Influencing the Interest Levels of Male Versus Female Students Going into STEM Fields.” Proceedings of 2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Tampa FL, June 15 - 19, 2019. Paper ID: 26352.[9] Nadelson, L., Mooney, D. K., Dean, N. “Why I am an Engineering Major: A Cross-Sectional Study of Undergraduate Students.” Proceedings of 2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Indianapolis, IN, June 15-18, 2014. Paper ID: 9097.[10] Shields, D. R. and K. P. Kisi. “Factors Influencing High School Students’ to Pursue and Engineering Baccalaureate.” Proceedings of 2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Vancouver, BC, Canada, June 16-29, 2011, AC 2011- 2263.[11
inalignment with the social pillar of sustainable design. However, classes rarely give students theopportunity to interact with communities to develop these listening skills. A small ethicallistening exercise was integrated into three civil engineering courses in fall 2019. Videos withstories from community members impacted by engineering were shown during class. The panelCommunity Engagement Ethics – First Steps in a Conversation with Affected Communities thatwas held at the American Society for Engineering Education (ASEE) Annual Conference in2019 served as the main source of community voices. In a first-year Introduction to CivilEngineering course, discussion of the human-centered design process was supported bycomments from Lena Young-Green in
Paper ID #36420Weaving Students into Engineering, not Weeding Them OutDr. Jenna P. Carpenter, Campbell University Dr. Carpenter is Founding Dean of Engineering at Campbell University. She is 2022-2023 President of ASEE and past President of WEPAN. She is a former NSF ADVANCE PI and was a co-recipient of the 2022 National Academy of Engineering’s Bernard M. Gordon Award for Innovation in Engineering and Technology Education for her role in launching the Grand Challenges Scholars Program. She is an ASEE PEV for General Engineering, Dr. Carpenter regularly speaks at the national level on issues related to the success of
interactive textbook," Advances in Engineering Education, vol. 10, no. 2, pp. 49-79, 2022, doi: https://doi.org/10.18260/3-1-1153-36028.[6] N. Sambamurthy, A. Edgcomb, and F. Vahid, "Animations for learning design philosophy and student usage in interactive textbooks," in ASEE Annual Conference, Tampa, FL, 2019, doi: https://doi.org/10.18260/1-2--32095.[7] A. Edgcomb and F. Vahid, "Effectiveness of online textbooks vs. interactive web-native content," in ASEE Annual Conference, Indianapolis, IN, 2014, doi: https://doi.org/10.18260/1-2--20351.[8] J. S. Yuen, A. Edgcomb, and F. Vahid, "Will Students Earnestly Attempt Learning Questions if Answers are Viewable?," in ASEE Annual Meeting, New Orleans, LA, 2016, p. 16595
undergraduate research students.Dr. Charles E. Pierce, University of South Carolina Dr. Pierce is the Director for Diversity and Inclusion and Associate Professor in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at the University of South Carolina. He is a Bell South Teaching Fellow in the College of Engineering and Computing and ASEE Campus Representative.Dr. Zulfikar Berk, University of South Carolina Dr. Zulfikar Berk’s research interests include constructivist learning approaches, global education, ex- periential learning, and problem-based learning. He is enthusiastic about the contribution of innovative pedagogical approaches by working on various teaching and learning models in advancing engineering education
, First-Year Programs, and Design in Engineering Education Divisions. He has also been recognized by ASEE as the recipient of the 2005 Merl K. Miller Award and by the Kern Entrepreneurial Engineering Network (KEEN) with the 2018 ASEE Best Card Award. Dr. Estell received the ASEE First-Year Programs Division’s Distinguished Service Award in 2019. Dr. Estell is also active within the Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology (ABET). He has been an ABET Expert since 2010, starting as a Program Evaluator (PEV) for both Computer Engineering and Computer Science. He served as a Computing Accreditation Commission (CAC) Commissioner from 2013 to 2021, including being on the CAC Executive Committee from 2016-19
Inclusion. Estell has received multiple ASEE Annual Conference Best Paper awards from the Computers in Education, First-Year Programs, and Design in Engineering Education Divisions. He has also been recognized by ASEE as the recipient of the 2005 Merl K. Miller Award and by the Kern Entrepreneurial Engineering Network (KEEN) with the 2018 ASEE Best Card Award. Estell received the First-Year Programs Division’s Distinguished Service Award in 2019 and the 2022 Computers in Education Division Service Award. Estell currently serves as an ABET Commissioner and as a subcommittee chair on ABET’s Accreditation Council Training Committee. He was previously a Member-At-Large on the Computing Accreditation
1551 2018 1 63 36 1500 2019 9 137 71 1858 2020 3 113 65 1902 2021 7 133 75 1900 Career Placement Rates 8% 7% 6% Students Employed in Renewable Energies Percentage of 5% 4
Creating Value in the Classroom," in 2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, 2019.[3] L. Mohandas, N. Mentzer, A. Jaiswal, and S. Farrington, "Effectiveness of Undergraduate Teaching Assistants in a First-Year Design Course," in 2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access, 2020. 12[4] A. Phillips, K. M. Kecskemety, and D. A. Delaine, "First-year Engineering Teaching Assistant Training: Examining Different Training Models and Teaching Assistant Empowerment," in 2018 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, 2018.[5] L. B. Wheeler, C. P. Clark, and C. M. Grisham, "Transforming a
Telecommunication Engineering from Visveswaraiah Technological Uni- versity (VTU), India in 2007 and Ph.D. from Old Dominion University, Norfolk, VA in 2012. Her research interests span the areas of Wireless Communication, Internet of Things (IoT), Optimization using Game Theory, and Engineering Education Research. She is a member of the IEEE and ASEE, a technical pro- gram committee member for IEEE Globecom, ICC, ICCCN and VTC conferences, and a reviewer for several international journals and conferences.Megan BekolayDr. Otsebele E. Nare, Hampton University Otsebele Nare is an Associate Professor in the Electrical and Computer Engineering Department at Hamp- ton University, VA. He received his electrical engineering doctorate
) 38.5 (9,872) 33.3 (9,864) 33.1 (6,487) 36.0 (4,452) Civil (270) 28.1 (13,586) 24.0 (11,464) 21.0 (12,154) 22.0 (8,935) Mechanical (358) 17.3 (34,781) 13.8 (26,816) 11.7 (19,241) 13.1 (16,063) Aerospace (57) 15.9 (5,168) 14.3 (3,781) 13.4 (3,459) 18.5 (2,722) Electrical (325) 15.5 (13,495) 12.7 (11,892) 11.5 (9,942) 14.2 (11,915)ASEE Profiles / By The Numbers reports; 2023 ABET program search, Bachelor Degree, United StatesThe American Freshman study (HERI 2019-2022 [13-16]) has long documented the strongerenvironmental and social commitments and concerns of female over male students
that an engineering student will be exposed tofinancial topics. Is it appropriate to include this discussion in engineering economy courses?How do we best use this material in class?References[1] Eschenbach, T, J.P. Lavelle, and N. Lewis, “Personal Finance Coverage in Engineering Economy Courses,”Proceedings of the 2017 ASEE National Conference, American Society for Engineering Education, Columbus, Ohio.[2] Eschenbach, T.G. and N.A. Lewis, “Risk, Standard Deviation, and Expected Value: When Should an IndividualStart Social Security?” The Engineering Economist, 64(1), pp. 24-39, 2019.[3] Arias, Elizabeth, and Jiaquan Xu, “United States Life Tables, 2020,” National Vital Statistics Reports, 71(1),August 8, 2022.[4] Office of Management and
virtual realities: theory and practice for next-generation spatial computing. O’Reilly Media, Inc.Mitsubishi © American Society for Engineering Education, 2021 2021 ASEE Southeast Section Conference Industrial Robot RV-2F Series (2019) Instruction Manual Robot Arm Setup & Maintenance,www.geva-roboter.at/files/rv-2f_series_robot_arm_setup__maintenance.pdfPapoutsi, C., Drigas, A., & Skianis, C.(2018).Mobile Applications to Improve Emotional Intelligence in Autism - A Review. Int. J. Interact. Mob. Technol, 47-61 .Ploog, Bertram & Scharf, Alexa & Nelson, Deshawn & Brooks, Patricia.(2012). Use of Computer-Assisted Technologies (CAT) to Enhance
first Executive Board of JLLA: Randi Mendes, President;Stephany Santos, Vice President; Arshia Yusuf Mirza, Secretary; Justin Fang, Treasurer; DonyeilHoy, Parliamentarian and Armin Tahmasebi Rad, Event Coordinator. Thank you for paving theway for future John Lof Scholars.References[1] A. M. Agogino, Educating the Engineer of 2020, vol. 3, no. 2005. Washington, D.C.: National Academies Press, 2005.[2] Tang, X., Burris, L., Hu, N., & Brenkus, N. (n.d.). Preparing ethical leaders in engineering research and practice: Designing an ethical leadership module. 2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition Proceedings. https://doi.org/10.18260/1-2--33190[3] Sullivan, S., & Koufteros, B. (n.d.). Meaning and impact: A review of Personal
, and Computer Engineering, Engineering Technology, and ConstructionManagement. Some non-College of Engineering students’ majors included ElementaryEducation, Communication Studies, English, Psychology, Sociology, Biology, Finance, Pre-Business, Architecture, Health Systems, and Kinesiology.Table 1 shows the aggregate numbers of Engineering and non-Engineering students. In Fall2018, the course description was not posted when the course schedule was released, possibly dueto an administrative error. The absence of course details may account for why less than half thestudents were from the College of Engineering, unlike Spring 2019 and Fall 2019. Not allstudents were aware of the problem-based learning technique used in the course until
scientists,” Sci. Educ., vol. 84, no. 2, pp. 180– 192, Mar. 2000, doi: 10.1002/(SICI)1098-237X(200003)84:2<180::AID-SCE3>3.0.CO;2- X.[8] L. Doyle and T. L. Nilsson, “Flipping the classroom: Do student learning gains and perceptions vary based on gender?,” presented at the ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Tampa Bay, FL, 2019.[9] J. D. Stolk, Y. V. Zastavkerq, and M. D. Gross, “Gender, motiviation, and pedagogy in the STEM classroom: A quantitative characterization,” presented at the ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Salt Lake City, UT, 2018.[10] E. A. Cech and T. J. Waidzunas, “Navigating the heteronormativity of engineering: The experiences of lesian, gay, and bisexual students
; Dygert, J., & Hensel, R. A. (2020, June), “How Do Student Perceptions of Engineers andEngineering as a Career Relate to their Self-Efficacy, Career Expectations, and Grittiness?” Paper presented at 2020ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access, Virtual Online. 10.18260/1-2--34729[3] J. Kruger and D. Dunning, “Unskilled and Unaware of It: How Difficulties in Recognizing One’s OwnIncompetence Lead to Inflated Self-Assessments,” Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, vol 77. pp. 1121-1134. 2002.[4] Morris, M. L., & Hensel, R. A. M., & Dygert, J. (2019, June), “Why Do Students Leave? An Investigation IntoWhy Well-Supported Students Leave a First-Year Engineering Program.” Paper presented at 2019 ASEE AnnualConference &
by Recognizing the Framing Power of Implicit Messages Kathryn A. Neeley University of VirginiaI. IntroductionSince the founding of the Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Commission in 2011, interest andactivity in diversity have grown in ASEE, culminating with the establishment of the Year ofImpact on Racial Equity (2021-2022) and the formation of the Equity, Culture, and Social JusticeDivision in 2020. These initiatives were preceded by several ASEE programmatic effortsincluding the Year of Action on Diversity (2014-2015), the Best Diversity Paper Award (2015),the Deans Diversity Pledge (2017), the Diversity Recognition Program (2019), and the
communityrecognizes the importance of communication skills, research on measuring visualcommunication skills of engineering students is limited [9]. For the study presented in this paper,students’ visual communication skills were assessed by comparing visual displays submittedearly in the term with those submitted at the end of the term.The study population used for this paper includes 71 students who have enrolled in andcompleted the course, The Way Things Work, in 2017, 2018, and 2019. Class enrollment by yearand gender are given in Table 1. Note that in 2017 enrollment was not limited but in 2018 and2019 enrollment was limited to 16 students and 24 students, respectively. In 2017, the coursecarried Technical and Applied Science (TAS) credit. All Dartmouth
Retention as Part of the Freshman Experience,” Acad. Educ. Leadersh. J., vol. 20, no. 1, 2016.[10] A. Ortiz-Rosario, A. Shermadou, D. A. Delaine, and T. M. Nocera, “To what extent does gender and ethnicity impact engineering students’ career outcomes? An exploratory analysis comparing biomedical to three other undergraduate engineering majors,” ASEE Annu. Conf. Expo. Conf. Proc., 2019.[11] G. D. Baura, “Educating for Industry: A Call to Action for Bio- Biomedical Engineering Professors and Students [Point of View],” IEEE Pulse, vol. 6, no. 2, pp. 5–9, Mar. 2015.[12] E. Seymour, A.-B. Hunter, and T. J. Weston, “Why We Are Still Talking About Leaving,” in Talking about Leaving Revisited, Cham: Springer
Research, v14 No.1, p.36-44.13. Fish, L. A. (2015). Undergraduate students computer-managed homework versus in-class performance for different testing formats. Business Education Innovation Journal, 7, 5-14.14. Nader, M., DeMara, R. F., Tatulian, A. & Chen, B. (2019). Quantitative Impact on Learning Achievement by Engaging High Integrity Testing using Lockdown Assessment for Online Delivery. 2019 ASEE SE Section Annual Conference, No. 45. This work was published and presented in March, 2019 https://cal.ucf.edu/wp- content/uploads/2020/06/ASEE-SE-2019-Nader-camera-ready-published.pdf15. Nader, M., DeMara, R. F., Tatulian, A., & Chen, B. (2021). Authenticated Testing during Blended Delivery: Impacts on
National Academies Press, 2012. https://doi.org/10.17226/25038.[11] A. Kirn, J.L. Huff, A. Godwin, M. Ross, & C. Cass. “Exploring tensions of using interpretative phenomenological analysis in a domain with conflicting cultural practices.” Qualitative Research in Psychology, 1-20, 2019.[12] A. Kirn, A. Godwin, C. Cass, M.S. Ross, & J.L. Huff. “Mindful Methodology: A transparent dialogue on adapting Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis for engineering education research.” In ASEE 2017: American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition, 2017.[13] J. Husman & W. Lens. “The role of the future in student motivation.” Educational Psychologist, vol. 34, no. 2, pp. 113-125
(eletromagnetismo e ondas) num curso deengenharia. In: Congresso Brasileiro de Educação em Engenharia (COBENGE), 2014, Juizde Fora.[4] Cutri, R.; Baracat, D. E. ; Marim, L. R. ; F.M. Witkowski . Active-learning for Physics(Electromagnetism) teachers in an Engineering Course. In: ASEE Annual Conference andExposition, 2015, Seattle, Washington. 122 ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition, 2015.[5] Cutri, R.; et al. Ten Ways to Improve Learning Physics as Part of an EngineeringCourse. ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, 2016, New Orleans. Anais. Louisiana,2016.[6] Cutri, R.; Marim, L.R.; Cardoso, J.R. Using project-based learning to teachelectromagnetic and wave concepts. International journal of electrical engineering education,v. 1, p. 002072091982899
students. The curricular efforts consisted ofdeveloping 18 e-learning modules and integrating them into courses in all programs. The co-curricular efforts included developing an entrepreneurially oriented Living Learning Community(LLC) for first-year students, and conducting entrepreneurially focused competitions. A coreteam consisting of the dean and four faculty led these efforts, and other faculty wereprogressively engaged to participate in these efforts. Internal efforts to develop the EM of faculty was not the primary focus from 2011 to 2019,except for training faculty on how to integrate the e-learning modules into courses. However,faculty were encouraged to pursue external opportunities to
Engineering Education, “Engineering and engineering technology by the numbers 2019,” 2019.[6] J. A. Henderson, E. M. Hines, J. L. Davis, L. S. S. Benjamin, J. D. Alarcón, and T. Slack, “It’s a Vibe: understanding the graduate school experiences of Black male engineering faculty,” Journal for Multicultural Education, vol. ahead-of-print, 2022, doi: 10.1108/JME-01-2022-0013/FULL/PDF.[7] A. S. Subburaj, P. R. Lockwood-Cooke, E. M. Hunt, and V. H. Subburaj, “Initiatives to financially, academically, and socially support underrepresented minorities in STEM disciplines,” in ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition, Conference Proceedings, 2020, vol. 2020-June. doi: 10.18260/1-2--34830.[8] W. Aspray and A. Bernat
: Year 1 in Review, Paper presented at 2018 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Salt Lake City, Utah. 10.18260/1-2—30020, June 2018.[2] K.A. Evans, M. Desselles, & M.K. Orr, Board 47: Year 2 of an S-STEM Summer Scholarship for a Sophomore Bridge Program, Paper presented at 2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition , Tampa, Florida. 10.18260/1-2—32357, June 2019. K.A. Evans, M. Desselles, & M.K. Orr, Year 3 of an S-STEM Summer Scholarship for a[3] Sophomore Bridge Program, Paper presented at 2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access, Virtual Online. 10.18260/1-2—35713, June 2020. K.A. Evans, M. Desselles, & M.K. Orr, Successes and Lessons in Year 4 of an S-STEM[4] Summer
. Wigfield, “MOTIVATIONAL BELIEFS,VALUES, AND GOALS,” 2002.[12] J. S. Eccles, A. Wigfield, and U. Schiefele, “Motivation to succeed,” in Handbook of child psychology: Social, emotional, and personality development., Vol. 3, 5th ed., N. Eisenberg, Ed. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons Inc, 1998, pp. 1017–1095.[13] Jacquelynne S. Eccles, “GENDER ROLES AND WOMEN’S ACH IEVEMENT- RELATED DECISIONS,” Psychol. ofWmn Q., vol. 11, pp. 135–172, 1987.[14] G. Hofstede, Cultures and organizations: Software of the mind. 1991.[15] R. L. Kajfez, M. J. Mohammadi-Aragh, A. Clark, S. Sassi, and J. Petrie, “Board 29: Initial Qualitative Exploration into First-Year Engineering Community and Identity,” in 2019 ASEE Annual
resources for expanding coverage of equitableK-12 computing education research using the CAPE framework; and 3) using recommendationsand resources to design and pilot workshops for training researchers in equitable K-12 CERmethods and practices. This poster describes some of the recommendations and resources wehave created for expanding coverage of equitable K-12 computing education research. 1McGill, Gransbury, Heckman, DeLyser, Rosato, and Smith ASEE 20241 IntroductionThe United Nations champions ”inclusive and equitable quality education” for each student [1, p.1]. As National Research Council emphasizes, equity is crucial to improving the ”...goals,structures, and
on peer evaluation ratings in project teams. In International Journal of Business Communication, 43(1), 4-20.[12] C. Martin & K. Locke. (2022). What do peer evaluations represent?: a study of rater consensus and target personality. In Frontiers in Education, 7, 1-7.[13] The Regents Of The University Of Michigan, “Tandem,” tandem.ai.umich.edu. https://tandem.ai.umich.edu/welcome (accessed: June 23, 2022).[14] ASEE. (2019). Current status of the U.S. engineering and computing workforce, 2019.[15] J. Roy. (2019). Engineering by the Numbers. American Society for Engineering & Education, 13-52.
West Virginiaare college ready for STEM. Apparently, female students in West Virginia need assistance tobecome competent and confident in STEM disciplines. Competition Of VEX EducationalRobotics to Advance Girls Education (COVERAGE) is a project aiming to inspire and supportfemale middle school and high school students to pursue STEM careers in West Virginia, fundedby the Greater Kanawha Valley Foundation. Specifically, in the fall semester of 2019 and springsemester of 2020, West Virginia University Institute of Technology assisted teachers to organizeGirls Robotics Clubs in Kanawha County, Fayette County, and Lincoln County. Throughattending the robotics clubs, female middle school and high school students are expected tobecome more