members treatedRelationships each other with respect and appreciation). We laughed together, joked, poked fun good naturedly, and sharedHumor lighthearted moments. The team exercised perseverance, resilience, didn't get down, mood didn't getGrit down, kept trying, even keeled, drive, work ethic, avoided burnout.Problem Solving The team was effective at overcoming challenges. The team had a solid approach to identifying, planning for, and minimizingRisk Management risks to the project.Innovation/ The team used creativity and outside-the-box-thinking to improve theCreativity project.Collaboration
course exposes a large percentage ofengineering students to actual business activity, and does so in a way that engages them inmaking a positive impact, addressing ABET outcome 2: an ability to apply engineering design toproduce solutions that meet specified needs with consideration of public health, safety, andwelfare, as well as global, cultural, social, environmental, and economic factors [14]. Trainingin microfinance also prepares graduates to address NSPE Code of Ethics item III.2.a Engineersare encouraged to participate in civic affairs; career guidance for youths; and work for theadvancement of the safety, health, and well-being of their community [15]. In a broader sense,the perception of engineers as making the world a better place is
willbenefit the host institution the most. This means that the applicant needs to get involved indiscussion and negotiation about the visit dates so that the visit is beneficial for the host institution.It is always beneficial if you have any prior contact and understanding with the Dean and/orDepartment chair of the host institution, if they are familiar with your work, work ethic, andcapabilities then agreeing on the visit dates, and project details is easy step and can be veryproductive. This initial contact can also help you discuss specific activities that you might beinterested in conducting during your visit to the host institution. In your application, you need to explain how relevant or beneficial your work will be for thehost institution
,pedagogical and student experiences. Similarly, with a focus on an engineering thermodynamics course,Riley [5] motivates the use of liberative pedagogies in engineering education by relating pedagogy tostudents’ prior experiences, student responsibility and authority, including ethics and policy, decenteringwestern knowledge systems.Institutional and Data Collection ContextThe student co-authors of this paper, who are currently in their sophomore year, are enrolled in anundergraduate engineering program developed around the intellectual theme of “human-centered”engineering. The program integrates the university’s liberal arts curriculum with an experientialengineering curriculum emphasizing societal responsibility.For the liberal arts requirement of
the academic year, allows sophomores to seniors the ability to participate in one offour different tracks: Entrepreneurship and Innovation, Industry, Research, or EngineeringProjects in Community Service (EPICS). Students spend one day a week in meetings learninggeneral topics: user-centered engineering design, engineering ethics, project management,teamwork, technical presentations, etc. Depending on the track students select, they wouldparticipate in additional technical skill sessions to assist with their specific projects. The sessionsare designed to provide instruction in various technical topics directly related to their project orinterest. Student groups meet outside of the normal meetings to work on their projects as a teamand/or with
nature of thedata collected and the lack of direct contact with human subjects. This paper does not reveal anypersonally identifiable information. Moreover, our study follows the ethical considerationsadopted by other researchers to conduct social media analysis of users' posts [15]–[17]. To analyzequalitative aspects, we conducted a manual thematic analysis [18]. We developed the codes usingan empirical bottom-up approach based on grounded theory [19]. In our initial analysis of theposts, we identified the codes. We also used human coding to extract a codebook, including topicsabout work-related concerns among Neurodiverse users. The code identification is based on priorwork related to social media analysis [10], [15], [20], [21]5. ResultsBased
thesuccessful implementation of a PBL curriculum [16].MethodsFor this pilot study, a three-week program is offered at SUSTech, a top research university inChina during summer 2021 and 2022. Upon completion of the program, students are expected to:(1) execute design process from problem conceptualization to prototyping using a diverse set ofstrategies; (2) conduct systematic research on the problem to identify suitable design strategies;(3) practice as a motivated professional designer with ethic, discipline, leadership andresponsibility; (4) communicate ideas effectively with oral and written communication assisted bydigital tools; and (5) apply technical knowledge and skills to generate new ideas and evaluatefeasibility of the design concepts with
public health, public good. safety, and welfare, as well as global, cultural, social, environmental, and economic factors. 3. an ability to communicate effectively PBL is easily assessed using presentations with a range of audiences. and papers rather than grading homework for the “right answer.” 4. an ability to recognize ethical and PBL is easily overlayed with professional professional responsibilities in society ethics statements and students’ engineering situations and make requirement to assess societal impact. informed judgments, which must consider the impact of engineering solutions in global, economic
, makingthem to see themselves as entrepreneurially minded individuals [7, 8]. Storytelling, throughwhich students share specific work or school situations that might represent a wide variety ofethical concerns [9] also constitutes ways to enhance and to extend the ethics learning outside atypical classroom setting.The integration of informal peer assessments provides additional opportunities for students toengage with academic content vicariously and to learn from their peers’ stories. The informalassessment process lowers the stakes, focuses on students’ learning as reflected in each story’snarrative, and encourages participation and creativity. Moreover, the processes of generating andsharing stories and the peer assessment process connect to
major search engines, Ethics: techniques for incorporating ethics in computer curriculum specifically in data science curriculum Programs/curricula: evaluating Data Science programs in the US and China and Retention: evaluating minority female retention in computer related degree programs. ©American Society for Engineering Education, 2023Retention of Female Minority Students in Bachelor STEM Degree Programs: An Exploratory Study of Five Cohorts1.0 Introduction Female minority students are underrepresented in academic based undergraduate science,technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) degree programs [1]. This group of studentswhich is comprised of American Indian or
education is significantly different from otherdisciplinary education, it is crucial to examine these psychological factors in the context ofother disciplinary education (Bogaard et al., 2021). For instance, previous research providesinsights into the ethical considerations (Venkatesh et al., 2022) and interdisciplinaryperspectives of engineering education (Yeter et al., 2023), which could inform future researchon the psychological factors influencing career decisions in these fields. In addition, furtherresearch can explore the impact of various forms of support, such as mentorship andprofessional development courses, on engineering students’ career decision-making (Rathoreet al., 2016). Such studies could provide insights into the effectiveness
the participants’ likelihood of success byfostering development of personal or individual adaptive strengths. Building on this, Burt et al.(2021) propose a new model of wholeness in graduate advising based on an ethic of care. Thefocus on wholeness directs attention to the need to recognize black male students as wholepersons, including the influence of family (Brooms & Davis, 2017; Tolbert Smith, 2022). Forexample, Tolbert Smith (2022) shows that black families and extended family members providedblack men’s primary sources of support, although black men also benefited from bi-directionalexchange of cultural capital when navigating non-inclusive environments. In the same vein,Burrell et al. (2015) suggest that while teacher expectations
, 3) an ability to communicate across cultures, 4) experience practicing engineering in a global context, and 5) an ability to effectively deal with ethical issues arising from cultural or national differencesTraditionally, these skills are acquired through study abroad programs. Recently some courseshave been developed for undergraduate engineering students with some success demonstratingstudents’ increased global competencies even among students were are not able to travel, see forexample [5].This paper will report on the experience learned from a program that was developed to provideopportunities to practice engineering in a global context. The Engineering World Health VirtualExchange was developed and conducted in the
transition? What facets of EM may have helped with the transition? 3. Did COVID create a specific need for new techniques and tools in the faculty community? 4. Did the virtual setting present an opportunity to reach a broader community?BackgroundEngineering education has experienced transitions before, often during large cultural shifts. Afterthe Second World War there was a significant transition in STEM curricula toward scientificintegration [3]. In the early 2000s the change in ABET requirements for ethics created anothersea change in engineering curricula [4]. The increase in active learning and evidence-basedinstructional practices has started a slower change in engineering education during the last 20years.Another example of
debugging of student- written programs; introduction to engineering majors, career exploration, engineering practice within realistic constraints, e.g. economic, environmental, ethical, health and safety, and sustainability; pathways to success in engineering. • ENGR 216 - Experimental Physics and Engineering Lab II (Mechanics) includes the description and application of laws of physical motion to the solution of science and engineering problems; using sensing, control and actuation for experimental verification of physics concepts while solving engineering problems; exposure to engineering ethics; continued exploration of engineering disciplines and careers. • ENGR 217 - Experimental Physics and
leadership to impact their successful transition to the workplace.Ms. Mihee Park, Pennsylvania State University MIHEE PARK, MS, is pursuing her PhD in Workforce Education and Development, College of Educa- tion,Pennsylvania State University. Her major research interests lie in the areas of diversity and inclu- sion, inclusive leadership, engineering ethics, sustainability education and practice, and multiculturalism. Email: mimipark2023@gmail.comDr. Ashley N. Patterson, Pennsylvania State University Dr. Patterson joined Penn State’s Curriculum and Instruction team in Fall 2015. Trained in Special and Elementary Education at Boston University and Reading Specialization at Hood College, she completed her PhD work at The
Study Infrastructure and Basic Transmission 5 Social Impacts of Calculations 26 Complete Streets 44 Impacts of Infrastructure 35 Electricity COVID-19 on 18 Green Infrastructure 27 Parking Distribution Transportation Systems 6 Teamwork and Stakeholders 19 Water Security 28 Transit 36 Renewable Energy 7 Ethics 1 20 Water Re-Use and 29 Route Selection
intervention activity directly addresses our second andfourth goals: teach students to appreciate diversity in engineering and computer science andserve diverse populations in their professional work.Algorithmic Justice LeagueModern technologies continue to implement features that rely on human interfaces, e.g. afingerprint reader or facial recognition to unlock a phone. However, the consideration of diversepersons is often not foregrounded in the development of the underlying technologies that makethese features possible. As a result, diverse populations are not granted equal access to thesetechnologies and may be underserved by them.The purpose of this intervention is to develop student awareness about the ethical considerationsassociated with
twenty to fifty percent of entering freshmen, according to Gordon,are undecided about their major, while seventy-five percent change their major at least once priorto matriculating [1]. Faculty mentorship is additionally indispensable as young adults willtransition into professional roles post-graduation, and in numerous cases, particularly in STEMrelated disciplines, ethical principles are necessary to maintain the public’s well-being. In thisregard, Johnson outlines that faculty mentorship in engineering fields is utilized to transmit values,cultural mores, and ethical principles to the engineering profession [4].According to Levinson, a mentorship role can exert a greater influence on student success due tothe relationship it builds between
. 9[18] C. Flaherty, “Early journal submission data suggest COVID-19 is tanking women’s research productivity,” Inside Higher Education, 21 2020.[19] M. M. King and M. Frederickson, “The Pandemic Penalty: The gendered effects of COVID-19 on scientific productivity,” SocArXiv, preprint, Sep. 2020. doi: 10.31235/osf.io/8hp7m.[20] E. Redden, “Scholars confront coronavirus-related racism in the classroom, in research and in community outreach,” Inside Higher Education, 02 2020.[21] R. J. Kreitzer and J. Sweet-Cushman, “Evaluating Student Evaluations of Teaching: a Review of Measurement and Equity Bias in SETs and Recommendations for Ethical Reform,” J. Acad. Ethics, Feb. 2021, doi: 10.1007/s10805-021-09400-w.[22] E. B. King
✓ ✓ ✓ People with Down 1/2018 ✓ Ethical concerns ✓ Syndrome and ASD 2/2018 Sports ✓ ✓ ✓ Rescue teams (ambulance drivers, Ambulance drivers are 1/2019 ✓ ✓ fire fighters, Andean always very busy rescue team) 2/2019 Small living spaces ✓ ✓ ✓As shown in Table 2 in semester 1/2014 the course topic was Health. This topic was too broadwhich led to students becoming confused about what Health meant. They asked questions suchas: Is healthy eating, Health? Who can
about them; some of these questions were: (1) what is notsustainable about their homes; (2) how our infrastructure can be more sustainable; and (3) whatthe correlations between sustainability from social, economic and environmental perspectivesare. Another example from a previous implementation was in an Ethics course, where studentsposted an image on Instagram that responds to what is ethics from an engineering perspectiveand how would a project manager's office include unethical/biased resources. By the end of thesemester, the students complete a post-course survey that addresses the same questions.The pre- and post-course surveys in this study are also used to evaluate the effectiveness ofintegrating Social Media platforms in STEM courses
Attorney General in Hawaii and a member of the team revamping the State Juvenile Justice Information System. Her research and instructional Interests include programming languages, computer ethics, and student development.Mr. Mohsen Taheri, Florida International University c American Society for Engineering Education, 2018 Paper ID #214932018 CoNECD - The Collaborative Network for Engineering and ComputingDiversity Conference: Crystal City, Virginia Apr 29Examining the Computing Identity of High-Achieving Underserved Comput-ing Students on the Basis of Gender, Field, and Year in SchoolMs. Atalie GarciaDr. Monique
the information that can be gleaned from these data is in directtension with the significant potential for negative impact on individuals from the associated lossof privacy and a diminishing “right to be forgotten.” 16 This tension is itself an area of newscholarship as legal, ethical and social scholars explore the nature, value, and ownership ofpersonal digital information.Disruptive Innovation A disruptive innovation is one that changes the value proposition in an existing market tosuch an extent that existing market leaders are displaced by newcomers who have been earlyadopters of the disrupting innovation. Interestingly, case studies of disruptive innovation showthat the existing market leaders are typically aware of the
fundamentals portion of the class, which occurs threes time per week and isled by a faculty member, students are introduced to engineering problem solving; get exposed toengineering ethics; and learn how to use computer software for word processing, spreadsheets,and programming in C/C++ and MATLAB. In the laboratory portion of the class, which occursonce per week and is led by a graduate teaching associate (GTA), students conduct bench-topexperiments to investigate fundamental engineering concepts, with a variety of experiences tointroduce elements of each of the engineering disciplines in which a student could choose tomajor. Lab reports or lab memos are assigned most weeks to develop technical writtencommunication skills. Several of the lab reports
included making sure that students hadexperience with team diversity and conflict. Five of the participants reported that their team hadnot been “in sync.” Two other participants reported that their teams were split on whether tolaunch their project as a startup. As one participant reported, their team’s dynamics started on theright path but did not go as well toward the end of the project. The goal, he said, was to get thegrade and not to pursue the project. As another participant put it, his assigned team had noguarantee of a common work ethic or a common vision.A third factor involves lack of passion for the project. These results were aggregated into the“not among students’ main goals” factor in Fig. 1 but are striking enough to merit
activities allowed students to explore innovativeideas without confining guidelines or rules. The purpose of the discussions was to stimulateconversation among peers. The PI and program manager acted only to keep the discussion on topicand ensure that all students had an opportunity to speak if they wished to do so. Seminars on twice-exceptional education and creativity were included. Workshops were presented on responsibleconduct of research and ethics, graduate school, preparing for the GRE exam, and technicalwriting. Preparation for graduate school was a key theme throughout the program; the topic wasaddressed in several workshops, brainstorming meetings and seminars. Bringing in outside expertswas successful in increasing the participants’ self
interdisciplinary students learn about and practice sustainability. Bielefeldt is also a licensed P.E. Professor Bielefeldt’s research interests in engineering education include service-learning, sustainable engineering, social responsibility, ethics, and diversity. Page 26.1710.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2015 Volunteerism in Engineering Students and Its Relation to Social ResponsibilityAbstractAddressing how engineering students view their role in society, their social responsibility, isseen as a central aspect toward creating holistic engineers
in Education Conference, 252-258.[4] Matthews, M. R (2000). Time for Science Education. How Teaching the History andPhilosophy of the Pendulum can contribute to Science Literacy. New York. KluwerAcademic.[5] Davis, M (1998). Thinking like an Engineer. Studies in the Ethics of a Profession. NewYork. Oxford University Press.[6] Edels, H (1968).Technology in the sixth form. Trends in Education. No 10. London.Ministry of Education.[7] Vardy, P and Grosch, P (1994). The Puzzle of Ethics. 1st edition. London. Font/HarperCollins. p 17.[8] Yokomoto, C. F and Bostwick, W. D (1999). Modelling: the process of writingmeasureable outcomes for Ec 2000. ASEE/IEEE Proceedings Frontiers in EducationConference, 2B-1, 18-22.[9] Bloom B et al (eds) (1956
efforts. This support of student internships is critical, as thenational trend is for increased student participation in internship or cooperative educationprograms. “In 1980, about one out of every 36 college students completed an internship prior tograduation. This increased to three out of four by the year 2000.” (Hurst 58)Prior to fall 2014, most divisional internship and co-op records were paper based. Work isunderway to streamline recordkeeping through the use of electronic databases. This has alloweddepartments to better evaluate student and employer success. The following graphs representemployer feedback for the following questions: 1. Did the internship student recognize professional, ethical and societal responsibilities