education, choosing and engineering, and determining their career goals.According to Eccles and Wigfield’s categories, it is a theory focused on the reasons forengagement[9]. SDT asserts that actions are motivated by the desire to fulfill three basic humanneeds: competence, autonomy, and relatedness [10]. Competence is the knowledge and skills onemust possess to succeed and feel effective in dealing with the environment. Perceivedcompetence is often compared to self-efficacy, which is a person’s beliefs about their capabilitiesto produce designated levels of performance that exercise influence over events that affect theirlives [11]. Competence is built through providing optimal challenges, promoting task feedback,and freedom from demanding
(communication, creativity, empathy, entrepreneurial mindset,ethics, global/cultural awareness, grit/persistence/resilience, leadership, lifelong learning, riskmanagement, systems thinking, and teamwork). Although most students at this institutionparticipate in experiential learning, the framework aims to provide students with richer, moremeaningful experiences through intentional engagement and reflection. Through several informalconversations, both students and employers have expressed the need for students to reflect andbe able to better communicate the value of their experiences in relation to their technical skillsand career aspirations. This point is reinforced by recent industry reports which emphasize thedifficult time employers have in finding
introduces students to the notion of inclusion and equity inengineering and has them reflect on the importance of these elements to their development, bothas students and professional engineers. By building awareness of inclusion, equity, andprofessionalism early in students’ academic career, the authors aim to create more inclusive andequitable learning environments that lead to a more diverse engineering student body andultimately, engineering workforce, by increasing student sense of belonging. This paper includesa detailed description of the orientation session, a summary of student feedback, and a discussionon how the orientation has been adapted for online participation.Introduction & BackgroundImpact of Freshman Orientation
solutions to meet the and experience University project objective ● Contribution to addressing Project team Students ● Documentation and support real-world challenges dissemination of the project ● Better preparation for future career development development Partnership ● Coordinate between partners ● Gap reduction between academic Digital coordinator, ● Facilitate project preparation development and real-world needs Innovation Project ● Provide cloud computing ● Sustainable partnership for Center
transitions in education and career pathways, and (3) design as central to educa- tional and global change. American c Society for Engineering Education, 2021 Mechanical engineering students’ perceptions of design skills throughout a Senior Design course sequenceAbstractEngineering design requires high-level, interdisciplinary, collaborative problem-solving skills tosuccessfully solve complex and dynamic challenges. For this reason, engineering design courseshave served as a platform for educators to provide students with skills and experiences to facethe global challenges they will encounter in their careers. This study examines
discussion about methodologies to improve thisconcerning situation is imperative.The Micro Nano Technology Student Scholars Research ProgramThe Micro Nano Technology Student Scholars Research Program (MNT-SSRP) is a remote,interdisciplinary, multi-component project, with the overall goal of increasing the number ofunderrepresented students, such as African Americans, Latinx, women, and veterans, that enter theSTEM workforce. The program stemmed from Pasadena City College’s Early Career UndergraduateResearch Experience (eCURe) program and is a component of the Micro Nano Technology EducationCenter (MNT-EC), which is located at PasadenaCity College and has both community collegeand research university partners [22]. MNT-ECis an NSF Advanced
Paper ID #33163Responding to the COVID Pandemic: Results and Reflections on Round-TableDiscussions at ASEE 2020Dr. John Tingerthal P.E., Northern Arizona University John Tingerthal joined the Construction Management faculty at Northern Arizona University in 2007 and was appointed as a Distinguished Teaching Fellow in 2015. His engineering career spans a variety of design and forensic engineering experiences. He spent the first eight years of his career performing structural consulting engineering in Chicago. He earned his Doctorate in Education and is currently the Associate Chair of the Civil Engineering, Construction
inconstruction. Additionally, students also involved in extra-curricular activities of organizationssuch as the International Association for Automation and Robotics in Construction (IAARC)which is affiliated with the central homonyms association and serves as an interdisciplinaryplatform that encourages collaboration among university students and entices them towards aprofessional career in a growing and vast field of automation and robotics in construction.Different data collection methods, goals, and analysis used in the research are as shown in Figure2. Figure 2. Research overviewThe study utilized a statistical ordered probit regression analyses to determine the impact ofdifferent variables that increases the
teleconferencing technologies and providing a means to sustain the collaboration during the academic yearOne of the factors that limit the success of some study abroad programs is the number of facultywho are interested in participating. Faculty may consider these programs to be a lot of work andtime spent may not align with other career aspirations. To remedy this, we solicited input andbuy-in from a range of individuals to ensure the program’s future, as well as to build “bench-depth.”While the explicit target audience was engineering majors, the program was also open to non-engineering majors with suitable STEM backgrounds. A major emphasis of the program was toattract currently under-represented students – female, first generation, and minority
them to understand the rigor and timecommitment required to be successful in the completion program. The overarching goals for thecourse are threefold: 1. Is engineering the right path for me? 2. Is the discipline I have selectedthe right choice for me? 3. What career opportunities are available for engineers in my chosendiscipline? Since the evening students have less options without starting over, they generally donot explore the second goal as much.Some additions and changes have been focused on broadening student perspectives and givingstudents tools to understand the curriculum and increase persistence which in turn improvesretention. Both groups have benefited from a Women in Engineering panel, generalizedestimation practice such as
issues. Graduates with an MSET degree will not only build theirunderstanding of leading-edge concepts in their technology arenas but will also become able tostrategically apply these concepts and technology at all levels of the industry.The MSET degree is designed to allow students to achieve their career objectives by offering aflexible, 30 credit hour plan of study in which each student chooses a focus area from thefollowing three areas. Construction Management Fire Safety and Explosion Protection MechatronicsThe university’s approach of merging engineering technology with other areas of study such asproject management, engineering ethics, and financial studies allows the MSET students tocustomize their plan of study to branch
, Master’s, and PhD in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Pittsburgh. After graduation, Dr. Kerzmann began his career as an assistant professor of Mechanical Engineering at Robert Morris University which afforded him the opportunity to research, teach, and advise in numerous engineering roles. He served as the mechanical coordinator for the RMU Engineering Department for six years, and was the Director of Outreach for the Research and Outreach Center in the School of Engineering, Mathematics and Science. In 2019, Dr. Kerzmann joined the Me- chanical Engineering and Material Science (MEMS) department at the University of Pittsburgh. He is the advising coordinator and associate professor in the MEMS department
and interested in the social impacts of engineering. Women tend to have ahigher interest in people than men [6], higher prosocial motivations [19], higher communal goals[2], and more positive social responsibility attitudes [20, 21]. Studies have also noted high socialmotivations related to career goals among groups from underrepresented racial/ethnic groups[22-24]. Engineering students’ motivation toward public welfare and social responsibilityattitudes may decrease as they increase in rank during college [25, 26], a phenomenon Cechtermed a culture of disengagement in engineering education [25]. Differences in the publicwelfare, helping others, and/or social responsibility attitudes of engineering students have beenfound among students
Portuguese language classes and collaborate with University students in Brazilon a sustainable energy design project.Specifically, this international, faculty-led program focused on global sustainability issues andhow to produce innovate engineering solutions to these problems. Additional added benefits tostudents who participate in these international experiences are that they become more globallyaware and global citizens, more personally and socially aware, and strengthening their career andacademic choices [2,3,4]. The desired student learning outcomes of this program are:1. Understand and solve problems related to scientific engineering principles that governsustainable energy technologies.2. Understand engineering, socio-cultural, environmental
engineering careers and tasks. As demonstrated by a series ofstandardized and teacher-made tests, students are credentialed by degree conferral that they canbegin a career as an engineer with the requisite information represented and stored in theirmemories. This approach rests on several key assumptions. ● Abstract knowledge is best, as it can apply to many concrete situations. ● Knowledge is represented and stored in memory and retrieved later on the job as needed. ● There is 1 instructional process, curricular sequence, that will work for all students. ● There are capital “T” Truths that can be objectively known and tested. ● Teaching is a matter of telling students the Truths and ensuring they can accurately recite and reproduce
Paper ID #33829Lifting an LI, FG, and/or UR Support Program Off the Ground duringCOVID-19: Successes and Lessons LearnedMr. Lenz Kaspar Bayas, Boise State University Lenz Bayas is an instructional design consultant interested in the intersection between race, culture, equity, and learning. Starting his career as a teacher with a focus on urban education, he has since transitioned into the corporate training field taking on clients in various sectors, including financial services, nonprofit, and higher education. Over the course of his career, he has grown to appreciate honing a systems view and taking a performance
a postdoctoral research associate at the University of Texas at Dallas within the Erik Jonsson School of Engineering and Computer Science where she is studying retention of undergraduate engineering students. She has extensive experience using qualitative and mixed-methods research in Engineering Education. Before joining UTD in September 2020, Laura worked at the University of San Diego on their RED grant to study institutional change efforts and redefine the engineering canon as sociotechnical. She has a background in environmental engineering and received her Ph.D. in Engineering Education at Utah State University with a research focus on the ethical and career aspects of mentoring of science and engineering
[5, 7]. Engineering graduates pursue careers in theoreticaldesign, and research and development [1]. Meanwhile, engineering technology graduates oftenenter construction, product design, manufacturing, or testing [7]. Figure 1. Hands-on Continuum for Engineering Technology [8].Despite the curriculum differences, graduates of ABET-accredited four-year engineeringtechnology programs in several states are qualified to become licensed professional engineerswith verifiable proof of competency [7, 9]. One earns licensure upon passing the Fundamentalsof Engineering (FE) exam and the Principles of Practice of Engineering (PE) exam through theNational Council of Examiners for Engineering and Surveying (NCESS) alongside providingproof of
research that indicates that the need to supportengineering faculty in curriculum development efforts so that all identities are represented andfully integrated into the engineering curriculum, assignments, and assessments [33], [37], [38].This is critical because students who have minoritized identities are able to recognize that notonly is their own identity excluded from the curriculum, but also other minoritized identities,which can amplify these students’ sense of isolation and lack of belonging in the engineeringmajor and career. Designing curricula, assignments, and assessments that reflect diverseperceptions of engineers and engineering work can help cultivate the professional formation ofengineering identity and encourage students with
; Smith et al.2017). This activity combines with an added emphasis among engineering programs to developan entrepreneurial mindset among their engineering students with the belief that this will lead tothem being more productive and innovative whether their career path leads them into establishedindustry (becoming “intrapreneurs”) or later as entrepreneurs.While this trend toward developing more entrepreneurially minded engineering students issupported by global economic trends and a rapidly changing work environment, one factor hasbeen largely overlooked in this process. Statistically, most entrepreneurial ventures fail, withdisproportionately large value being created from a minority of entrepreneurial endeavors (Coats,2019). Given this fact
programs, especially through interactive lab activities [4].Another program geared towards electrical engineering found an increase in both studentknowledge on the subject matter and interest in future studies in engineering and science fields[5]. Engineering career aspirations were also shown to increase in a Texas A&M summerprogram [6]. Another program found students showed great interest in studying engineering andengineering-related fields after their summer program [7]. Numerous additional studies echo thefindings of this limited selection of studies [8-11]. Together, these studies show the potential ofcollege-level courses for high school students to grow student knowledge, subject matter interest,career aspirations, and future college
Paper ID #34100Authentic Engineering Design AssessmentMiss Joanna AmbrosioDr. M. David Burghardt, Hofstra University Dr. M. David Burghardt, professor of Engineering, founder and co-director of the Center for STEM Research, has been the principal or co-principle investigator on 13 NSF projects primarily dealing with engineering in STEM.Dr. Deborah Hecht, Center for Advanced Studyin Education As Director of the Center for Advanced Study in Education, at the CUNY Graduate Center I am involved in a wide range of educational evaluations of funded and local projects. I also mentor graduate students interested in careers in
and 5 give an overview on the similar questions that were asked weekly as thequiz was completed. Both answers are satisfactory, but in general the articles received scoringjust above average. The answers to the questions 7 and 8 give a clear message that some of thepapers were more approachable for the students, and they were clearly helpful for learning. Thequestions 4 and 6 regarding the relevance of topics to the future career of students received theTable 1. First part of the mandatory questionnaire completed at the end of the course. The meanvalues and the standard deviation (std) for the questions are presented with n = 41. Before the course, I was already familiar with the IEEE Yes 23 1. Xplore database
relation to its mission to help students succeed in their nascentprofessional engineering careers. Engineering students at Detroit Mercy are required to havethree one-semester long co-ops as a graduation requirement and must seek a co-op at the end ofthe freshman year. The TTI survey is designed to help students get a better understanding ofthemselves, thus making them better prepared to communicate effectively with prospectiveemployers during the job search and interviews. The TTI survey is administered at the beginningof freshman year in order to help students answer basic questions that should be expected inemployment screening and interviews, questions such as “tell me about yourself” and “what aresome of your strengths and weaknesses?”The TTI
is focuses on engineering pathways, career and technical education, digital thread, cyber physical systems, mechatronics, digital manufacturing, broadening participation, and engineering education. She is a Director of Mechatronics and Digital Manufacturing Lab at ODU and a lead of Area of Specialization Mechatronics Systems Design. She worked as a Visiting Researcher at Commonwealth Center for Advanced Manufacturing in Disputanta, VA on projects focusing on digital thread and cyber security of manufacturing systems. She has funded research in broadening participation efforts of underrepresented students in STEM funded by U.S. Department of Education, focusing on com- puter science and cybersecurity pathways, and
Engineering: The Role of STEM Interventions,” Journal of College Student Development, vol. 57, no. 6, pp. 742–747, Sep. 2016, doi: 10.1353/csd.2016.0072.[9] N. A. Fouad, W.-H. Chang, M. Wan, and R. Singh, “Women’s Reasons for Leaving the Engineering Field,” Front Psychol, vol. 8, Jun. 2017, doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2017.00875.[10] J. Rohde et al., “Design Experiences, Engineering Identity, and Belongingness in Early Career Electrical and Computer Engineering Students,” IEEE Transactions on Education, vol. 62, no. 3, pp. 165–172, Aug. 2019, doi: 10.1109/TE.2019.2913356.[11] S. Hurtado and D. F. Carter, “Effects of College Transition and Perceptions of the Campus Racial Climate on Latino Students’ Sense of Belonging,” Sociology of
the discussion, the facilitator asked if thefacial jewelry led to certain assumptions by the students. It is important to keep a sense of humorin this discussion and the facilitator to be comfortable with hearing untrue or unfair stereotypesbased on their appearance. By keeping it light and laughing or agreeing with the assumptions,students feel able to be more honest in their biases about the facilitator. This kind of discussionmay be more difficult for students to have with an authority figure and so faculty may need to bemindful of this as they are preparing for such a discussion. Similarly, this discussion may bedifficult for faculty members whose career is subject to students’ evaluations. Future study couldexplore the effect of having a
on our future workforce. Therefore, STEM students willrequire an academic career that develops and nurtures their professional skills far beyondtechnical skills, thus ensuring success in such competitive work environments. This isespecially true for international, women, first-generation STEM students, andunderrepresented minorities in STEM education, who must overcome additional barriers tosucceed. To understand the current status, priorities and deficiencies in presentation skills, abenchmark survey was administered to 320 STEM students to understand theirunderstandings of presentation skills. Afterward, a pilot study measured students’communication skills development in two construction management courses, byimplementing a lecture-based
digital pulse-width modulation signals sent to the robot and calculate the responsetime of the motors. Evaluation measures include a pre/post survey that measure student excitement in thecourse, intent to major in electrical and computer engineering, and understanding of the field.Additionally, an exit survey upon graduation evaluates student intent to pursue a career inrobotics. Lastly, registration data observes pre/post number of students in the major. Resultsshow significant increases in interest in the field of electrical and computer engineering, numberof majors, and student learning.Introduction Over the past ten years there has been a steady negative trend in the number of electricaland computer engineering (ECE) majors
metadisciplinary understanding of sustainability and to become agents ofchange in their careers. Two new interdisciplinary courses (3-credits) were developed throughthe SF IGERT project by MTU and SUBR faculty. Sustainable Futures 1 focuses on the toolsand methods needed for policy evaluation and sustainability assessment (e.g., life cycle analysis)and concentrates on issues relevant to industrialized countries. Sustainable Futures 2 examinespolicy implications of sustainability, especially in the developing world. Completion of thesecourses is a requirement of the Graduate Certificate in Sustainability.1 The certificate alsorequires students to complete at least one course associated with each of the three pillars ofsustainability, i.e., environmental