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- Enhancing Student Success in Two-Year Colleges
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- 2016 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Richard Brown Bankhead III, Highline College; Tessa Alice Olmstead, Highline College; Judy Mannard PE, Highline Community College
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Diversity
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Two Year College Division
-10 school year and the ASEE Pacific Northwest Section Outstanding Teaching Award in 2014.Ms. Tessa Alice Olmstead, Highline College Tessa holds a bachelor’s degree in Bioengineering from the University of Washington, and a second bach- elor’s degree in Dance. She is currently researching the use of reflective practices to improve engineering education at Highline College. She also serves as a research scientist for the Department of Neurosurgery at the University of Washington.Ms. Judy Mannard PE, Highline Community College c American Society for Engineering Education, 2016 Changing Student Behavior through the Use of Reflective Teaching Practices in an Introduction to
- Conference Session
- Two-Year College Special Topics Potpourri
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- 2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Angela Minichiello, Utah State University; Tracy D Blake, Utah State University; Wade H. Goodridge, Utah State University; David Dwight Sam PhD, Utah State University
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Two Year College Division
within the USUsystem for a specific topic or course in one location. The libguide for this course (http://libguides.usu.edu/engr1000) is updated each time we teach the course.Final research papers are due during finals week and carry a stiff penalty for lateness-due toobvious reasons. Papers are turned in electronically via Blackboard. A grading rubric that wasestablished by the instructors and is updated each time the course is taught is used as the basis forassigning grades. To perform grading, the papers are equally divided among the instructors sothat each instructor initially grades 1/n of the total number of papers, where “n” is the number ofinstructors. Instructors assign grades to their assigned papers using the rubric. A master rubric
- Conference Session
- Two Year-to-Four Year Transfer Topics Part I
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- 2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Erik N. Dunmire, College of Marin; Amelito G. Enriquez, Canada College; Kate A. Disney, Mission College, Santa Clara
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Two Year College Division
to 3 million students every year,1 byproviding affordable and accessible education. The community college system feeds two largepublic university systems, the 23-campus comprehensive California State University (CSU)system, and the 10-campus research-oriented University of California (UC) system, as well asnumerous private and out-of-state universities. Ideally, students should be able to complete all oftheir lower-division coursework at a community college and then transfer to a four-yearinstitution to complete the last two years, thus earning a bachelor’s degree in approximately fouryears.In the 2006-2007 academic year, for instance, 55% of California State University (CSU)graduates and 28% of University of California (UC) graduates began
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- Reporting Out: Dissemination of Several NSF Projects of Interest to Two-Year Colleges
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- 2015 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Dan G. Dimitriu, San Antonio College; Jerry O'Connor, San Antonio College
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Two Year College Division
, undergraduate research projects, student organizations, and internships was worthwhile to me. 19c The San Antonio River Authority (SARA) professional engineer 10 10 0 speaker session was worthwhile to me. 19d The CPS Energy professional engineer speaker session was 6 12 2 worthwhile to me. No reasons given for Disagreements 21a I prefer to learn math online using ALEKS over traditional math 5 13 2 (lecture) class. 21b The tutors and instructors were helpful in learning math using 9 11 0 ALEKS. 21c I learn math faster using ALEKS
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- Retention Strategies in Action Part II
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- 2010 Annual Conference & Exposition
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Heather Evans, University of Washington; Priti Mody-Pan, University of Washington
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Two Year College Division
AC 2010-1414: USING AN ADAPTIVE TINTO FRAMEWORK TO INTERPRETSUCCESSES OF TWO-YEAR INSTITUTIONS IN RETAINING ENGINEERINGSTUDENTSHeather Evans, University of Washington Heather Evans is a Research Assistant at the Center for Workforce Development at the University of Washington. She is a graduate student in the Department of Sociology and a Fellow in the Comparative Law and Society Studies program at UW. Her research employs mixed methodologies, including ethnographic fieldwork and statistical analysis. Broadly, she is interested in ways in which institutions reproduce social inequality, how new social spaces are created, and perceptions of citizenship among marginalized people.Priti Mody-Pan
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- Female Faculty, Learning, NSF, and ABET Issues at Two-Year Colleges
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- 2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Nicholas Massa, Springfield Technical Community College; Michele Dischino, Central Connecticut State University; Judith F. Donnelly, Three Rivers Community-Technical College; Fenna D. Hanes, New England Board of Higher Education
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Two Year College Division
threaded discussions and online chats. Over the three 5-weeksessions, participants are given greater autonomy and more responsibility to self-direct their ownlearning. This gradual transition from highly structured to open-ended is designed to emulate theway in which instructors will use Challenges with their own students. To facilitate collaborativeproblem solving among participants, each team was assigned a separate problem-solving “wiki”at www.pbworks.com to emulate the Problem Solving Toolbox feature of the STEM PBLChallenges. Between online class sessions, participants were encouraged to collaborate with theiralliance partners to explore how best to incorporate the PBL Challenges into their own classroom