. Camacho is Professor of Sociology at the University of San Diego. She began her career at UC San Diego in 1999 as a postdoctoral fellow at the Center for US Mexican Studies, and later as a UC Faculty Fellow in Ethnic Studies. In 2015-16, she returned to UC San Diego as a fellow of the American Council on Education. As a bilingual/bicultural Latina, Camacho has 30 years of experience in higher ed- ucation advocating for underrepresented groups and first generation college students. For over a decade, her work on institutional transformation has received funding from the National Science Foundation to examine and address inequities in higher education, specifically as they relate to Science, Technology, Engineering and
Education, 2019 CPP WE: Retaining & Graduating Women in Undergraduate EngineeringAbstract Research shows that the number of women pursuing degrees in STEM (Science,Technology, Engineering, and Math) fields is disproportionately less than the number of womenpursuing degrees in the same fields. Cal Poly Pomona’s Women in Engineering (CPP WE)Program seeks to do its part in countering this disparity by engaging all men and women withinthe College of Engineering for the purposes of recruiting, retaining, and graduating greaternumbers of female students.Introduction California State Polytechnic University, Pomona (Cal Poly Pomona) is part of the 23-campus California State University system in California. Cal Poly Pomona has a
diversity.Dr. Jacquelyn F. Sullivan, University of Colorado Boulder Jacquelyn Sullivan is founding co-director of the Engineering Plus degree program in the University of Colorado Boulder’s College of Engineering and Applied Science. She spearheaded design and launch of the Engineering GoldShirt Program to provide a unique access pathway to engineering for high potential, next tier students not admitted through the standard admissions process; this program is now being adapted at several engineering colleges. Sullivan led the founding of the Precollege division of ASEE in 2004; was awarded NAE’s 2008 Gordon Prize for Innovation in Engineering and Technology Education, and was conferred as an ASEE Fellow in 2011. She has
. Ecklund, A. E. Lincoln, and C. Tansey, “Gender Segregation in Elite Academic Science,” Gend. Soc., vol. 26, no. 5, pp. 693–717, Oct. 2012.[16] C. Hill, C. Corbett, and A. St Rose, Why So Few? Women in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics. ERIC, 2010.[17] E. Cech, “Engineers and Engineeresses? Self-conceptions and the development of gendered professional identities,” Sociol. Perspect., vol. 58, no. 1, pp. 56–77, 2015.[18] A. Green and D. Sanderson, “The roots of STEM achievement: An analysis of persistence and attainment in STEM majors,” Am. Econ., vol. 63, no. 1, pp. 79–93, 2018.[19] A. C. Wilkins, “Race, Age, and Identity Transformations in the Transition from High School to College for Black
information technology and process design issues related to delivering quality health care. As the Department Chair, he has been involved in the initiation of programmatic initiatives that have resulted in significant growth in the Industrial Engineering Program, situating it in the forefront both nationally and internationally. These include the Online Master of Engineering in Indus- trial Engineering Program, the Endowed Chairs Program in Industrial Engineering, Human Factors and Ergonomics Institute and the Clemson Institute for Supply Chain and Optimization and the Center for Excellence in Quality. For his success, he has been recognized by the NAE through the Frontiers in Engi- neering Program, and he has received the
Science Foundation (NSF) Scholarships in Science,Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics Program (S-STEM), VT-NETS is a scholarshipprogram and research project focused on improving collaboration efforts between Virginia Techand two community college partners. The primary objective of VT-NETS is to determine how allthree partners can increase the success and efficiency of engineering transfer through communitycollege-to-bachelor’s degree pathways, thus increasing attainment of A.S. and B.S. degrees inengineering. VT-NETS works toward increasing access to co-curricular programs, streamliningand aligning advising between institutions, and developing a cohort mentality among the pre-transfer students at the community college. One intention of this
. Following military service, Michael obtained a Bachelor of Sci- ence in Engineering degree from Arizona State University, graduating in 2013. His research and service interests include veterans in engineering, veterans with service-connected disability, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and human sex trafficking.Dr. Nadia N. Kellam, Arizona State University Dr. Nadia Kellam is Associate Professor in the Polytechnic Engineering Program at Arizona State Uni- versity. Prior to this position, she was an Associate Professor at the University of Georgia, where she was co-director of the interdisciplinary engineering education research Collaborative Lounge for Un- derstanding Society and Technology through Educational
navigating this reality. More specifically, the purpose ofthis paper is to 1) catalogue data sources that collect STEM-related (science, technology,engineering, and mathematics) data at a national level and 2) critique the usefulness of the dataas it relates to informing efforts aimed at broadening participation of underrepresentedracial/ethnic groups in engineering. To address this purpose, we explored the following question: Based on the landscape of publicly-available data that is currently collected at a national level, how can the participation of underrepresented racial/ethnic groups in engineering be empirically monitored?To this end, we identified and reviewed multiple STEM-related data sources to highlight theways the
Measurement of Co-Curricular Support: Insights from an Exploratory Factor AnalysisAbstractThe purpose of this work-in-progress paper is to share insights from current efforts to developand test the validity of an instrument to measure undergraduate students’ perceived support inscience, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM). The development and refinement ofour survey instrument ultimately functions to extend, operationalize, and empirically test theModel of Co-curricular Support (MCCS). The MCCS is a conceptual framework of studentsupport that demonstrates the breadth of assistance currently used to support undergraduatestudents in STEM, particularly those from underrepresented groups. We are currently
, 2018.[3] Congressional Research Service, The U.S. science and engineering workforce: Recent, current, and projected employment, wages, and unemployment, 2017.[4] C. Cooper, and J. Woodward, “Predicting student success in precalculus,” In Proc. INTED 5th International Technology, Education and Development, 03, 2011, pp. 5398- 5401.[5] S. S. Stanley, “Revitalizing precalculus with problem-based learning,” The Journal of General Education, vol. 51, no. 4, pp. 306-315, 2002).[6] A. B. Brown Judd, and T. Crites, “Preparing students for calculus,” In Proc. 16th Annual Conference on Research in Undergraduate Mathematics Education, 02, 2013, pp. 2.39- 2.46.[7] L. S. Shulman, and M. G. Sherin