hasbún et al., 2016; Miller et al., 2020). It is a one-week writingworkshop that gives Ph.D. students a secure place to support one another among like-mindedpeers while they modify their task assumptions about the dissertation and develop good habitsthat might lead to degree completion. Although this is an excellent resource for Ph.D. students at later
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- Student Division (STDT) Technical Session 4: Minoritized Student Experiences
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- 2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Micaha Dean Hughes, North Carolina State University, Raleigh; John Roberts, UK College of Engineering
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Paper ID #38826Attracting Black Students to Undergraduate Engineering Programs: A RapidReview for Broadening ParticipationMicaha Dean Hughes, North Carolina State University, Raleigh Micaha Dean Hughes is a doctoral student in the Educational Psychology program in the Teacher Educa- tion and Learning Sciences department at North Carolina State University. Her research interests include community-engaged approaches to educational equity and access in STEM education, college recruitment and K-12 outreach practices for minoritized groups in STEM, mathematical identity development for rural adolescents and young adults, and
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- Student Division (STDT) Technical Session 2: Student Success and Resources
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- 2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Katherine Drinkwater, Duke University; Karis Boyd-Sinkler, Duke University; Rebecca Simmons, Duke University
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Paper ID #38994Why Should You Join? Exploring the Role of Engineering Clubs on theUndergraduate Engineering ExperienceMs. Katherine Drinkwater, Duke University Katie Drinkwater is a recent graduate of Duke University with a Bachelor’s in Mechanical Engineering. She is excited to begin working towards her Ph.D. in Engineering Education at Virginia Tech in the Fall. Her interest in Engineering Education began through a project where she helped to design a makerspace inside a shipping container. Since then, she has explored design and engineering education through in- dependent projects and extracurricular leadership in SWE
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- Student Division (STDT) Technical Session 5: Motivation and Support for Success
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- 2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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D'Andre Jermaine Wilson-Ihejirika, University of Toronto, Canada; Qin Liu, University of Toronto, Canada; Joanna Meihui Li, University of Toronto, Canada; Mustafa Nisar, University of Toronto, Canada; Jiawen Lin, University of Toronto, Canada
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participation in makerspaces is ascribed to early childhood experienceswith making [72]. Unsurprisingly, societal pressures and work-family conflicts experienced bywomen students in face of choice goals exist across geographical boundaries (e.g., in Japan, [38];in Thailand [62]; and in Canada [50]).Similarly, different cultural backgrounds enable students to develop cultural resources withintheir communities and apply these resources to their university experience [73]. Familial capitalsupports marginalized students to pursue humanitarian engineering through encouraging storiesand role models [74]. First-generation students also gain funds of knowledge from their familiesand communities regarding tinkering, perspective taking, and reading people [75
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- Student Division (STDT) Technical Session 1: Student Success and Mentoring
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- 2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Duncan H. Mullins, State University of New York, Buffalo ; AraOluwa Adaramola, Purdue University, West Lafayette
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dealing with while teaching.We eventually recognized that our teaching skills would improve over time and needed to makespace for growth and give ourselves grace during this process (11 DM, 12 DM). Interacting withstudents this semester helped us to realize the urgency and need to drive change and innovationin higher education because it affects students’ lives and future opportunities.DiscussionAs mentioned above, we discovered that teaching is a complicated set of skills primarily learnedthrough practicing teaching. We grew and developed in very unexpected ways through thisprocess. We found new things about teaching. We learned about the vast array of skills requiredfor teaching and were able to begin building our teaching toolbox. We learned