Paper ID #38448Overlooked, Underlying: Understanding tacit criteria of proposalreviewing during a mock panel reviewMs. Randi Sims, Clemson UniversityKelsey Watts, Clemson University Kelsey Watts is a recent graduate from Clemson University. She is part of the Engineering Education Research Peer Review Training (EER PERT) team and has also developed Systems Biology outreach modules for high school students.Ms. Evan Ko, University of Illinois at Urbana - Champaign Evan is recent undergraduate graduate in Bioengineering with a minor in Material Science and Engineer- ing at the University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign.Prof
Paper ID #38390The Combination Approach: Increasing Student Learning and Understand-ingof Introductory Computer Science TopicsMr. Thomas Rossi, Penn State Behrend Thomas Rossi is a lecturer in Computer Science and Software Engineering at Penn State Behrend. His research focuses on improving the post-secondary experience for students through the use of current com- puting tools and technologies. Thomas graduated with his MS in Computer Science from the University of New Hampshire in 2016.Dr. Paul C. Lynch, Penn State Behrend Paul C. Lynch received his Ph.D., M.S., and B.S. degrees in Industrial Engineering from the
Paper ID #37793An Approach to Understanding Problem Solving Using Multiple SolutionMethodsMr. Hao Li, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Hao Li is currently a PhD student studying Mechanical Engineering at MIT. He earned his Bachelor’s degree from Rice University.Dr. Anette Hosoi, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Anette (Peko) Hosoi is Associate Dean of Engineering and the Neil and Jane Pappalardo Professor of Me- chanical Engineering, at MIT. She received her PhD in Physics from the University of Chicago and went on to become an NSF Postdoctoral Fellow in the MIT Department of Mathematics and at the Courant
://www.abet.org/wpcontent/uploads/2019/04/FAQs-for-EAC-C3-C5-4-8-2019.pdf (accessed January 3, 2023).[9] KEEN, “The Framework for Entrepreneurially Minded Learning.” Engineering Unleashed. https://engineeringunleashed.com/framework (accessed January 3, 2023).[10] J. B. Hylton, D. Mikesell, J.-D. Yoder, and H. LeBlanc, “Working to instill the entrepreneurial mindset across the curriculum,” Entrepreneurship Educ. Pedagogy, vol. 3, no. 1, pp 86-106, Jan. 2020, doi: 10.1177/2515127419870266.[11] L. Verschaffel, F. Depaepe, and W. Van Dooren, “Word Problems in Mathematics Education,” in Encyclopedia of Mathematics Education, S. Lerman, Ed., Dordrecht, Germany: Springer, 2014, doi: 10.1007/978-94-007- 4978-8_163.[12
Paper ID #38193Introducing Omnifinites and the Arithmetic Errorless Infinity CalculatorHunter Christopher Fred, Western Kentucky University HUNTER C. FRED is a senior completing his Bachelor of Science degree in civil engineering from the School of Engineering and Applied Sciences at Western Kentucky University. Mr. Fred may be reached at hunter.fred689@topper.wku.edu.Ryan Bennett Greenwood, Western Kentucky University RYAN B. GREENWOOD is a senior completing his Bachelor of Science degree in civil engineering from the School of Engineering and Applied Sciences at Western Kentucky University. Mr. Greenwood may be
Paper ID #38112Board 326: Investigating Creativity, Confidence, and an EntrepreneurialMindset through Curricular Modification and Community EngagementDr. Katrina J. Donovan, South Dakota School of Mines and TechnologyDr. Jon J Kellar, South Dakota School of Mines and Technology Kellar is the Douglas Fuerstenau Professor of Materials and Metallurgical Engineering at the SD School of Mines and Technology. He has been on the faculty since 1990, and in 1994 was selected as an National Science Foundation Presidential Faculty Fellow aDr. Michael West, South Dakota School of Mines and Technology Dr. Michael West is an associate
Jersey Institute of Technology Prateek Shekhar is an Assistant Professor - Engineering Education division at New Jersey Institute of Technology. His research is focused on examining translation of engineering education research in prac- tice, assessment and evaluation of dissemination initiatives and educational programs in engineering dis- ciplines. He holds a Ph.D. in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Texas at Austin, M.S. in Electrical Engineering from University of Southern California and B.S. in Electronics and Communica- tion Engineering from India.Jacqueline Handley, University of Michigan Jacqueline Handley is a graduate student at the University of Michigan, in Science Education. Her back
engineering and design work.Dr. Molly Y. Mollica, University of Maryland, Baltimore County Molly Y. Mollica (she/her) is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Mechanical Engineering at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County (UMBC). Dr. Mollica earned her B.S. in Biomedical Engineering from Ohio State University (OSU), M.S. in Mechanical Engineering from OSU, and Ph.D. in bioengineering at the University of Washington. She also trained as a postdoctoral scholar-fellow at Bloodworks Northwest Research Institute. Molly’s wetlab research interests are at the intersection of engineering mechanics, mechanobiology, and health equity. Her educational research interests are in community-engaged learning, project-based
Paper ID #40106Designing the Laboratory Experience from the Ground Up: CustomLaboratory Equipment and Writing-Intensive PedagogyDr. Jacob Bishop, Southern Utah University Jacob Bishop holds B.S. and M.S. degrees in Mechanical Engineering. He earned a Ph.D. in Engineering Education at Utah State University pursuing his research on the flipped classroom. His research interests are multidisciplinary. In educational research, his interests include model-eliciting activities, open online education, educational data mining, and the flipped classroom. In quantitative methodology and psycho- metrics, his interests focus on the
Paper ID #36777Identifying Student Profiles Related to Success in Discrete Math CSCoursesProf. Yael Gertner, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Dr Gertner joined the Computer Science Department at the University of Illinois in 2020 as a Teaching Assistant Professor. She received her B.S. and MEng in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science from MIT, and Ph.D. in Computer and Information Science at the University of Pennsylvania. She was a Beckman Fellow at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. Her current focus is on broadening par- ticipation in Computer Science and Computer Science Education She has
for improving problemsolving in engineering mechanics; (4) Extended Reality Enhancements to the Thermal SciencesCurriculum; and (5) Hands-on, minds-on, and game-based learning for Solid MechanicsCurriculum. Cohort 1 was primarily composed of Academic Professional Track (APT) Facultywhose primary role in the department was teaching. Of these, a majority of proposals were in themechanics and materials areas but not many in the thermal sciences and dynamics and controlsareas. A conscious effort was made in year 2 to recruit faculty in these areas; thus cohort 2consisted of about 7-8 Tenure track faculty in areas related to thermal sciences and mechanics.They were paired with APT faculty so that there was a mix of different faculty in each team
Paper ID #38467What to Teach First, Hardware or Software? Improving Success inIntroductory Programming CoursesDr. Richard Whalen, Northeastern University Dr. Richard Whalen is a Teaching Professor at Northeastern University in Boston, MA and is Director of First-year Engineering. The mission of the First-year Engineering team is to provide a reliable, wide- ranging, and constructive educational experience that endorses the student-centered and professionally- oriented mission of the University. He also teaches specialty courses in the Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering at Northeastern and has published and
Paper ID #37272An Analysis of Low-Scoring Blind and Low-Vision Individuals’ SelectedAnswers on a Tactile Spatial Ability InstrumentDaniel Kane, Utah State University Daniel Kane is a graduate student at Utah State University pursuing a PhD in Engineering Education with a concurrent master’s degree in Civil Engineering. His research interests focus around the study of spatial ability with an emphasis on identifying patterns of spatial strategies and measuring spatial ability in blind and low vision populations.Dr. Natalie L. Shaheen Dr. Natalie L. Shaheen is an assistant professor of blind education at Illinois State
Paper ID #39303A Gamification Framework for Exploratory Learning in Higher STEM Edu-cationDr. Yan Shi, University of Wisconsin - Platteville Dr. Yan Shi is currently a Professor in the Software Engineering Program at University of Wisconsin- Platteville. She received her PhD in Computer Science from The University of Texas at Dallas in 2011. Her research interests include software engineering, data engineering, machine learning and engineering education.Dr. Kyle S Horne, University of Wisconsin - PlattevilleYanwei Wu, UW Platteville ©American Society for Engineering Education, 2023 A
University at West Lafayette (COE) Tugba Karabiyik, Ph.D., is a lecturer at Purdue Systems Collaboratory, Purdue University. She holds an M.S. in Applied and Computational Mathematics and Ph.D. in Biological Mathematics both from Florida State University. Her research interests include economic decision-making, engineering design thinking, data-driven decision-making through data visualizations, and mathematical and statistical modeling.Dr. Lan Jin Lan is currently the Intercultural Learning Specialist of Center for Intercultural Learning, Mentorship, Assessment and Research (CILMAR). Her role is to provide research support to people who are interested in intercultural learning. Lan received her PhDKris Acheson-Clair
things in that direction”(Senior in Chemical Engineering).Another mentor highlights these many opportunities when they say they “want to pursue a careerin energy resources in some way, hopefully, solar, wind or water…I'm also really passionateabout pursuing a career in green architecture and going into the planning and design process ofthat” (Female Junior in Environmental Engineering). Whether these mentees pursue a degree inSTEM or not, the relationships they will build with these environmentally-minded mentors willbleed into other aspects of their life. As one student says, “... after graduation I would like tofocus my career goals on sustainable development in rural communities both domestically andabroad. I envision a combination of field
Paper ID #39587Designing Instruction to Promote a Riemann Sum-Based Understanding ofthe Definite IntegralDr. Caleb D Holloway, West Virginia University Institute of Technology I am an assistant professor of mathematics at West Virginia University Institute of Technology. My formal education is in functional analysis, but for the last several years I have been working in the field of math education. My current interests are students’ conceptual development of calculus and precalculus concepts, and the use of open educational resources in math education. ©American Society for Engineering Education
Paper ID #38182Board 207: ACCESS in STEM: An S-STEM Project Supporting Economi-callyDisadvantaged STEM-Interested Students in Their First Two YearsErica ClineMenaka AbrahamSarah AlaeiDr. Heather Dillon, University of Washington, Tacoma Dr. Heather Dillon is Professor and Chair of Mechanical Engineering at the University of Washington Tacoma. Her research team is working on energy efficiency, renewable energy, fundamental heat transfer, and engineering education. Before joining academia, she worked for the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) as a senior research engineer working on both energy efficiency and renewable
Paper ID #36790Peer oral exams: A learner-centered authentic assessment approachscalable to large classesMarko V. Lubarda, University of California, San Diego Marko V. Lubarda is an Assistant Teaching Professor in the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering at the University of California, San Diego. He teaches mechanics, materials science, design, computational analysis, and engineering mathematics courses, and has co-authored the undergraduate textbook Intermediate Solid Mechanics (Cambridge University Press, 2020). He is dedicated to engi- neering pedagogy and enriching students’ learning experiences through
Paper ID #40095Board 385: Shark AI: Teaching Middle School Students AI FundamentalsUsing Fossil Shark TeethDr. Jeremy A. Magruder Waisome, University of Florida Dr. Jeremy A. Magruder Waisome is the Thomas O. Hunter Rising Star Assistant Professor in the En- gineering Education Department at the University of Florida (UF). Her research focuses on self-efficacy and critical mentoring in the context of engineering and computer science education. She is passion- ate about broadening participation in engineering, leveraging evidence-based approaches to improve the engineering education environment.Dennis R. Parnell Jr
Paper ID #37423Intersectionality Between Race and Gender in LSAMP-NSF STEM ProgramMentorshipMs. Jennifer Ackerman, Texas A&M University I am a third year PhD student at Texas A&M University in College Station, and am a first-generation, queer, female student from New York. I am in the higher education administration program and my research interests include engineering education for underrepresented students, especially women in the field. I am interested in how their mental health is affected by being an outsider in and out of the classroom.Am´ rica Soto-Arzat, Texas A&M University e The second author is
Paper ID #36975Application of Mastery Learning in an Online MATLAB Programming CourseDr. James Edward Toney, The Ohio State University James Toney earned the Ph.D. in applied physics from Carnegie Mellon University in 1998 and the B.S. in electrical engineering from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in 1984. He is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Engineering Education at Ohio State, where his focus is on curriculum development for teaching computer programming, primarily in MATLAB. He has previously held R&D positions at Bat- telle, Penn State Electro-Optics Center, and SRICO, Inc., where he worked on modeling
Paper ID #39829White Male Allyship in STEM Higher Education: An Autoethnographic StudyMr. Nagash Antoine Clarke, University of Michigan Nagash Clarke is a doctoral student at the University of Michigan working with Dr. Joi-Lynn Mondisa. In his research, he examines mentoring and its particular implications for minoritized populations, as well as white male allyship in STEM higher education. He received a Bachelor’s in Chemistry from Pace University and Masters degrees in both Chemical Engineering and Engineering Education Research from the University of Michigan. He teaches chemistry at Washtenaw Community College.Dr. Joi
Paper ID #39721A descriptive study of an innovative and sustainable model ofwork-integrated learning for industry professionals: An Indian caseProf. Venkataraman PB, Birla Institute of Technology and Science Pilani https://www.linkedin.com/in/venkataraman-pb-3056917G Sundar ©American Society for Engineering Education, 2023A descriptive study of an innovative and sustainable model of work integrated learningfor industry professionals – An Indian caseAbstract:Research on education models suggests work integrated learning (WIL) to be an effectiveapproach for professional studies. An exhaustive, methodological review of literature
Students"Dr. Ben Weihrauch, University of Colorado Boulder, College of Engineering & Applied ScienceDr. Ben Weihrauch serves as Senior Director of Professional Student Development in theCollege of Engineering & Applied Science at the University of Colorado Boulder. Ben leads theCollege’s ProReady initiative, which is CU Engineering’s commitment to the career andprofessional development success of students. Ben has been a scholar-practitioner in highereducation for 20+ years across the student lifecycle, including admissions and advising, careerservices, employer relations, and program management.Before CU Engineering, Ben served in leadership roles at the Colorado School of Public Health,Community College of Denver, Michigan State
Paper ID #39352Impact of Computation in Undergraduate Curriculum : Alumni PerspectiveB. Rus¸en Argun, University of Illinois at Urbana - Champaign Rus¸en is a Ph.D. student in the department of Mechanical Science and Engineering, University of Illi- nois at Urbana-Champaign. He is the computational teaching assistant of the Materials Science and Engineering department for academic year 2022-2023, and participated in the teaching activities about computations in several undergraduate courses. His research is about coarse-grained simulations of soft materials. He enjoys sailing when the weather is nice.Prof. Andre Schleife
Paper ID #40479An Analysis of the Impact of Advances in Generative ArtificialIntelligence on Programming Assignments and CompetitionsMr. Devang Jayachandran, Pennsylvania State University, Harrisburg Devang Jayachandran is currently a graduate student pursuing a Masters of Science in Computer Science at the Mathematics and Computer Science department in Penn State Harrisburg. Devang received his Bachelor’s of Engineering in Information Science from the National Institute of Engineering, Mysuru, India and then worked at JP Morgan Chase and Co, Bengaluru, India in the field of Natural Language Processing and Document
Summer Evaluation Institute. Besides teaching, she has worked as an evaluator in grants awarded by the National Science Foundation (NSF), National Insti- tutes of Health (NIH), US Department of Agriculture (USDA), and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). Currently she is the internal evaluator for the projects Recruiting, Retaining and Engaging Academically Talented Students from Economically Disadvantaged Groups into a Pathway to Successful Engineering Careers (PEARLS) and for Building Capacity at Collaborative Undergraduate STEM Program in Resilient and Sustainable Infrastructure (RISE-UP). Both projects are funded by NSF.Maryliz Soto, University of Puerto Rico, MayaguezDr. Carla Lopez Del Puerto
Paper ID #38511Board 290: Faculty Experiences with Hands-on Models for CalculusInstructionProf. Eric Davishahl, Whatcom Community College Eric Davishahl serves as professor and engineering program coordinator at Whatcom Community College in northwest Washington state. His teaching and research interests include developing, implementing and assessing active learning instructional strategies and auto-graded online homework. Eric has been an active member of ASEE since 2001. He was the recipient of the 2008 Pacific Northwest Section Outstanding Teaching Award and currently serves on the ASEE Board of Directors as Zone IV Chair.Dr
an opportunity for research that can guideimplementation of ungrading and thus enable other scholarship.With the above context in mind, this evidence-based practice paper asks: 1) how do educatorsimplement ungrading in engineering courses? 2) what do educators vary in order to adaptungrading to their unique educational contexts? 3) how can we characterize the pedagogicaldesign space of radical or non-traditional grading schemes? We ask these questions as we do inorder to situate our work as a research through design effort, specifically the approach advocatedby Gaver (2012) in which a set of design solutions are interrogated to determine their invariancesas well as the dimensions of variation. In framing our effort as research through design