association with Colorado State University global campus.Dr. Dan Tenney, University of Bridgeport Dr. Tenney is an Assistant Professor at the University of Bridgeport in the Technology Management Department as part of the Engineering School. Dan Tenney worked in various Quality, Technical, and Operational positions in manufacturing divisions of HJ Heinz Company, 3M Company and Nile Spice Foods (acquired by Quaker Oats). For more than 25 years Dan was a member of the executive teams that directed and managed these divisions. Dan’s current focus is strategic technical and business management, application and research. Dan is a Board member on a Child’s Mental Health nonprofit agency where he has facilitated strategic
Paper ID #42153Social Capital and Persistence in Computer Science of Google’s ComputerScience Summer Institute (CSSI) StudentsMs. Marjan Naghshbandi, University of Toronto Marjan is a graduating BASc student in the Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering at the University of Toronto with a focus on AI and business studies. Her research interests include students’ persistence in computer science and related fields. She also has professional experience in software development and project management.Sharon Ferguson, University of Toronto Sharon is a PhD student in the department of Mechanical and Industrial
Paper ID #34837Social-belonging Intervention in a Computer Science Systems CourseDr. Shanon Marie Reckinger, University of Illinois at Chicago Shanon Reckinger is a Clinical Assistant Professor in the department of Computer Science at the Univer- sity of Illinois at Chicago. She received her PhD in Mechanical Engineering at the University of Colorado Boulder in August of 2011 and an MS degree in Computer Science Education at Stanford University. Her research interests include computational fluid dynamics, numerical methods, and computer science education.Dr. Chris Gregg, Stanford UniversityDr. Bryce E. Hughes, Montana State
science with a concentration in software engineering, and M.Sc. in computer science from Brock University, St. Catharines, ON, Canada in 2007 and 2009, respectively. He received the Ph.D. in computer science from the University of Guelph in 2014. He received the 2009 Graduate TA Award from Brock University. He is an ISW Trainer and has facilitated numerous training for Russian educational improvement. He previously worked for Magna International Inc. as a Manufacturing Systems Analyst and as a visiting researcher at ITU Copenhagen. He is currently an Assistant Professor and head of the Artificial Intelli- gence in Games Development Lab at Innopolis University in Innopolis, Republic of Tatarstan, Russia and an
Paper ID #38914Music, Coding, and Equity: An Exploration of Student and TeacherExperiences in Decoding Messaging and Discussing Equity with the ”YourVoice Is Power” CurriculumDr. Sunni Haag Newton, Georgia Institute of Technology Sunni Newton is currently a Senior Research Scientist at the Georgia Institute of Technology in the Center for Education Integrating Science, Mathematics, and Computing (CEISMC). Her research focuses on assessing the implementation and outcomes of educatiRoxanne Moore, Georgia Institute of Technology Roxanne Moore is currently a Research Engineer at Georgia Tech with appointments in the school of
Associate Professor at Weber State University in the School of Computing. He earned his Ph.D from Washington State University under the guidance of Dr. Diane Cook in 2014. He also received his B.S and M.S in Computer Science from Utah StatDr. Yong Zhang, Weber State University Dr. Yong Zhang is an associate professor in Computer Science at Weber State University. He received the B.E. degree and M.E. degree in Electrical Engineering from Harbin Institute of Technology, China, and the Ph.D degree in Electrical Engineering from West Virginia University, Morgantown, USA. His research interests include digital image and video processing, bioinformatics, and machine learning. ©American Society for
Paper ID #35070Making College Campus Wheelchair Accessible: Students PerspectiveDr. Molu O Olumolade, Central Michigan University An Associate Professor of Engineering and Technology with Central Michigan university; received first and second degrees from NCA&T and doctorate degree from the University of Calgary. He has been engaged in teaching for more than a decade and has more than 20 years of industrial experience in plant engineering. His research and publications are in the areas of manufacturing scheduling, design for man- ufacturability and assembly (DFM/DFA) and preventive maintenance
Three Rivers Community College.Dr. Elizabeth Litzler, University of Washington Elizabeth Litzler, Ph.D., is the director of the University of Washington Center for Evaluation and Re- search for STEM Equity (UW CERSE) and an affiliate assistant professor of sociology. She has been at UW working on STEM Equity issues for more than 19 years. Dr. Litzler is a member of ASEE, 2020-2021 chair of the ASEE Commission on Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion, and a former board member of the Women in Engineering ProActive Network (WEPAN). Her research interests include the educational cli- mate for students, faculty, and staff in science and engineering, assets based approaches to STEM equity, and gender and race
Paper ID #212802018 CoNECD - The Collaborative Network for Engineering and ComputingDiversity Conference: Crystal City, Virginia Apr 29Promoting Inclusivity in Computing (PINC) via Computing Application Mi-norProf. Ilmi Yoon, SFSU Professor Ilmi Yoon, Professor of Computer Science at San Francisco State University (SFSU), is an expert in gamification and game development, particularly in interactive media, 3D over the Internet, and network information visualization. She has developed ”DeBugger” Multiplayer Online Game for Educating Computer Science since 2011 and started to focus on various computational education research
technical program committee (TPC) member of high quality international conferences in Digital Forensics and Security. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2020 Internet of Things Forensics in Smart Homes: Design, Implementation and Analysis of Smart Home Laboratory Shinelle Hutchinson, Yung Han Yoon, Neesha Shantaram, and Umit Karabiyik {hutchi50,yoon127,nshantar,umit}@purdue.edu Department of Computer and Information Technology Purdue UniversityAbstractThe Internet of Things (IoT) has skyrocketed to the forefront of everyone’s lives, whether theyknow it or not. IoT devices
Paper ID #33953Qualitative Evaluation of Visualizations for List-based IterationMs. Molly Rebecca Domino, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State UniversityMs. Margaret O’Neil Ellis Associate Professor of Practice, Computer Science Department, Virginia Tech My research interests include examining ways to improve engineering educational environments to facil- itate student success, especially among underrepresented groups.Dr. Dennis Kafura American c Society for Engineering Education, 2021 Qualitative Evaluation of Visualizations for List-Based Iteration
COVID-19. On the other hand, virtual labs, remote controllabs, or video-based labs are good alternatives when students cannot perform the laboratory tasksin person. [8[. Remote laboratories allow the implementation of experiments through theinternet, whereas video-based activities provide a step-by-step overview of a real lab. In thisway, students can visualize the whole experimental process and its environment through a video.Zhai, Wang, and Liu provide examples for some of the above labs in electrical engineering [8].In March 2020, Columbia College Chicago decided to close the campus following the lockdownpolicies and health concerns. Faculty received instructions to transform their courses from in-person to remote learning. One of the
c Society for Engineering Education, 2020 THE S-STEM PROGRAM IN MATHEMATICS AND ITS IMPACT ON STUDENT SUCCESS1. INTRODUCTIONThe UTA (University of Texas at Arlington) is one of the eight campuses in the University ofTexas system, and it is located in the Dallas-Fort Worth metropolitan area between the cities ofDallas and Fort Worth. It offers doctoral, master’s, and bachelor’s degrees, and it is the secondlargest campus in the system after the flagship campus at Austin. According to the fall of 2019figures, it has a student population of 42,863, consisting of 30,652 undergraduate students and12,211 graduate students. The women make up 60% and the men 40% of the undergraduatestudent population, 51