” forreporting “Male/Female/Non-binary Gender/Another Gender or Unknown” [7]. Please see the 2016report of the Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System (IPEDS) Technical Review Panel(TRP) discussion on gender for additional context [8]. References 1. S. L. Eddy and S. E. Brownell, “Beneath the numbers: A review of gender disparities in undergraduate education across science, technology, engineering, and math disciplines,” Phys. Rev. Phys. Educ. Res., vol. 12, no. 2, p. 020106, Aug. 2016, doi: 10.1103/PhysRevPhysEducRes.12.020106. 2. M. Bahnson, C. Cass, H. L. Perkins, M. A. Tsugawa-Nieves, and A. Kirn, “WIP: A Case for Disaggregating Demographic Data,” presented
Subaward Agreementwith the Louisiana Space Grant Consortium (LaSPACE).” References1. Radhwan, H., Shayfull, Z., Abdellah, A. E. H., Irfan, A. R., & Kamarudin, K. (2019). Optimization parameter effects on the strength of 3D-printing process using Taguchi method. In AIP Conference Proceedings (Vol. 2129, No. 1, p. 020154). AIP Publishing LLC.2. Oropallo, W., & Piegl, L. A. (2016). Ten challenges in 3D printing. Engineering with Computers, 32(1), 135-148.3. Prabhakar, M. M., Saravanan, A. K., Lenin, A. H., Mayandi, K., & Ramalingam, P. S. (2021). A short review on 3D printing methods, process parameters and materials. Materials Today: Proceedings, 45, 6108-6114.4. Chan
StudentAchievement in Multiple STEM Disciplines”. It should be noted that the opinions, results andconclusion or recommendations expressed are those of the author(s) and do not necessarilyreflect the views of the National Science Foundation.References[1] L. Ah-Nam and K. Osman, “Developing 21st Century Skills through a Constructivist- Constructionist Learning Environment. K-12 STEM Education,” Inst. Promot. Teach. Sci. Technol., vol. 3, no. 2, pp. 205–216, 2017.[2] S. Guzey and G. Roehrig, “Teaching Science with Technology: Case Studies of Science Teachers’ Development of Technological Pedagogical Content Knowledge (TPCK),” Contemp. Issues Technol. Teach. Educ., vol. 9, no. 1, pp. 25–45, 2009.[3] D. S. Niederhauser and D. L. Lindstrom
, no. 1. Wiley- Blackwell Publishing Ltd, pp. 6–27, 2012. doi: 10.1002/j.2168-9830.2012.tb00039.x.[9] K. G. Ricks, J. A. Richardson, H. P. Stern, R. P. Taylor, and R. A. Taylor, “An Engineering Learning Community To Promote Retention And Graduation Of At-Risk Engineering Students,” 2014.[10] M. J. Grimm, “Work in progress - An engineering bridge program - the foundation for success for academically at-risk students,” in Proceedings - Frontiers in Education Conference, FIE, 2005. doi: 10.1109/fie.2005.1612214.[11] S. J. Gates Jr and C. Mirkin, “Encouraging STEM students is in the national interest,” Chron High Educ, vol. 58, no. 39, 2012.[12] Florida International University (FIU
Paper ID #36715Environments Affecting Black Student Thriving in Engineering (BSTiE)Stephanie A Damas, Clemson University Stephanie Ashley Damas is currently a graduate student at Clemson University studying to get her Ph.D. in Engineering and Science Education. Her area of interest is Diversity and Inclusion in Engineering. She holds a bachelorˆa C™s degree in electrical engiDr. Lisa Benson, Clemson University Lisa Benson is a Professor of Engineering and Science Education at Clemson University, and the past editor of the Journal of Engineering Education. Her research focuses on the interactions between student
Paper ID #37936ICT-Mediated STEM for the Inclusive Education of Migrants and RefugeesChildrenJuan Sebasti´an S´anchez-G´omez, Universidad El Bosque Doctoral student of PhD in Industrial and Systems Engineering at Universidad de los Andes (Colombia).Maria Catalina RamirezAndrea Herrera, Universidad de los Andes, Columbia ©American Society for Engineering Education, 2023 ICT-mediated STEM for the inclusive education of migrants and refugees’ children Juan Sebastián Sánchez-Gómez1,2,3, María Catalina Ramirez Cajiao2 y Andrea Herrera3 1
paper. Further, this workwas supported by the Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Arizona State University. Anyopinions, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this material are those of theauthor(s).References[1] C. Goodenew, “Classroom belonging among early adolescent students,” J Early Adolesc., vol. 13, pp. 21–43, 1993, doi: https://doi.org/10.1177/0272431693013001002.[2] C. Wilson and J. Secker, “Validation of the Social Inclusion Scale with Students,” Soc. Incl., vol. 3, no. 4, Art. no. 4, Jul. 2015, doi: https://doi.org/10.17645/si.v3i4.121.[3] S. Hurtado and D. F. Carter, “Effects of College Transition and Perceptions of the Campus Racial Climate on Latino College Students’ Sense of Belonging,” Social. Educ
-ton [23]. III. DEI S TUDENT A MBASSADOR P ROGRAM AT S EATTLE U NIVERSITY In this section, we first give background about our institution, followed by a summary of our previouswork. We then describe the organization and structure of the DEI Student Ambassadors program. Weconclude the section with details about the specific events and activities that the DEI Student Ambassadorsorganized.A. Seattle Unviersity Seattle University is a small, private, religiously-affiliated and mission-driven institution located inSeattle, WA. Our urban campus is home to eight colleges and schools. One of them is the College ofScience and Engineering (CSE) which hosts eight departments. CSE is in the midst of a multi-yearproject to develop programs
’ career aspirations and expectationsIntroductionIn the last decade the representation of women at the undergraduate engineering level has slowlybut steadily increased, reaching 24% Canada-wide in 2020 [1]. At the institution providing thesetting for the present study women now make up nearly 40% of the undergraduate cohortsuggesting a promising trend toward gender equity. However, representation of women amonglicensed Professional Engineers (P.Eng.) has not kept pace, with women comprising only 20% ofnewly licensed Canadian P.Eng.’s each year and just 14% of Professional Engineers overall [2-3]. This representation gap in the profession is compounded with the low rates of licensureamong engineering graduates in
andcolleagues [17] suggested that researchers use SCCT to study the influences on specific aspectsof higher education student development to identify supports and barriers to this process.One study that has used SCCT to theorize identity development at the university level guides thiswork; it is Barbarà-i-Molinero et al.’s [18] integrative conceptual framework on the factors thatinfluence the professional identity development of higher education students. Researchersconducted a review with experts that identified influencing factors on professional identitydevelopment for higher education students and shared a framework for influences onprofessional identity development of higher education students, including expected outcomes,social experience
://doi.org/10.1016/j.compedu.2016.02.002.[4] M. Wilkerson, V. Maldonado, S. Sivaraman, R. R. Rao, and M. Elsaadany, "Incorporating immersive learning into biomedical engineering laboratories using virtual reality," Journal of Biological Engineering, vol. 16, no. 1, p. 20, 2022/08/08 2022, doi: 10.1186/s13036-022- 00300-0.[5] S. Robert, "Biomedical Engineering Virtual Circuit Simulation Laboratories," presented at the ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Honolulu, Hawaii, 2007/06/24, 2007. [Online]. Available: https://peer.asee.org/2171.[6] P. D. Ryan, M. Dominik, and T. G. Cheryl, "WIP: Pilot Study for the Effect of Simulated Laboratories on the Motivation of Biological Engineering Students
ideologies [3]; these perspectives are also alignedwith Radoff et al.’s description of narrow thinking [13]. Previous research has looked at howundergraduate engineering students align with these common narratives in interviews and focusgroups with students [10, 13], surveys [19], student classwork [15], and whole class discussions[7, 14]. The four common narratives that are pertinent to this study are technocracy, free marketidealism, technological neutrality, and technological determinism.Technocracy is a decision making approach guided by the belief that all problems can andshould be solved through technology [21]. Here, technological solutions are privileged, oftenwith little consideration of the social, political and historical context of the
“researchevaluation” was discussed as the topic continues to develop rapidly. However, the authors didnot articulate any opportunities around research intelligence as a data-driven service; rather, thefocus rested on opportunities around advising and educating others to view research metricsmore comprehensively rather than on a narrow set of metrics. No mention was made of activelyparticipating in a service to aid in strategic decision making, nor building teams around suchservices [2]. On the other hand, a more recent report from the often-consulted Ithaka S+R teamstate in “It’s Not What Libraries Hold; It’s Who Libraries Serve,” that academic libraries must“center on the user” and “must be completely re-architected to provide modern businessintelligence
Paper ID #39362Elaboration of a contextualized event for teaching eigenvalues andeigenvectors in the control and automation engineering courseJuliana Martins Philot, Instituto Mau´a de Tecnologia - Brazil I hold a B.A. in Mathematics from Universidade Estadual Paulista J´ulio de Mesquita Filho - UNESP (2007), a M.Sc. in Mathematics from Universidade Estadual Paulista J´ulio de Mesquita Filho - UNESP (2010) and a Ph.D. in Mathematics Education from Pontif´ıcia Universidade Cat´olica de S˜ao Paulo - PUC- SP (2022). I have experience in Mathematics Teaching for Engineering courses since 2009 and currently I am a
University Gregory S. Mason received the B.S.M.E. degree from Gonzaga University in 1983, the M.S.M.E. de- gree in manufacturing automation from Georgia Institute of Technology in 1984 and the Ph.D. degree in mechanical engineering, specializing in multi-rate digitalDr. Teodora Rutar Shuman, Seattle University Professor Teodora Rutar Shuman is the Chair of the Mechanical Engineering Department at Seattle Uni- versity. She is the PI on an NSF-RED grant. Her research also includes electro-mechanical systems for the sustainable processing of microalgae. Her work is published in venues including the Journal of Engineering Education, IEEE Transactions on Education, International Journal of Engineering Educa- tion
, and a published author. He is a former McNair Scholar, National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, & Medicine-Ford Foundation Fellow, Herman B. Wells Graduate Fellow, Inter- national Counseling Psychologist, former Assistant Professor at the University of Kentucky, and current Post-Doctoral Research Scholar at the University of Pittsburgh. Dr. Z.’s research program focuses on examining the impact of intersectional oppression on historically excluded groups & creating culturally relevant interventions to enhance their well-being. Within this framework, he studies academic persis- tence and mental wellness to promote holistic healing among BIPOC. He earned Bachelor’s degrees in Psychology &
interpersonalconflicts.Acknowledgements: This work is supported by the National Social Science Fund of China(AIA220013).References Brown P R, Matusovich H M. Career Goals, Self-Efficacy and Persistence in Engineering Students. IEEEFrontiers in Education Conference (FIE), 2016. Chenchen Zhu and Luze Han. 2021. CV chatbot based on “STAR” method. In Proceedings of HumanInterface Technologies 2020/21 Winter conference (CPEN541). ACM, Vancouver, BC, Canada, 6 pages. Choi D S, Loui M C. Grit for Engineering Students. IEEE Frontiers in Education Conference (FIE), 2015. David D. Woods. Four concepts for resilience and the implications for the future of resilience engineering [J].Reliability Engineering and System Safety,2015(141):5-9. French B.F, Immekus J C, Oakes
differentiate fromsources in my normal reference list (e.g. [A27] instead of [27]). For in-text citations, I only usethe generic term ‘authors’ when referring to the writers of a text, never the author’s or authors’last name(s). Finally, for the few articles quoted twice, I have assigned them a unique number foreach quote. While this does introduce redundancy to the reference list, it avoids drawingadditional attention to the articles in-text.Structural useThe structural use category characterizes articles based on how neurodiv* was used relative tothe article’s purpose. In other words, it describes what role neurodiv* played in the article. Thiscategory consists of four usage groups: casual, minor context, major context, and focus. Iassigned each
Percentage of participants Coping strategy Coping strategy using strategy (N=55) using strategy (N=55) Music/art/performance/ Alcohol use 11% (n = 6) 4% (n = 2) movies (not at home) Caffeine use 5% (n = 3) Pet(s) 7% (n = 4) Eating to relax 35% (n = 19) Planning or scheduling 24% (n = 13) Errands/shopping 4% (n = 2) Reading 16% (n
consider it to be the appropriate time to share said details. However, future publicationswill discuss data collection and analysis in more detail.AcknowledgementThe material is based upon work supported by the NSF 2217477. Any opinions, findings, andconclusions or recommendations expressed in this material do not necessarily reflect those of theNSF.ReferencesAmerican Association of University Professors (AAUP). 2018. https://www.aaup.org/news//data-snapshot-contingent-faculty-us-higher- ed#.YKqu9ahKg2wvAn, S. 2016. “Asia Americans in American History: An AsianCrit Perspective on Asian American Inclusion in State and U.S. History Curriculum Standards, Theory, and Research in Social Education.” Theory and Research in Social
created overlaysonto the real-world machines within their cleanroom facility.[11] Their AR software currently didnot have a “training” aspect to it yet, but exemplifies the exciting possibilities of how these ever-expanding extended reality technologies can be applied within the nanofabrication industry. Itshould be noted that virtual and augmented reality solutions are used extensively in otherindustries. An example is the use of augmented reality in surgery [12] with new developments inHead’s Up Displays progressing rapidly. These would allow the surgeon(s) to stay focused on theprocedure without having to look at multiple screens to interpret digital images, patient data andprogress. Similarly, oil and gas industries are increasingly adopting
learners to participate in an inclusive, productive, and engaging classroomenvironment is for instructors to embed a Culturally Responsive-Sustaining (CR-S) framework. TheCulturally Responsive framework proposes creating student-centered learning environments that affirmcultural identities; foster positive academic outcomes; develop students’ abilities to connect across lines ofdifference; elevate historically marginalized voices; empower students as agents of social change; andcontribute to individual student engagement, learning, growth, and achievement through the cultivation ofcritical thinking [18]. Ladson-Billings introduced the term culturally relevant pedagogy over two decadesago based on her research on effective teachers of African
Society for Engineering Education, 2022A Practical Method for Improving Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion in Nuclear Science Mr. James Olson, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Dr. Li Liu, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Mr. Malcolm Porterfield, Rensselaer Polytechnic InstituteBackground and Motivation Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI) is the oldest operating private school of scienceand school of engineering among those that were established in any English-speaking country[1]. Starting with civil engineering in the 1820's, RPI has continually evolved available curriculato meet societal goals. Since the early 1990's, societal progress
concepts they do not understand [13]. Therefore, the formation of home-culture studygroups could be considered an oppositional behavior because many of the faculty do notencourage it.Another example of community conformism occurred through teaching assistants’ office hours.Students found that TAs were more approachable than professors because they were morewilling to help and were more like peers. At TA office hours, students not only received helpfrom TAs, but also found help and community among other students there who were working onthe same assignments. The final example of community conformism was Student 5’s effort torecruit more minority students to undergraduate research opportunities, thus helping them adapt.We observed one example of
governments and universities [1] [2]. Chile is no exception.In 2019, 28.7% of students who entered STEM disciplines were women, increasing only by 1.3% in2020 to 30%. Family, cultural, economic and social factors influence this under-representation, factorswhich tend to reduce women´s self-concept on learning and ability in this area. Women have lowerself-concept in the STEM disciplines than do men, consequently the dropout rate for women is doublethat of men [3].An intervention was designed aiming to promote and increase self-concept in learning capabilities infirst-year engineering students in Computer Engineering and Industrial Engineering. Such interventionwas based on three types of collaborative activities within the classroom, which seek to
-wide focus on the student experience, https://www.naspa.org/images/uploads/main/Learning_Reconsidered_Report.pdf , Jan. 2004.3. H. Schattle, The practices of global citizenship, Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2008.4. A. W. Chickering and L. Reisser, Education and identity, 2nd ed., San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.5. L. Patton, K. A. Renn, F. M. Guido, S. J. Quaye, D. S. Forney, & N. J. Evans, Student Development in College, 3rd ed., San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass, 2016.6. M. S. Hevel, “Toward a History of Student Affairs: A Synthesis of Research, 1996- 2015,” Journal of College Student Development, vol. 57, no. 7, pp. 844-862, 2016.7. D. P. McAdams, “The psychological self as actor, agent, and author
techniques,thorough literature review on selected passive technique, learning the required software,verification and validation of numerical model, parametric investigation to determine optimalconfiguration, and authoring technical papers. This independent study was a three-credit hourcourse that replaced a required technical elective for the student. Meetings were held everyWednesday and lasted for a maximum of three hours. Since dimples have proven to be effectiveon golf balls, it is also of interest to test their efficacy on airfoils to enhance aerodynamicperformance by energizing the flow and delaying boundary layer separation. There has beensome contradictory research with respect to the optimal location, size and geometry of thedimple(s) on an
not promising for continued instruction online in the upcomingsemesters under the COVID-19 epidemic.References[1] Blaich, C. & Wise, K. (2020, September 14). Comparison of how faculty and staff have experienced their institutions’ responses to COVID-19. Higher Education Data Sharing Consortium (HEDS). Available: https://www.hedsconsortium.org/wp-content/uploads/2020.09.14-COVID-19-Survey-Faculty-v-Staff- Memo.pdf[2] The Chronicle of Higher Education (2020, October). ‘On the Verge of Burnout’: Covid-19’s impact on faculty wellbeing and career plans. Available: https://connect.chronicle.com/rs/931-EKA- 218/images/Covid%26FacultyCareerPaths_Fidelity_ResearchBrief_v3%20%281%29.pdf[3] Fox, K