part of aprofessional development and training that would be required before faculty could access thedashboards. This is intended to guide faculty from focusing on the exceptions and rare cases andmore towards the use of aggregate data (that can be disaggregated) to identify bottlenecks, gaps,and trends that could be addressed to support student success and improve student retention. Thedata will also be used to explore the stories that faculty tell about their observations, in which thedata might tell different stories from the assumptions that faculty might have, providing potentiallevers for change.References[1] Rehrey, G., Shepard, L., Hostetter, C., Reynolds, A., & Groth, A. (2019). Engaging Faculty in Learning Analytics: Agents of
) Cohort A (1) Cohort B (1) Fresno State Cohort A (1) Cohort B (1) Total Awards 8 16 16 16 8Awards are disbursed by semester allowing us to respond to changes in scholar eligibility, e.g.changes in financial need, students transferring out of FCC, changing majors, or dropping tobelow full-time status (exceptions for full time status were permitted during the COVID-19pandemic). Table 2 shows the number of awards given in the first two years of the program.Table 2: Program Scholarship Awards by Project Year and Semester (Actual) Year 1 (2019/2020) Year 2
Paper ID #34521The SEECRS Scholar Academy at Whatcom Community College: Three Co-hortsof S-STEM Scholarships LaterEric Davishahl, Whatcom Community College Eric Davishahl holds an MS degree in mechanical engineering and serves as associate professor and engineering program coordinator at Whatcom Community College. His teaching and research interests include developing, implementing and assessing active learning instructional strategies and auto-graded online homework. Eric has been a member of ASEE since 2001. He currently serves as awards chair for the Pacific Northwest Section and was the recipient of the 2008 Section
Paper ID #34814Applying Research on Reducing Student Resistance to Active LearningThrough Faculty Development: Project UpdateLaura J. Carroll, University of Michigan Laura Carroll is a PhD candidate pursuing a degree in Engineering Education Research at the University of Michigan.Ms. Lea K. Marlor, University of Michigan Lea Marlor is a Ph.D. student at the University of Michigan, studying Engineering Education Research. She joined the University of Michigan in Sept 2019. Previously, she was the Associate Director for Education for the Center for Energy Efficient Electronics Science, a NSF-funded Science and
,” in 2018 19th International Conference on Research and Education in Mechatronics (REM), 2018, pp. 75–80.[44] W. Yu, O. Farook, J. P. Agrawal, and A. Ahmed, “Software-hardware integration of system design discipline.” ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition, 2018.[45] Jupyter.org, “Jupyter Notebook,” https://jupyter.org/index.html, June 2019.
Journal- American Institute of Steel Construction 52, no. 3 (2015): 203-217.[10] Jiang, Z., Caicedo, J. and Petrulis, R. (2018). "NSF REU SITE: Collaborative Research: Integrated Academia-Industry Research Experience for Undergraduate in Smart Structure Technology", Proceedings of 125th American Society for Engineering Education (ASEE) Annual Conference & Exposition, Salt Lake City, UT.[11] Sdii.ce.sc.edu. (2018). Home | Smart Structures Technologies REU. [online] Available at: http://sdii.ce.sc.edu/REU_SST/ [Accessed 3 Feb. 2019].[12] Pathwaystoscience.org. (2019). Pathways To Science. [online] Available at: http://www.pathwaystoscience.org [Accessed 3 Feb. 2019].
manners”. ASEE Prism. American Society for Engineering Education. 2005. vol. 15. no. 4. pp. 45.[10] B. Horn. “A reflection on leadership: A comparative analysis of military and civilian approaches,” 2014, Journal of Military and Strategic Studies, vol 15. No. 3.[11] Y. Xue, R. Larson. “STEM crisis or STEM surplus? Yes and yes”. 2015. Website. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5800410/ (Accessed November 7, 2019)[12] A. Barr, A. “From the battlefield to the schoolyard: The short-term impact of the Post-9/11 G.I. Bill”. The Journal of Human Resources, 2015. vol. 50. no. 3. pp. 580-613.[13] A. W. Radford, A. Bentz, R. Dekker, J. Paslov, J. “After the Post-9/11 G.I. Bill: A profile of military service
Student Success?,” presented at the 2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Jun. 2014, p. 24.344.1-24.344.12. Accessed: Jan. 20, 2023. [Online]. Available: https://peer.asee.org/curricular-efficiency-what-role-does-it-play-in-student-success[10] D. Waller, “Organizational factors and engineering student persistence,” Dissertation, Purdue University, 2022. [Online]. Available: https://doi.org/10.25394/PGS.21606342.v1[11] G. L. Heileman, W. G. Thompson-Arjona, O. Abar, and H. W. Free, “Does Curricular Complexity Imply Program Quality?,” presented at the American Society for Engineering Education, Tampa, Florida, 2019, pp. 1–13.[12] D. Reeping and D. Grote, “Rethinking the Curricular Complexity Framework for
? Understanding the Impact of Engineering Identity on Retention," in ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition, Tampa, Florida, 2019/06/15 2019: ASEE Conferences. [Online]. Available: https://peer.asee.org/32674. [Online]. Available: https://peer.asee.org/32674[14] A. Godwin, G. Potvin, Z. Hazari, and R. Lock, "Identity, critical agency, and engineering: An affective model for predicting engineering as a career choice," Journal of Engineering Education, vol. 105, no. 2, pp. 312-340, 2016, doi: 10.1002/jee.20118.[15] K. L. Tonso, "Engineering Identity," in Cambridge handbook of engineering education research, A. Johri and B. M. Olds Eds., A. Johri and B. M. Olds, Eds.: Cambridge University Press, 2014, ch. 14, pp
gifts of autism, ADHD, dyslexia, andother brain differences: ReadHowYouWant. com; 2010.11. Hain CC, Turek WC, Zaghi AE, Hain A, editors. Board# 156: Experiences of Pre-College TeachersWorking with Undergraduate Engineering Students with ADHD in Research Laboratories. 2017 ASEEAnnual Conference & Exposition; 2017.12. Hain A, Zaghi AE, Taylor CL, editors. Promoting Neurodiversity in Engineering throughUndergraduate Research Opportunities for Students with ADHD. 2018 ASEE Annual Conference &Exposition; 2018.13. CEOSE. Biennial Report to Congress 2017-2018. In: Engineering TCoEOiSa, editor. Investing inDiverse Community Voices: National Science Foundation; 2019. p. 10.14. Taylor CL, Zaghi AE, Kaufman JC, Reis SM, Renzulli JS
. 28, no. 2, pp. 163–179, 2015.[4] Higher Education Research Institute, “2011 CIRP Freshman Survey,” 2012. [Online]. Available: https://heri.ucla.edu/cirp-freshman-survey. [Accessed: 04-Mar-2021].[5] L. C. Shea, L. Hecker, and A. R. Lalor, From disability to diversity: College success for students with learning disabilities, ADHD, and autism Spectrum disorder. The National Resource Center for the First-Year Experience, 2019.[6] B. M. Moskal, “Diversity’s Forgotten Dimension,” ASEE PRISM., 24, no. 4, p. 41, 2014.[7] L. Weyandt et al., “The performance of college students with and without adhd: Neuropsychological, academic, and psychosocial functioning,” J. Psychopathol. Behav. Assess., vol. 35, no. 4
member of the IEEE, a member of the IEEE MTT-10 committee, and a member of the ASEE, Bioelectromagnetics Society and Society of Women Engineers. She serves on the editorial board of the Bioelectromagnetics Society.Tim Robinson, University of Nevada Reno I am a former elementary and middle public school teacher who is currently pursuing a doctoral degree in STEM Education. My research interests are in the areas of science and engineering education where I look at student interest as well as the use of technology such as digital data collection devices and the impact they have on students’ ability to argue scientifically.Dr. Adam Kirn, University of Nevada, Reno Adam Kirn is an Assistant Professor of Engineering
.[13] D. R. Simmons, G. D. Young Collins, S. G. Adams, and J. P. Martin, “Non-Curricular Activities Help African-American Students and Alumni Develop Engineer of 2020 Traits: A Quantitative Look,” Proceedings of the ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, 2014. https://peer.asee.org/22870[14] D. R. Simmons and S. M. Lord, “Removing Invisible Barriers and Changing Mindsets to Improve and Diversify Pathways in Engineering,” Adv. Eng. Educ., vol. 7, no. 2, pp. 1–22, 2019. https://advances.asee.org/wp-content/uploads/vol07/issue02/papers/AEE-issue-24- EAGER-Simmons-Lord.pdf[15] C. J. Finelli and S. M. Lord, “Integrating Sociotechnical Issues in the Introduction to Circuits Course,” 2023 European Society for Engineering
, “Pedagogies of liberation in an engineering thermodynamics class,” ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition, June 22-25, 2003, Nashville, Tennessee. American Society for Engineering Education, 2003. 10. Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology, "Criteria for Accrediting Engineering Programs 2018-2019," [Online]. Available: http://www.abet.org/accreditation/accreditation-criteria/criteria-for-accrediting- engineering-programs-2018-2019/#program. [Accessed: January 30, 2018].
Conference Content Access, Virtual On line . 10.18260/1-2—34761[12] Lopez del Puerto, C., & Cavallin, H. E., & Perdomo, J. L., & Munoz Barreto, J., & Suarez, O. M., & Andrade, F. (2019, June), Developing a Collaborative Undergraduate STEM Program in Resilient and Sustainable Infrastructure Paper presented at 2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Tampa, Florida. 10.18260/1-2—32629[13] López del Puerto, C., & Cavallin, H. E., & Suarez, O. M., & Munoz Barreto, J., & Perdomo, J. L., & Vázquez, D. E., & Andrade Rengifo, F., & Guillemard, L., & Troche, O. (2020, June), Design and Assessment of Architecture/Engineering/Construction (AEC) Curricula for
., & Hidalgo, F., “Building a Collaborative Advising Structure throughECST Advising Council,” presented at ASEE PSW 2019 Conference, Poster Symposium, LosAngeles, USA, 2019.[9] Dong, J., & Allen, E., “Work-in-Progress: Building an Inclusive Faculty CommunityThrough the ECST Teaching and Learning Academy,” ASEE Annual Conference, Florida, June2019.[10] Tuberty, J., Anagnos, T., and Allen, E.L., “Leveraging Scholarships to Advance StudentSuccess,” Proceedings ASEE Zone IV Conference, Long Beach, CA, 2014.[11] Rosenthal, K. I., & Shinebarger, S. H., “Peer Mentors: Helping Bridge the Advising Gap,”About Campus, 15.1 (2012): 24-27.[12] Heirdsfield, A. M., Walker, S., Walsh, K., & Wilss, L., “Peer mentoring for first-yearteacher
://users.rowan.edu/~jahan/hunter/algae_workshop/algae_resources.htm, Accessed 10 September 2018.11. “National Nutrition Month– Shocking Stats From Around the World.” (2014). Operation USA, Operation USA, (Jan. 31, 2019).12. Oilgae.com. ‘Algae Cosmetics’. [Online]. Available: http://www.oilgae.com/non_fuel_products/algae_cosmetics.html . [Accessed: 15 December 2018].13. Y. Tang, K. Jahan, K. B. Trinh, G. Gizzi, N. Lamb, “Algae City - An Interactive Serious Game,” Proceedings of 2018 ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition, Salt Lake City, UT, 2018.14. Y. Tang, C. Franzwa, T. Bielefeldt, K. Jahan, M. Saeedi-Hosseiny, N. Lamb, S. Sun, “Sustain City – Effective Serious Game Design in Promoting Science and Engineering Education,” in Design
," 2012. Accessed: 5/2019. [Online]. Available: Makezine.com: https://cdn.makezine.com/make/sales/Maker-Market-Study.pdf[3] M. Tomko, R. Nagel, M. Alemán, and J. Linsey, "Learning in Academic Makerspaces: How Inclusivity Affords Learning for Female Students in Various University Makerspaces," presented at the ASEE Annual Conference, Salt Lake City, UT, 2018.[4] V. Bean, N. M. Farmer, and B. A. Kerr, " An exploration of women’s engagement in Makerspaces," Gifted and Talented International, vol. 30, no. 1-2, pp. 61-67, 2015, doi: doi:10.1080/15332276.2015.1137456.[5] J. L. Saorín, D. Melian-Diaz, A. Bonnet, C. C. Carrera, C. Meier, and J. De La Torre-Cantero, "Makerspace teaching-learning environment to
: Understanding the Transition from Capstone Design to IndustryOverviewThis paper summarizes the principle findings from a multi-year, multi institution study of newgraduates’ transitions from school to work. Reports of a competency gap between school andwork for engineers abound, dating back at least to the Mann report in 1918.[1] Recent webinarsand reports from ASEE, including the Transforming Undergraduate Education in Engineering(TUEE) reports [2, 3] and the Industry 4.0 Workforce Summit [4] continue to describe both thegaps and the changes needed in undergraduate education to better prepare today’s students tobecome tomorrow’s engineers.While these and other reports often describe broad curricular changes needed to address the gap
community.IntroductionIn this paper, we provide an update for the years 2019-2023 to the implementation of the EarlyResearch Scholars Program (ERSP), developed at the University of California San Diego, to ourinstitution, the University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC). The program, funded by the NationalScience Foundation Improving Undergraduate STEM Education program, was designed to supportretention of students from marginalized backgrounds in the field of computing especially duringthe second year of their major [1].Currently, the project at UIC is in its fourth grant year, having served four cohorts of students since2019. The program has served majority women or non-binary students and continues to strive forrepresentation of minoritized students in the fields
component to the program, community college transfer students will likely continue tohave varying levels of graduation rates and graduation successes. Programs expanded from thisstudy would benefit from the basic structure, but require additional expansions into moreelaborate financial package designs.References[1] "Tennessee Promise." https://www.tn.gov/tnpromise.html (accessed 02/24/23.[2] R. M. Ellestad, D. J. Keffer, J. Retherford, C. Wetteland, M. Kocak, and T. Griffin, "NSF S-STEM: Transfer Success Co-Design for Engineering Disciplines (TranSCEnD)," in 2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Tampa, FL, 2019.[3] V. Tinto, Leaving college: Rethinking the causes and cures of student attrition. ERIC, 1987.[4
. A. S. Ralston, “Barriers and bottlenecks in engineering mathematics: How performance throughout a math sequence affects retention and persistence to graduation,” in October 2019 IEEE Frontiers in Education Conference (FIE), 2019.[8] J. J. Pembridge and M. A. Verleger, “First-year math and physics courses and their role in predicting academic success in subsequent courses,” in Proceedings of the 120th ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition, 2013.[9] D. G. Beanland, “Challenges and opportunities facing the education of engineers-Address to Victoria division of engineers Australia seg meeting.” Melbourne, 2010.[10] PCAST President’s Council on Advisors on Science and Technology and President’s Council on
in the George W. Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineer- ing at the Georgia Institute of Technological. Dr. Linsey received her Ph.D. in Mechanical Engineering at The University of Texas. Her research area is design cognition including systematic methods and tools for innovative design with a particular focus on concept generation and design-by-analogy. Her research seeks to understand designers’ cognitive processes with the goal of creating better tools and approaches to enhance engineering design. She has authored over 100 technical publications including twenty-three journal papers, five book chapters, and she holds two patents. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2019
of K-16 engineering learners; and teaching engineering.Dr. Glenda D. Young Collins, Mississippi State University Dr. Glenda D. Young Collins completed her doctoral work at Virginia Tech in the Department of Engi- neering Education. Her research interests include the role of university-industry partnerships in shaping student career expectations and pathways, the student to workforce continuum, and broadening participa- tion in engineering. Dr. Collins has worked as an Employer Relations Assistant for the VT Career and c American Society for Engineering Education, 2019 Paper ID #27724 Professional
Paper ID #30852Reducing Student Resistance to Active Learning: Applying ResearchResults to Faculty DevelopmentLea K. Marlor, University of Michigan Lea Marlor is a Ph.D. student at the University of Michigan, studying Engineering Education Research. She joined the University of Michigan in Sept 2019. Previously, she was the Associate Director of Education for the Center for Energy Efficient Electronics Science, a NSF-funded Science and Technology Center at the University of California, Berkeley. She managed undergraduate research programs to recruit and retain underrepresented students in science and engineering and
://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.3102/0013189X211027528[10] Goldman, A. (2019), “Interpreting Rural Students’ Stories of Access to a Flagship University,” The Rural Educator, National Rural Education Association, 40(1).[11] Miller, P., & Votruba-Drzal, E. (2012), “Early academic skills and childhood experiences across the urban-rural continuum.” Early Childhood Research Quarterly, 28, 234–248.[12] Gattis, C., & Adams, P., & Delgado Solorzano, X., & Popp, J., & Lo, W., & Muralidhara, D. (2023 June), Helping Rural and Underrepresented Students Succeed in STEM, Proceedings of the 2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Baltimore, MD.[13] Adams, P., & Delgado Solorzano, X., & Lo, W., & Gattis, C
Immersion and a Focus on Identity,”Proceedings of American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference, Salt Lake City,UT: ASEE 2018.[3] Y.-L. Han, K. E. Cook, G. Mason, T. R. Shuman, and J. Turns, “Engineering with Engineers:Revolutionizing a Mechanical Engineering Department through Industry Immersion and a Focuson Identity,” Proceedings of American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference,Tampa, FL: ASEE 2019.[4] Y.-L. Han, K. Cook, G. Mason, T. R. Shuman, and J. Turns, “Engineering with Engineers:Fostering Engineering Identity through Industry Immersion,” 2020 ASEE Annual Conferenceand Exposition, Montreal, Québec, Canada: ASEE 2020.[5] Y.-L. Han, K. Cook, G. Mason, T. R. Shuman, and J. Turns, “Engineering with
doctorate research at UC Berkeley investigated the applicability of seismic isolation and supplemental viscous damping to nuclear power plants with focus on seismic resilience and safety. After receiving her PhD, Dr. Wong began a post-doctoral fellowship at Lawrence National Laboratory focusing on computa- tional analysis for nonlinear seismic analysis of Department of Energy nuclear facilities and systems. She has established an active research lab at SFSU with a diverse group of undergraduate and Master’s level students. For her engineering education research, she is interested in exploring how to use technology such as virtual reality and 3D printing to enhance student engagement. She is an active member of ASCE, ASEE
the University of Memphis. Her research interests are imaging science, estimation theory, computational imaging enabled by deep learning, and computational optical sensing and imaging applied to multidimensional multimodal light microscopy and hyperspectral imaging. She received a CAREER award by the National Science Foundation in 2009, the Herff Outstanding Faculty Research Award in 2010 and 2015, and she was the recipient of the Ralph Faudree Professorship at the University of Memphis 2015-2018. She was named Fellow of the SPIE in 2019 and Fellow of the Optica (OSA) in 2020. She serves as Associate Editor for IEEE Transactions on Computational Imaging, Topical Editor for Optica’s Applied Optics, and as Executive
mitigate a “chilly climate” transform women’s experience, relationships, and achievement in engineering,” Journal of Educational Psychology, vol. 107, no. 2, pp. 468- 485, May 2015.[13] S. C. Davis, E. C. Moise, N. Cheon and S. B. Nolen, “Investigating Student Perceptions of an Engineering Department’s Climate: The Role of Peer Relations,” in Proceedings of the 2018 ASEE Annual Conference, 24-27 June 2018, Salt Lake City, Utah [Online]. Available: http://www.asee.org [Accessed: 14 January 2019][14] M. T. Wang and J. L. Degol, “School climate: A review of the construct, measurement, and impact on student outcomes,” Educational Psychology Review, vol. 28 no. 2, pp. 315-352, June 2016. [15] S. Secules, A. Gupta, A. Elby and C. Turpen