undergraduate mechanical engineering major anticipating graduation in May of 2019. I am a member of the Beyond Professional Identity research group based in Harding University located in Searcy, Arkansas. I plan to further my studies in engineering education in graduate school particularly in regards to equipping students to work in development and sustainability. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2018 Paper ID #22967Dr. Jeremiah SullinsDr. Shari E. Miller, University of Georgia Shari E. Miller is an Associate Professor and the Associate Dean of the School of Social Work at the Uni- versity
. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2019 Simulation software for Online teaching of ECE CoursesABSTRACTOnline learning, also known as e-learning, has become an increasingly common choice for manystudents pursuing an education. Online learning requires the student to participate and learnvirtually via computer, as opposed to the traditional classroom environment. Although onlinelearning is not for everyone, it's important for prospective students to determine whether or not it'ssomething they would like to pursue. The following are advantages and disadvantages for onlinelearning:Advantages-Online learning provides flexibility because students are able to work when it's convenient forthem. Students can do all the
the ASEE ECE Division, served as an as- sociate editor for the ASEE Journal of Engineering Education, and served on the IEEE Committee on Engineering Accreditation Activities, the IEEE Education Society Board of Governors, the ABET EAC (2009-2014), and EAC Executive Committee (2015-2018). Dr. Rover is a Fellow of the IEEE and of ASEE.Dr. Mani Mina, Iowa State University Mani Mina is with the department of Industrial Design and Electrical and Computer Engineering at Iowa State University. He has been working on better understanding of students’ learning and aspects of tech- nological and engineering philosophy and literacy. In particular how such literacy and competency are reflected in curricular and student
survey regarding SAS tutors.The participants consisted of 86 students who attended SAS tutoring sessions and completed thesurvey regarding SAS tutors during Spring 2019 semester. To ensure honest feedback, none ofparticipant demographic information was solicited. The survey answers cannot be traced back toany individuals.MeasuresThe effectiveness of the tutors was measured by an 11-item questionnaire. The selection ofquestions for the survey was informed by previous years’ surveys of students, tutors, and facultyto establish common themes about tutoring techniques and content considered effective.Questions were developed based on the common themes and a new survey was created. The newsurvey questions were examined for face value by faculty and
, Cognitive, and Sensory Sciences, Division of Behavioral and SocialSciences and Education, and National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, AddressingDiversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Anti-Racism in 21st Century STEMM Organizations: Proceedings of aWorkshop in Brief. Washington, D.C.: National Academies Press, 2021, p. 26294. doi: 10.17226/26294.[3] K. H. Collins, N. M. Joseph, N. M. Joseph, and D. Y. Ford, “Missing in Action: Gifted BlackGirls in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics:,” Gifted Child Today, vol. 43, no. 1, pp. 55–63, Jan. 2020, doi: 10.1177/1076217519880593.[4] J. Lofton, “Encouraging Young Women to Pursue Engineering: 25 Years of Summer CampSuccesses and Challenges,” in 2017 ASEE Annual Conference
focuses on ethical and empathic formation in engineering education. He received his PhD from Purdue University’s School of Engineering Education, as well as a Master of Science and Bachelor of Science from Purdue University’s School of Civil Engineering. He is the editorial board chair for the Online Ethics Center, deputy director of research for the National Institute of Engineering Ethics, and past-division chair for the ASEE Liberal Education/Engineering and Society division.Sowmya Panuganti, Purdue Engineering Education Sowmya Panuganti is a graduate student at Purdue University in the Engineering Education department. She is passionate about understanding engineering culture and the effects it has on engineers’ mental
Engineering Education, vol. 111, no. 3, pp. 665– 702, 2022.[6] E. Zerbe, G. M. Sallai, K. Shanachilubwa, and C. G. P. Berdanier, “Engineering graduate students' critical events as catalysts of attrition,” Journal of Engineering Education, vol. 111, no. 4, pp. 868– 888, 2022.[7] D. Satterfield, M. Parker, M. Bahnson, H. Perkins, M. Tsugawa, K. Scalaro, C. Cass, and A. Kirn, “Unpacking engineering doctoral students’ career goal setting and future time perspectives,” In 2022 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Minneapolis, MN, 2022.[8] C. G. P.Berdanier, C. Whitehair, A. Kirn, and D. Satterfield, “Analysis of social media forums to elicit narratives of graduate engineering student attrition,” Journal of
Scaffolded, Interactive, and Reflective Analysis Framework for Developing Ethical Reasoning in Engineering Students,” ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition, Jul. 2016, doi: 10.18260/p.26288.[8] J. L. Hess, J. Beever, C. B. Zoltowski, L. G. Kisselburgh, and A. O. Brightman, “Enhancing engineering students’ ethical reasoning: Situating reflexive principlism within the SIRA framework,” Journal of Engineering Education, vol. 108, no. 1, pp. 82–102, Jan. 2019, doi: 10.1002/jee.20249.[9] S. S. Shapiro and M. B. Wilk, “An analysis of variance test for normality (Complete samples),” Biometrika, vol. 52, no. 3/4, p. 591, Dec. 1965, doi: 10.2307/2333709.[10] C. Gilligan. “In a Different Voice: Women’s Conceptions of
., “Integrating Ethics Into A Civil Engineering Course”, Paperpresented at 2006 Annual Conference & Exposition, Chicago, Illinois. https://peer.asee.org/1291[3] Bowers, S., & Maccarone, E. M., & Ricco, G. D., "On the Integration of Ethical, Legal, andSocietal Issues into a Computer Science Senior Design Capstone Program". Paper presented at2016 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, New Orleans, Louisiana.https://peer.asee.org/25826[4] S. Rajan et al., "Incorporating Ethics in Engineering Education." Journal of ElectricalEngineering & Technology, 30 (2017): 164-171.[5] Hedayati Mehdiabadi, A., and James, J. O., & Svihla, V., “Ethical Reasoning in First-YearEngineering Design Paper”, presented at 2019 ASEE Annual Conference &
Grant No.2306178. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendation expressed in this materialare those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National ScienceFoundation.References[1] J. Trevelyan, “Transitioning to engineering practice,” Eur. J. Eng. Educ., vol. 44, no. 6, pp. 821–837, Nov. 2019, doi: 10.1080/03043797.2019.1681631.[2] Z. S. Byrne, J. W. Weston, and K. Cave, “Development of a Scale for Measuring Students’ Attitudes Towards Learning Professional (i.e., Soft) Skills,” Res. Sci. Educ., vol. 50, no. 4, pp. 1417–1433, Aug. 2020, doi: 10.1007/s11165-018-9738-3.[3] R. P. Aleman and et al, “Mind the Gap: Exploring the Exploring the Perceived Gap Between Social and Technical Aspects
Computing Diversity (CoNECD) Conference, Crystal City, VA, April 29, 2018.[21] C. McGough and L. Benson, “Distribution of Characteristic Ways That Students Think about the Future in Large Enrollment Engineering Classes,” Proceedings of the 124th ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Columbus, OH, June 24-28, 2017, doi: 10.18260/1-2--28187.[22] L. Benson., C.J. Bolding, J. Ogle, C. McGough, J. Murphy, and R. Lanning, “Engineering Students’ Perceptions of Belongingness in Civil Engineering,” Proceedings of the 126th ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Tampa, FL, June 16-19, 2019.[23] R. Yin, Case Study Research Design and Methods (5th ed.). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage, 2014, doi:10.3138/cjpe
(Millennial) and Gen Z Cultural Cohort Demographics: Social, Political and Economic Perspectives and Implications,” presented at the 2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access, Jun. 2020. Accessed: Nov. 07, 2022. [Online]. Available: https://peer.asee.org/gen-y-millennial-and-gen-z-cultural-cohort-demographics-social-political-and- economic-perspectives-and-implications[2] “Gen Z more likely to report mental health concerns,” https://www.apa.org. https://www.apa.org/monitor/2019/01/gen-z (accessed Nov. 07, 2022).[3] A. M. Bisantz, “Undergraduate Education - University at Buffalo,” Fall 2022.[4] G. Wiggins and J. McTighe, Understanding By Design, 2nd Expanded edition. Alexandria, VA: Assn. for
-11.1093. 12. doi:10.18260/1-2--28[15] S. Chitikeshi, J. Hildebrant, O. Popescu, O. M. Ayala, and V. M. Jovanovic, “Integrating statistical methods in engineering technology courses,” in ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition, Salt Lake City, UT, 2018. doi:10.18260/1-2--30689[16] J. Burns, and M. Hammond, “Work in progress: Redesigning a multidisciplinary engineering statistics course,” in ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition, Tampa, FL, 2019. doi:10.18260/1-2--33577[17] D. Myszka, “Alternative student performance evaluations in mechanical measurement courses,” in ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition, Pittsburgh, PA, 2008, pp. 13.168. 1-13.168. 10. doi:10.18260/1-2--3290[18] N. S. Vidic, and R. M
% to 10%. Engineering curriculum roadmaps for degree or certificate completion are designed to see a student complete required courses within two years when beginning the curriculum at Math 5A (Calculus 1). When beginning in an earlier math, students are guided using a three-year plan to complete courses at FCC before transferring.The FCC Institutional Research, Assessment, and Planning Office tracks institutional data for eachobjective. The ESP initiated in fall 2019. As such we do not yet have data on completion rateimpact (Table 1). However, despite the impact of the pandemic, in the remaining years of theproject we expect to see an increase in both 2- and 3-year completion rates. The increase in degreeand certificate
, indigenous, and other students ofcolor, relatively little research has been devoted to Asians and Asian-Americans in engineering.Asian and Asian-American engineers comprise the majority of non-White engineers,representing 12.2% of science and engineering bachelor’s degrees earned and over one-third oftenured or tenure-track engineering faculty in the United States in 2018 (NCSES, 2018; ASEE,2018). As the largest non-White group, they have played a unique racialized role in engineering,at once being cast as the “model minority” yet often overlooked as a minoritized group or viewedas a “perpetual foreigner” within White-dominated engineering spaces. In addition, legacies ofAsian and Asian-American racialization, defined as the social, political
(TRB) Committee on Aircraft/Airport Compatibility and is a past member of the TRB Committees on Traffic Flow and Characteristics and Transportation Network Modeling. Stephen is also a member of the Ameri- can Society for Engineering Education (ASEE).Dr. Anne Nordberg, The University of Texas at ArlingtonProf. Wei Wayne Li, Texas Southern UniversityProf. Hanadi S. Rifai P.E., University of Houston ©American Society for Engineering Education, 2020 An Exploratory Study of Intentionality towards Diversity in STEM Faculty Hiring (Research) Abstract Despite efforts over the past few decades to promote diversity and foster
available. Besides, Repos, which is also responsible for supporting the local organizers ofthese meetings, seems to be growing stronger, perhaps at a slower pace than many would like,but steadily. These two aspects seem to play an important role in the shared perception of manyGE practitioners, in which, despite the highly adverse Brazilian political scene since the removalof Dilma Rousseff from office (2016) and, mainly, after far-right Jair Bolsonaro’s presidencyinauguration (2019), GE teams not only survive (in many cases, however, with much less moneyand undergraduate students (as scholarship holders)) but are also being created nationwide.Leading Grassroots Engineering TeamsMany groups, linked or not to university extension centers, identify
Paper ID #43481”How You Got Me Messed Up”: A Critical Analysis of Doctoral EngineeringEducation through the Lens of Black PhD CandidatesMrs. Crystal Alicia Nattoo, Stanford University Crystal Nattoo (she/her) is a first-generation college student from South Florida. She graduated with her bachelors from the University of Miami in 2019 as an Electrical Engineering (EE) major and Graphic Design minor. She then received her EE M.S. degree at Stanford University in 2021, and is currently continuing in the EE Ph.D program. Her current research focuses on the fabrication and characterization of flexible sensors and circuits using
the World Bank (2019) [1], the number of people without access to electricity suppliesdecreased from 1.2 billion in 2010 to 759 million in 2019. Electrification through decentralized solutionsbased on renewable Energy gained momentum. According to the same report, the number of peopleconnected to isolated mini electrical grids (called microgrids) doubled between 2010 and 2019, goingfrom 5 to 11 million people. However, there is still much to do. Through her presentation in TED talks,engineer Rose Mutiso (2019) [2] presents the problem and describes alternative solutions with theintroduction of sustainable electricity production (wind and solar) in the same communities.In Mexico, according to Energía Hoy (Servin, 2021) [3], there are more than
students navigated their first yearon campus during different stages of the pandemic. We use a sociological lens in order toinvestigate how history and biography intersect for first-year engineering students navigatingtheir transition to college from 2019-2022 [35]. We share quantitative data at the college level tocompare outcomes related to retention and GPA among the three cohorts and assess differencesfor students involved in these programs compared to students who did not have the samesupports. We find evidence to support that despite adaptations student success programsdelivered online/remotely were able to build social capital among participants in ways that mayhave helped to buffer some of the social isolation and negative mental health
Transfer course. In this study, 28 seniorundergraduate engineering students were presented with a quantitative problem related to thelength of a pipe in a water heater and given context for the problem that created additional designconsiderations. Students wrote memos to present their final solutions and describe additionalconsiderations for solar water heating. Classroom observations and student memos demonstratedthat students were able to consider contexts to their heat transfer content that went beyondtraditional, technical considerations; however, most of the considerations that studentsbrainstormed were environmental, rather than economic or social [30].Similarly, in 2019, Lord et al. [35] described the design and implementation of three
motivation and their learning experiences. Her projects include studies of student perceptions, beliefs and attitudes towards becoming engineers and scientists, and their development of problem-solving skills, self- regulated learning practices, and epistemic beliefs. Other projects in the Benson group involve students’ navigational capital, and researchers’ schema development through the peer review process. Dr. Benson is an American Society for Engineering Education (ASEE) Fellow, and a member of the European Society for Engineering Education (SEFI), American Educational Research Association (AERA) and Tau Beta Pi. She earned a B.S. in Bioengineering (1978) from the University of Vermont, and M.S. (1986) and Ph.D. (2002
. J., & Higgins, A. Z. (2016). Written justifications to multiple-choice concept questions during active learning in class. International Journal of Science Education, 38(11), 1747–1765. https://doi.org/10.1080/09500693.2016.1214303Koretsky, M., Nolen, S., Self, B., Papadopoulos, C., Widmann, J., Prince, M., & Dal Bello, D. (2019). For Systematic Development of Conceptests for Active Learning. EDULEARN19 Proceedings, 1, 8882–8892. https://doi.org/10.21125/edulearn.2019.2205Papadopoulos, C., Davishahl, E., Ramming, C. H., Abreu, J. C. B., & Kitch, W. A. (2022). Work in Progress: Context Matters: A Comparative Study of Results of Common Concept Questions in Statics at Several Diverse Institutions. ASEE Annual
Behaviors Among Engineering Students", 2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access, Jul. 2021, [Online]. Available: https://peer.asee.org/work-in-progress-measuring-stigma-of- mental-health-conditions-and-its-impact-in-help-seeking-behaviors-among-engineering- students.[6] Wright, C. J., Hargis, L. E., Usher, E. L., Hammer, J. H., Wilson, S. A., & Miller, M. E. "Identifying engineering students’ beliefs about seeking help for mental health concerns". In 2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access.[7] K. Jensen and K. Cross, “Board 73: Student Perceptions of Engineering Stress Culture,” in 2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition Proceedings, Tampa, Florida: ASEE Conferences, Jun. 2019, p. 32418. doi
of Engineering.” Darcie holds a Master of Engineering degree in Environmental Engineering (2019) and Bachelor of Science degree in Biological Engineering (2017), both from Utah State University. She is passionate about student success and support, both inside and outside of the classroom.Dr. Lauren Singelmann, Minnesota State University, Mankato Lauren Singelmann is an Assistant Professor at Minnesota State University, Mankato with the Iron Range Engineering program. She has a Ph.D. in Electrical and Computer Engineering and STEM Education through North Dakota State University. Her research interests include learning analytics and alternative assessment.Mr. Rob Sleezer, Virginia Tech Rob Sleezer earned his
in transportation from Iowa State University. Dr. Fitzsimmons is a graduate of the American Society of Civil Engineers Excellence in Civil Engineering Education (ExCEED) and also has served as an assistant mentor. He teaches undergraduate and graduate courses in transportation and railroad engineering.Dr. Jeff Zacharakis, Kansas State University Jeff Zacharakis is a professor of adult learning and leadership in the Department of Educational Leader- ship. His areas of research include leader and organizational development. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2019 Investigating the Role of Social Responsibility on Veteran Student Retention in
for Engineering Education (ASEE).Dr. Ann Saterbak, Duke University Ann Saterbak is Professor of the Practice in the Biomedical Department and Director of First-Year En- gineering at Duke University. Saterbak is the lead author of the textbook, Bioengineering Fundamen- tals. Saterbak’s outstanding teaching was recognized through university-wide and departmental teaching awards. In 2013, Saterbak received the ASEE Biomedical Engineering Division Theo C. Pilkington Out- standing Educator Award. For her contribution to education within biomedical engineering, she was elected Fellow in the Biomedical Engineering Society and the American Society of Engineering Educa- tion.Anila K. Shethia, Rice University Anila K
, numerical and experimental methods. He has participated in many research projects and has published several peer-reviewed journal papers since 2004.Ms. Sotonye Ikiriko, Morgan State University c American Society for Engineering Education, 2020 Paper ID #31691 Ms. Sotonye Ikiriko is currently a Doctoral student and Research Associate in the Department of Civil Engineering, Morgan State University (MSU) in Baltimore Maryland. Prior to joining the department in January of 2019, Ms. Sotonye Ikiriko was a Graduate Research Assistant (GRA) at Tennessee State University (TSU) in Tennessee State, where she
entry intothe practice of civil engineering at the professional level.” [1] During the 2018-9 academic year,13 capstone design projects were required to address sustainability within their proposed designs.The United Nations Sustainable Development Goals [3] and the ASCE Envision Rating Systemwere used to assess the sustainability of each design. The rationale behind using both the UNSustainable Development Goals and the Envision Rating System arose during a workshop at the2018 ASEE Annual Conference, “Applications of the Envision Rating System in EngineeringCourses and Curricula.” [4] Workshop participants were asked to look at the 17 UN SustainableDevelopment Goals, each with 10 objectives, select one goal and match it to the Envision