of Alavi FTIR Spectroscopic Imaging Lab (AFISIL) and supervises multi- ple undergraduate students in their research. Her research interest includes characterization of biological samples by employing FTIR Spectroscopic Imaging techniques and developing novel digital image pro- cessing and analysis algorithms to process the collected FTIR-spectro-microscopic data. Additionally, Dr Alavi is a member of IEEE, ASEE and she has been a member of McLeod Institute of Simulation Science and pursues research in advanced control systems simulation. Dr Alavi also conducts research in promoting electrical engineering undergraduate education and is the recipient of the best paper award in the Electrical and Computer Engineering
Undergraduate EngineeringCurriculum Guidelines that were approved in 2019 [21] and which replace the 2002 equivalentGuidelines [22].As we will see in the next section, the 2002 Guidelines were particularly important forprogressive perspectives such as grassroots engineering and liberating technical support tograssroots groups because: 1. They made the curriculum more flexible, allowing local faculty to adapt it to specificities the institution could identify as worth considering [23]; 2. They made explicit an ideal education that should form a generalist, humanist, critical, ethical, and socially and environmentally sensitive engineer [22]; 3. They encouraged a multidisciplinary education and made curricular
justice are connected: • General engineering and social justice o Free Radicals “Science Under the Scope” [21] o Donna Riley’s Engineering and Social Justice book [22] o Caroline Baillie’s “Engineering and Social Justice” chapter [23] o ASEE workshop on the “Foundations of Social Justice for Engineers” [24] • Specific case studies in fields o Case study bioengineering ethics “SUMO-1” [25] o Coded Bias documentary [26] o Nicholas Sakellariou’s “A Framework for Social Justice in Renewable Energy Engineering” chapter [27]This area is emerging. There are several scholars documenting their attempts at adding socialjustice to the engineering courses [28]–[31], though
. Dina has won several awards including the 2018 ASEE/IEEE Frontiers in Education Conference Best Diversity Paper Award, 2019 College of Engineering Outstanding Graduate Student Research Award and the Alliance for Graduate Education and the Professoriate (AGEP) Distinguished Scholar Award. Dina’s dissertation proposal was selected as part of the top 3 in the 2018 American Educational Research Association (AERA) Division D In-Progress Research Gala.Dr. Allison Godwin, Purdue University at West Lafayette Allison Godwin, Ph.D. is an Assistant Professor of Engineering Education at Purdue University. Her research focuses what factors influence diverse students to choose engineering and stay in engineering through their
liberation.This theoretical framework and model provides us a basis from which to articulate a theory ofchange based on engineering and labor that spans multiple domains of power in engineeringeducation.A Theory of Engineering and LaborIn her 2019 JEE guest editorial, “Asking questions, we walk,” Alice Pawley drew attention to thefact that our hegemonic understandings of engineering are socially constructed and constrainedby a neoliberal mindset, binding engineers to techno-rational arguments [66]. As an example, shediscussed the culpability of engineering educators in worsening climate change by failing to“provide students with a moral language to think about engineers’ responsibility for climatechange” [66, p. 449]. Additionally, she explained that
Ethics and Societal Impacts," in ASEE Annual Conference & Exhibition, Salt Lake City, UT, 2018.[24] J. Lucena and J. Leydens, "From Sacred Cow to Dairy Cow: Challenges and Opportunities in Integrating Social Justice in Engineering Science Courses," in ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition, Seattle, WA, 2015.[25] J. Davishahl, "Engineering faculty experiences teaching social justice to first year students," in IEEE Frontiers in Education Conference, Lincoln, NE, 2021.[26] B. Dewsberry and C. Brame, "Inclusive Teaching," CBE- LIfe Sciences Education, vol. 18, no. 2, 2019.[27] C. Brown, "The Importance, and the Challenges, to Ensuring an Inclusive School Climate," Educational Psychologist, vol. 54, no. 4, pp. 322-330
needs to be performed to understand how different learningactivities and environments affect students' ideas about empathy. Therefore, this study aimed toidentify the constructs of empathy that were most salient in students before and after therehabilitation engineering course.Study ContextThe rehabilitation engineering course was piloted in Spring 2017. Preliminary research showedthat students developed aspects of design empathy, as well as recognition of the importance ofaccessibility and universal design [14]. The course was offered again in Fall 2019 and enrolled24 fourth- and fifth- year biomedical engineering and mechanical engineering students. Thecourse was co-taught by Dr. Lauren Cooper and Dr. Brian Self, mechanical engineering
Paper ID #31478Panel: Busting a Career Move? When and Why or Why Not?Dr. Adrienne R. Minerick, Michigan Technological University Adrienne Minerick is Dean of the College of Computing at Michigan Tech. She received her M.S. and Ph.D. from the University of Notre Dame and B.S. from Michigan Tech. Adrienne is a fellow of ASEE, fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), former President of the AES Electrophoresis Society, and a Michigan Professor of the Year Nominee, which illustrate her dual passion for research and education’s impact on individuals and societal advances. Adrienne’s research
K-12 outreach and research experiences for high school students, teachers, and undergraduates in this role.Dr. Matthew W. Ohland, Purdue University, West Lafayette Matthew W. Ohland is the Dale and Suzi Gallagher Professor and Associate Head of Engineering Edu- cation at Purdue University. He has degrees from Swarthmore College, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, and the University of Florida. His research on the longitudinal study of engineering students and forming and managing teams has been supported by the National Science Foundation and the Sloan Foundation and his team received for the best paper published in the Journal of Engineering Education in 2008, 2011, and 2019 and from the IEEE Transactions on
Framework for Transition with Greater Fidelity in Artifacts Supporting Student Performance ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition, 2020, Conference Paper ID #28668.2. B. Pejcinovic, Design of Rubrics for Student Outcomes in 2019-2020 ABET Criteria International Conference on Information and Communications Technology, Electronics and Microelectronics (MIPRO), 2020.3. A. Battistini, Kitch, W.A., Make Assessment Straightforward: A Case Study on the Successful Implementation of ABET Student Outcomes 1-7 ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition, 2021, Conference Paper ID #34918.4. K.S. Grahame, Pfluger, C., WIP: A Comparison and Assessment of Capstone and Cornerstone Student’s Perceptions of the Application of ABET Design Criteria ASEE
, F. Aqlan, J. Brockman, D. Lapsley, and K. L. Meyers, "Building andReplicating a Community-Engaged Educational Ecosystem - a STEM Learning Commons,"presented at the National Science Foundation Improving Stem Undergraduate EducationSummit, Washington, D.C, June 1-3 2022, 2022.[10] D. Wood, A. Gura, and J. Brockman, "Critical Findings in the Development of theCommunity-Engaged Educational Ecosystem," in American Society for Engineering Educationproceedings: ASEE, 2020.[11] D. Wood, A. Gura, J. Brockman, A. Rayna Carolan-Silva, S. Boukdad, and J. C. Alarcon,"Informing Replication of the Bowman Creek Educational Ecosystem Pilot," in American Societyfor Engineering Education proceedings, A. Genau Ed.: ASEE, 2019.[12] D. Wood, A. Gura, J
Zone 2 Conference, SanJuan, Puerto Rico, March 2-5, 2017[4] H.I. Abu-Mulaweh, H.M. Oloomi, D.W. Mueller, and O.A. Thomas, “A MultidisciplinaryCapstone Senior Project: Interactive Cooling System”. Proceedings of 2012 ASEE AnnualConference & Exposition, San Antonio, Texas. June 10-13, 2012. 10.18260/1-2-20834.[5] N. Dukhan, and M. Schumack, “Thermal Science Capstone Projects in MechanicalEngineering”, Proceedings of 2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Vancouver, BC.June 2011. 10.18260/1-2-18859[6] A.D. Christy, T.G. Wilson, and O.J. Meehl, “Thermodynamics for Citizenship:Entrepreneurial Engineering through Project-based Learning”. Proceedings of 2019 ASEEAnnual Conference & Exposition, Tampa, Florida. June 2019. 10.18260/1-2
, pp. 33, Mar 1990.[9] M. Morris, R. Hensel, and J. Dygert, "Why Do Students Leave? An Investigation Into WhyWell-Supported Students Leave a First-Year Engineering Program." ASEE Annual Conference& Exposition proceedings. Tampa, FL, USA. June 2019.[10] M. Morris, J. Dygert, R. Hensel, “How Do Student Perceptions of Engineers andEngineering as a Career Relate to Their Self Efficacy, Career Expectations, and Grittiness?”Paper Accepted: ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition. Montreal, Quebec, Canada. June2020.
,” presented at the 2017 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Jun. 2017, Accessed: Mar. 21, 2019. [Online]. Available: https://peer.asee.org/a-skills-focused- approach-to-teaching-design-fundamentals-to-large-numbers-of-students-and-its-effect-on-engineering-design- self-efficacy.[8] T. P. Carpenter et al., “Survey-software implicit association tests: A methodological and empirical analysis,” Behav. Res. Methods, vol. 51, no. 5, pp. 2194–2208, Oct. 2019, doi: 10.3758/s13428-019-01293-3.[9] A. G. Greenwald, B. A. Nosek, and M. R. Banaji, “Understanding and using the implicit association test: I. An improved scoring algorithm,” J. Pers. Soc. Psychol., vol. 85, no. 2, pp. 197–216, Aug. 2003.[10] B. A. Nosek, M. R. Banaji, and A. G
technologies. Dr. Alaraje is a member of the American Society for Engineering Education (ASEE), a member of the ASEE Electrical and Computer Engineer- ing Division, a member of the ASEE Engineering Technology Division, a senior member of the Institute of Electrical & Electronic Engineers (IEEE), and a member of the Electrical and Computer Engineering Technology Department Heads Association (ECETDHA).Dr. Lorelle A Meadows, Michigan Technological University Dr. Lorelle A. Meadows is the Dean of the Pavlis Honors College at Michigan Technological University. Dr. Meadowsreceived her B.S., M.S. and Ph.D. in Oceanic Science from the University of Michigan, College of Engineering. Dr. Meadows was previously Assistant Dean of
access. This study isrepresenting their voices after 4 years (2019 -2023) of implementation of an active learningpedagogy described as experiment-centric pedagogy. A total of seven STEM fields participatedin their implementation of the ECP during the study period. A survey of 17-items which hasbeen validated, was adopted from Carroll et al [4] and administered to all faculties that haveparticipated in the 4 year program. A total of ten (10) faculty which represent diverse STEMfields are included in this study. Notably, out of the 7 STEM disciplines that the implementationof the ECP was done, only 6 fields department feedback were captured in this preliminaryfinding. The 17-items have 5-point Likert scales that range from strongly disagree to
(Virtual), Montreal, Quebec, Canada.[5] Gattis, C., Delgado Solorzano, X., Nix, D., Popp, J., Cleary, M., Lo, W., Hill, B., & Adams, P. (2019, June). Work in Progress: A Path to Graduation: Helping First-Year Low Income, Rural STEM Students Succeed. Proceedings of the 2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Tampa, Florida. 10.18260/1-2—33585
methods course incorporating engineering design activities (work in progress). 2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition Proceedings, 42522. https://doi.org/10.18260/1- 2--42522OECD. (2019). Transformative competencies for conceptual learning framework. https://www.oecd.org/education/2030-project/teaching-and- learning/learning/transformative- competencies/Transformative_Competencies_for_2030_concept_note.pdfPurzer, S., Strobel, J., & Cardella, M. (2014). Engineering in pre-college settings. https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctt6wq7bhRadloff, J., Antink-Meyer, A., Brown, R., Yeter, I. H., & Fantacone, D. (2023, February 7). Board 168: Exploring K-12 S,T,E,M teachers’ views of nature of
Graduate Academy for Teaching Excellence Fellow, a Global Perspectives Fellow, a Diversity Scholar, a Fulbright Scholar, a recipient of the NSF CAREER award, and was inducted into the Bouchet Honor Society. Homero serves as the American Society for Engineering Education (ASEE) Chair for the Commission on Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (CDEI), the Program Chair for the ASEE Faculty Development Division, and the Vice Chair for the Research in Engineering Education Network (REEN). He holds degrees in Industrial Engineering (BS, MS) from the National Experimental University of T´achira, Master of Business Administration (MBA) from Temple University, and Engineering Education (PhD) from Virginia Tech.Miss Yi Cao, Virginia
, teamwork behaviors, and academic performance," 2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Tampa, Florida. doi: 10.18260/1-2--32738[22] L. C. Hodges, "Student engagement in active learning classes," Active Learning in College Science, pp. 27-41, 2020, doi: 10.1007/978-3-030-33600-4_3[23] D. Zahay, A. Kumar, and C. Trimble, "Motivation and active learning to improve student performance," in Creating Marketing Magic and Innovative Future Marketing Trends: Proceedings of the 2016 Academy of Marketing Science (AMS) Annual Conference, 2017: Springer, pp. 1259-1263, doi: 10.1007/978-3-319-45596-9_231[24] Y. Kusumoto, "Enhancing critical thinking through active learning," Lang. Learn. High. Educ., vol. 8, no. 1
Mentor Perspectives of Apprenticeships for Community College STEM CareersAbstractThe National Science Foundation’s Eddie Bernice Johnson INCLUDES Aspire Alliance hasestablished several RC (Regional Change) Collaboratives of two-year and four-year highereducation institutions, focused on preparing a diverse and inclusive future community collegefaculty. Each RC collaborative recruits graduate students enrolled at research-intensive orcomprehensive universities to participate in semester-long apprenticeships under the mentorshipof community college professors. In Texas, two of these RC collaboratives have been operatingcontinuously since 2019 with the participation of institutions that serve diverse studentpopulations from
course description changes for their courses. This research addssignificantly to the literature as there is very little research on the impact of course descriptionson students’ course selection process.1. IntroductionEfforts to broaden the participation of women and people of color within engineering andcomputing education have made incremental improvements in the U.S. but, overall, continue tohave challenges. The under-representation of women and ethno-racial minorities in STEM fieldsis nothing new [1]. Based on a 2021 report, the share of women in computer occupationsdeclined from 30% in 2000 to 25% in 2016 and has remained stable until 2019 [2]. Womencontinue to be vastly underrepresented in the ranks of engineers and architects (15% in 2019
arepersisting in theCoE at a much higher rate; i.e., 10 percent Table 4. Retention of BEE compared to CoEhigher for year 2 retention based on 2020 and historical data 2008-2019. Year 2 cohorts2021 cohorts, and 34 percent year 3 retention 2020 and 2021. Year 3 data only 2020 cohort.based on 2020 cohort. The three changed BEE All Historicalmajors and went into business majors (2) and Retention Year Cohorts CoE Meanart (1). Three participants additional students Year 2 77% 67%from cohort 2020 and 2021 are no longer LSU In CoEstudents for several reasons
engage high school students infour Chicago communities in an afterschool program focused on the design of technologies topromote green energy in their communities. At the time of this work-in-progress study, threeyears of activities were being developed by the authors who are university faculty and a team ofundergraduate majors in STEM fields. Each year incorporates micro:bit computers and MicrosoftMakeCode across two units of four modules of activities. These eight modules are developed toengage high school students, who may have little hands-on engineering design experience, withlearning skills and technologies that they then apply to a culminating engineering designchallenge each year (see Aldeman et al., 2023 ASEE paper for more detailed
research facilitated by project management and self-regulated learning processes,” in 2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, 2023[5] D.A. Patel, S. Aggrawal, and K.C. Dittman, “Navigating the Transition from Project Management to Product Management”, PM World Journal, Vol. XII, Issue X, October. 2023.[6] T. Sprinkle, “10 Skills to Transition from Engineering to Project Management,” www.asme.org, Jun. 13, 2018. https://www.asme.org/topics-resources/content/10-skills- transition-project-management[7] Kriengsak Panuwatwanich, Rodney Anthony Stewart, and Kali Prasad Nepal, “Project management skills for engineers: industry perceptions and implications for engineering project management course,” Proceedings of the 2011 AAEE
interests include first-year engineering experiences, assessment, inclusive excellence, and active learning pedagogy, including project-based learning.Dr. Ronald R. DeLyser, University of Denver Ronald R. DeLyser is currently an Associate Professor Emeritus of the University of Denver where he served on the faculty between 1986 and 2019. He has received all of his degrees in Electrical Engineering: the B.S. degree from the University of Florida, Gainesville, in 1974; the M.S. degree from the University of New Mexico, in 1978; and the Ph.D. degree from the University of Colorado, Boulder in 1991. Dr. DeLyser, a member of the U.S. Air Force between 1965 and 1986, held a teaching position at the United States Air Force
Journals in Engineering and Technology, as a member of review panel for NASA and Department of Education, as a regional and chapter chairman of IEEE, SME, and ASEE, and as a session chair and as a member of scientific and international committees for many international conferences. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2019 Learning Modules for Geometric Pattern Identification and Mathematical Modeling of Facade SystemsAbstractOver the past decade, responsive facade systems have emerged to improve user comfort, energyconsumption, and cost efficiency as they are capable of responding and adapting toenvironmental stimuli. Design of a responsive facade system involves
when they entered the CM program during their junior year at CWUand then compared their respective conflict management styles across gender. The researchersused this analysis to detect differences in the male and female conflict management styles whileenrolled in CWU’s four-year, campus based, American Council for Construction Education(ACCE) accredited CM program. The results of the TKI were evaluated through a series ofstatistical analyses. TKI paper-based questionnaires were distributed to 50 junior-level males and21 junior-level females over a five-year period from the winter of 2014 to the spring of 2019.The TKI scores were tallied and documented in order to determine each student’s conflictmanagement style during their junior year and to
reach 44,000 exabytes [1].Moreover, the International Data Corporation (IDC) forecasts that in 2025 we will be producing165 zettabytes of data per year [4]. There is an increasing demand for doing everything onlinewhether it is in our work or private life and this increase is responsible for this explosion of databeing created. In conjunction, we also employ smart devices that are continuously connected tothe internet and produce constant streams of real-time data about things that range from ourheartrate to our current location. It is estimated that today (in 2019) more than four billion peopleare online and in 2020 every person will produce 1.7 megabytes of data every second [4], andmillions of enterprises are becoming more and more web based
. Oerther, “Introduction to Environmental Modeling: Results from a Three-Year Pilot,” in ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Tampa, Florida, DATE, 2019. [Online] Available: https://www.doi.org/10.18260/1-2--33020.[26] A. Linke, S. Leutert, J. Busby, M. Duque, M. Shawcroft, and S. Brewer, “Dry Growing Seasons Predicted Central America Migration to the US From 2012 to 2018,” Scientific Reports, vol. 12, no. 18400. [Online] Available: https://www.undp.org/sites/g/files/zskgke326/files/migration/oslo_governance_centre/d8dca416c204cc 6fdbe409ce38b45533a2b454e6657bca1a6368daefa5f5d96b.pdf.[27] D.B. Oerther, “An Example of Convergence: Guatemala Research on WaSH (GRoW),” Journal of Advanced Nursing, vol