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Conference Session
Technical Session: Transforming Engineering Education Is Possible! A Descriptive Case Study of Reimagining Engineering Education and Delivering a Wake Forest Engineering Student Experience Promoting Inclusion, Agency, Holistic Learning, and Success
Collection
2024 Collaborative Network for Engineering & Computing Diversity (CoNECD)
Authors
Olga Pierrakos, Wake Forest University
Tagged Topics
CoNECD Paper Sessions, Diversity
the work of building the faculty and staff team, faculty development, the benefits andchallenges of the organizational structure, specific elements of curricular and pedagogicalinnovation, operational structures and decision making, etc.II. METHODSThis paper is a descriptive case study detailing the visioning and building of Wake ForestEngineering. It is written from the emic perspective of the Founding Chair who happens to alsobe an engineering education research scholar. This descriptive case study offers a chronologicalaccount of key activities that impacted the student experience, including (1) department vision,mission, identity, (2) curriculum structure and development, (3) student advising, (4)pedagogical strategies, (5) integrative
Conference Session
Track 3: Technical Session 3: Envisioning Equitable Pathways to STEM Graduate Education: Creating a Coalition including University of Maryland Eastern Shore, Bowie State University, and University of Maryland College Park to Make It Happen
Collection
2024 Collaborative Network for Engineering & Computing Diversity (CoNECD)
Authors
Rosemary Parker, University of Maryland, College Park; JACQUELINE SMITH, Bowie State University; Isabel K Lloyd, Materials Science and Engineering Dept., University of Maryland, College Park, MD; Jennifer Johnson, Temple University ; Yuanwei Jin, University of Maryland Eastern Shore
Tagged Topics
CoNECD Paper Sessions, Diversity
Shore. ©American Society for Engineering Education, 2024 Envisioning Equitable Pathways to STEM Graduate Education: Creating a Coalition including two public HBCUs and a public Research 1 University to Make It HappenAbstractTwo public HBCUs and a public Research 1 University established a coalition to developpathways to STEM M.S. and Ph.D. programs among Black, Latinx, and Native Americanstudents. Through a mixed-methods research project, the team: (1) identified Faculty Championsto support and advocate for the students; (2) developed a Memorandum of Understanding forSTEM programs between the institutions to facilitate sustained effort by our coalition; and (3)identified Pilot
Conference Session
Track 3: Technical Session 8: Self-Advocacy Professional Programming as a Framework to Support Non-Academic Outcomes of STEM PhD Graduate Education
Collection
2024 Collaborative Network for Engineering & Computing Diversity (CoNECD)
Authors
Carmen Maria Lilley, The University of Illinois at Chicago
Tagged Topics
CoNECD Paper Sessions, Diversity
Paper ID #40784Self-Advocacy Professional Programming as a Framework to SupportNon-Academic Outcomes of STEM PhD Graduate EducationProf. Carmen Maria Lilley, The University of Illinois at Chicago Dr. Lilley’s research interests in engineering education focus on professional development of engineering students at the undergraduate and graduate level. She is interested in studying the effects of the intersection of gender and race/ethnicity on the professional formation of engineers and how institutions of higher education can transform to support student’s sense of belonging. ©American Society
Conference Session
Track 3: Technical Session 1: An Ecosystem of Support Initiatives for BIPOC, Women, and Domestic Graduate Students in STEM
Collection
2024 Collaborative Network for Engineering & Computing Diversity (CoNECD)
Authors
Andrew Edmunds, Clemson University; Melissa Smith, Clemson University
Tagged Topics
CoNECD Paper Sessions, Diversity
Paper ID #40727An Ecosystem of Support Initiatives for BIPOC, Women, and DomesticGraduate Students in STEMDr. Andrew Edmunds, Clemson University Dr. Edmunds is a Coordinator for Graduate Recruitment and Inclusive Excellence in the College of Engi- neering, Computing, and Applied Sciences at Clemson University. With more than 10 year of experience supporting both graduate and undergraduate students in engineering his research focuses on sense-of- belonging, part-time graduate students, and the future of land grant universities.Dr. Melissa Smith, Clemson University ©American Society for Engineering
Conference Session
Track 4: Technical Session 5: Using a Summer Bridge Program to Develop a Situational Judgment Inventory: From Year 1 to Year 2
Collection
2024 Collaborative Network for Engineering & Computing Diversity (CoNECD)
Authors
Malini Josiam, Virginia Tech Department of Engineering Education; Walter C. Lee, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
Tagged Topics
CoNECD Paper Sessions, Diversity
student, and then 1 studentin each of the following categories: SE Asian, E Asian, S Asian, and Middle Eastern orNorth African student. Pilot Results 33Furthermore, the sample was a little over half first generation college students (51%). Gender 34First we will walk through some of the scenario results by gender. Your first round of tests did not go well and your usual studying habits are not working Women’s top two choices: Men’s top two choices: 1. Spend more
Conference Session
Technical Session 8 - Paper 5: Cultivating Inclusivity: A Systematic Literature Review on Developing Empathy for Students in STEM Fields
Collection
2022 CoNECD (Collaborative Network for Engineering & Computing Diversity)
Authors
Stephanie Jill Lunn, Georgia Institute of Technology; Cristi L. Bell-Huff, Georgia Institute of Technology; Joseph M LeDoux, Georgia Institute of Technology
Tagged Topics
CoNECD Paper Sessions, Diversity
Learning. Previously, Stephanie received her B.S. and M.S. degrees in Neuroscience from the University of Miami, in addition to B.S. and M.S. degrees in Computer Science from FIU.Dr. Cristi L. Bell-Huff, Georgia Institute of Technology Cristi L. Bell-Huff, PhD is a Lecturer and Director of Faculty and Student Training in the Wallace H. Coulter Department of Biomedical Engineering at Georgia Tech and Emory University. She is involved in teaching, engineering education innovation, and research. In addition to her PhD in Chemical Engineer- ing, she also has an MA in Educational Studies. She has industrial experience in pharmaceutical product and process development as well as teaching experience at the secondary and post
Conference Session
Technical Session 10 - Paper 2: Lived Experiences and Literature Reviews: Leveraging Experiential Knowledge in STEM Education Doctoral Studies
Collection
2022 CoNECD (Collaborative Network for Engineering & Computing Diversity)
Authors
Sharetta M. Bufford M.Ed., Clemson University; Stephanie A Damas, Clemson University; Matthew Voigt, Clemson University; Eliza Gallagher, Clemson University
Tagged Topics
CoNECD Paper Sessions, Diversity
). “A Quantitative Pilot Study of Engineering Graduate Student Identity,” in ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Columbus, OH. https://peer.asee.org/27502Connors, R. (1998). The Rhetoric of Citation Systems, Part I: The Development of Annotation Structures from the Renaissance to 1900. Rhetoric Review, 17(1), 6-48.Connors, R. (1999). The Rhetoric of Citation Systems, Part II: Competing Epistemic Values in Citation. Rhetoric Review, 17(2), 219-245.Cooke, N. A. (2014). Pushing back from the table: Fighting to maintain my voice as a pre-tenure minority female in the white academy. Polymath: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Arts & Sciences, 4(2)Cressey, D. (2014). Journals weigh up double-blind peer review. Nature (London). https
Conference Session
Track 6: Technical Session 6: Stewardship of the Stories: Learning from Black Engineering Students' Lived Experiences
Collection
2024 Collaborative Network for Engineering & Computing Diversity (CoNECD)
Authors
Tanya D Ennis, University of Colorado Boulder; Donna Auguste Ph.D., Auguste Research Group, LLC; Cynthia Hampton Ph.D., Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
Tagged Topics
CoNECD Paper Sessions, Diversity
onBlack undergraduate engineering students reveal a prevalence of identity saliency, persistence,and support resources for undergraduate engineering students, but that more intentional andcreative studies were needed to understand the experiences of Black students in STEM. Researchefforts to explore the complexity of the underrepresentation of Black engineers at every levelhave resulted in a common agenda with an “ultimate goal to improve, enhance, and transformlearning and work environments” [6, p. 107].Black undergraduate engineering students encounter many challenges in their pursuit of anengineering degree. Some of these challenges include stereotype threat, a “predicament in whichmembers of certain social groups must deal with being judged
Conference Session
Track 5: Technical Session 2: Adoption of an Advocates and Allies Program to a Predominantly STEM Campus
Collection
2024 Collaborative Network for Engineering & Computing Diversity (CoNECD)
Authors
Adrienne Robyn Minerick, Michigan Technological University; Sonia Goltz, Michigan Tech; andrew storer, Michigan Technological University; Patricia Sotirin, Michigan Technological University
Tagged Topics
CoNECD Paper Sessions, Diversity
education for student growth and societal advances. While directing the Micro Medical Device Engineering Research Labo- ratory (M.D. – ERL), she has managed, as PI or co-PI, ˜$13 million, yielding 93 research graduates*, a patent, and >100 publications [*12 PhDs (64% women, 18%UR)]. Her favorite quote is by Ray Mc- Dermott, ”Culture is not a past cause to a current self. Culture is the current challenge to possible future selves.”Sonia Goltz, Michigan Tech Sonia Goltz earned her PhD in industrial/organizational psychology at Purdue University and is the Mickus Endowed Faculty Fellow of Business Impact in the College of Business at Michigan Tech, where she has served as Co-PI on two NSF ADVANCE grants.andrew storer
Conference Session
Technical Session 12 - Paper 2: DEI Student Ambassadors Program
Collection
2022 CoNECD (Collaborative Network for Engineering & Computing Diversity)
Authors
J. McLean Sloughter, Seattle University; Brooke I Wynalda; Agnieszka Miguel, Seattle University
Tagged Topics
CoNECD Paper Sessions, Diversity
Computing Diversity Conference, Crystal City, VA, April 2018.[19] B. A. Pedersen, R. A. Hensel, S. A. Raisa, R. A. Atadero, A. A. Casper, R. R. DeLyser, C. D. Griffin, S. T. Leutenegger, M. L. Morris, C. Paguyo, J. Paul, S. Park, K. E. Rambo-Hernandez, and B. N. Roszelle, “Leveraging changes in engineering and computer science curricula to engender inclusive professional identities in students,” in Proceedings of the 2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference, July 2021.[20] C. Finelli and M. Kendall-Brown, “Using an interactive theater sketch to improve students’ perceptions about and ability to function on diverse teams,” in Proceedings of the 2009 Annual ASEE Conference and Exposition, Austin, TX, June 2009.[21] M. Kaplan, C. E. Cook
Conference Session
Technical Session 1 - Paper 2: Challenging the Hegemonic Culture of Engineering: Curricular and Co-Curricular Methodologies
Collection
2022 CoNECD (Collaborative Network for Engineering & Computing Diversity)
Authors
Bailey Bond-Trittipo, Florida International University; Joseph Valle, University of Michigan - Ann Arbor; Stephen Secules, Florida International University; Andrew Green, Florida International University
Tagged Topics
CoNECD Paper Sessions, Diversity
. Newberry, Eds. Springer, pp. 203-216, 2015.[19] S. Secules, A. Gupta, A. Elby, C. Turpen, “Zooming out from the struggling individual student: An account of the cultural construction of engineering ability in an undergraduate programming class,” Journal of Engineering Education, vol. 107, no. 1, pp. 56-86, 2018.[20] S. Secules, “Making the familiar strange: An ethnographic scholarship of integration contextualizing engineering educational culture as masculine and competitive,” Engineering Studies, vol. 11, no. 3, pp. 196-216, 2019.[21] D. Riley, “ Rigor/Us: Building boundaries and disciplining diversity with standards of merit,” Engineering Studies, vol. 9, no. 3, pp. 249-265, 2017.[22] C. Seron, S
Conference Session
Track 2: Technical Session 6: Minoritized Student Audio Narratives to Influence Faculty's Empathic Understanding: Learning from Sophie and Enola
Collection
2024 Collaborative Network for Engineering & Computing Diversity (CoNECD)
Authors
Stephen Secules, Florida International University; Maimuna Begum Kali, Florida International University; Cassandra J McCall, Utah State University; Gabriel Van Dyke, Utah State University
Tagged Topics
CoNECD Paper Sessions, Diversity
Engineering Education Department at Utah State University. Her research centers the intersection identity formation, engineering culture, and dis- ability studies. Her work has received several awards including best paper awards from the Journal of Engineering Education and the Australasian Journal of Engineering Education. She holds a Ph.D. in En- gineering Education from Virginia Tech as well as M.S. and B.S. degrees in civil engineering from the South Dakota School of Mines and Technology.Gabriel Van Dyke, Utah State University Gabriel Van Dyke is a Graduate Student and Research Assistant in the Engineering Education Department at Utah State University. His current research interests are engineering culture and applying
Conference Session
Track 5: Technical Session 1: Peru in State College
Collection
2024 Collaborative Network for Engineering & Computing Diversity (CoNECD)
Authors
Lauren A Griggs Griggs, Pennsylvania State University ; Julio Urbina, Pennsylvania State University
Tagged Topics
CoNECD Paper Sessions, Diversity
) the NSF Pathway Fellowsprogram, 2) work published in a 2016 ASEE Paper, 3) redefinition of the programgoals to include retention of underrepresented students and exposure to globalengagement and 4) the evolution & connection to the Penn State Clark ScholarsProgram 8U NITED S TATES F ULBRIGHT S CHOLAR 2015 AT U NIVERSIDADN ACIONAL DE INGENIERIA (UNI) – L IMA , P ERU• PILOT: NSF PATHWAY FELLOWS TRIP TO PERUPilot 2015: The research question in this project was: While conventional retentionprograms for underrepresented students have shown to achieve graduation ratesequal to or surpassing those of the majority male population over an extendedperiod, could