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- Undergraduate Track - Technical Session II
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- 2018 CoNECD - The Collaborative Network for Engineering and Computing Diversity Conference
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Karen E. Rambo-Hernandez, West Virginia University; Abhik Roy, West Virginia University; Melissa Lynn Morris, West Virginia University; Robin A. M. Hensel, West Virginia University; Jeremy Clinton Schwartz, West Virginia University; Rebecca A. Atadero, Colorado State University; Christina Paguyo, University of Denver
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Diversity, Undergraduate Education
Freshman Engineering Program, in the Benjamin M. Statler College of Engineering and Mineral Resources at West Virginia University (WVU). She graduated Summa cum Laude with a BSME in 2006, earned a MSME in 2008, and completed her doctorate in mechanical engineering in 2011, all from WVU. At WVU, she has previously served as the Undergraduate and Outreach Advisor for the Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering department and the Assistant Director of the Center for Building Energy Efficiency. She has previously taught courses such as Thermodynamics, Thermal Fluids Laboratory, and Guided Missiles Systems, as well as serving as a Senior Design Project Advisor for Mechanical Engineering Students. Her research interests
- Conference Session
- Undergraduate Track - Technical Session III
- Collection
- 2018 CoNECD - The Collaborative Network for Engineering and Computing Diversity Conference
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Beth A. Myers, University of Colorado, Boulder; Emily Knaphus-Soran, University of Washington; Donna C. Llewellyn, Boise State University; Ann Delaney, Boise State University; Sonya Cunningham, University of Washington; Pamela Cosman, University of California, San Diego; Tanya D. Ennis, University of Colorado, Boulder; Katherine Christine Tetrick, Washington State University; Eve A. Riskin, University of Washington; Janet Callahan, Boise State University; Kevin Pitts, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
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Diversity, Undergraduate Education
emphasis in Public Policy and Administration from Boise State University. Her thesis was entitled, ”Nanomanufacturing Outside of the Lab: An Academic-Industry Partnership Case Study.” She also re- ceived her B.S. in Materials Science & Engineering from Boise State in 2014. In the Spring of 2016, Ann was recognized as part of the first cohort of University Innovation Fellows at Boise State, and has worked as a Fellow to collect and incorporate student feedback into future plans for makerspaces on the Boise State campus. As an undergraduate and graduate student, she has been involved with the Society of Women Engineers, and also taught a materials science laboratory course as a graduate teaching assis- tant. She has
- Conference Session
- Undergraduate Track - Technical Session II
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- 2018 CoNECD - The Collaborative Network for Engineering and Computing Diversity Conference
- Authors
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Donald Winiecki Ph.D., Boise State University; Noah Salzman, Boise State University; Timothy Andersen, Boise State University; Amit Jain, Boise State University; Dianxiang Xu, Boise State University
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Diversity, Undergraduate Education
encouraged to use theirown computers to begin filling in elements of the rubric (Appendix A). The instructor uses not onlydetails of the case under investigation in the discussion, but introduces related examples that come fromacademic literature, other popular media and authentic examples provided by faculty in the computerscience department.The second class period of each week is an open-ended laboratory in which student teams continueworking together to produce a completed Social Contract Building Blocks rubric (Appendix A,Appendix B). During this session, the instructor moves from team to team, reviewing their draftmaterials, offering suggestions and coaching. At present, students use shared access to a GoogleDocsword processing document to
- Conference Session
- Undergraduate Track - Technical Session VI
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- 2018 CoNECD - The Collaborative Network for Engineering and Computing Diversity Conference
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Bruk T. Berhane, University of Maryland, College Park
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Undergraduate Education
Paper ID #242722018 CoNECD - The Collaborative Network for Engineering and ComputingDiversity Conference: Crystal City, Virginia Apr 29On Becoming a ”Transfer Institution”: Research on a Community Collegethat Supports Diverse Black Students in their Transfer AspirationsDr. Bruk T Berhane, University of Maryland, College Park Dr. Bruk T. Berhane received his bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering from the University of Mary- land in 2003, after which he was hired by The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory (JHU/APL) where he worked on nanotechnology. In 2005 he left JHU/APL for a fellowship with the
- Conference Session
- Undergraduate Track - Technical Session VII
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- 2018 CoNECD - The Collaborative Network for Engineering and Computing Diversity Conference
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Nancy Mariano, Seattle University; Agnieszka Miguel, Seattle University; Mara Rempe, Seattle University; J. McLean Sloughter, Seattle University
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Diversity, Undergraduate Education
are over 100 full-time and part-time faculty and more than 1,100undergraduate and graduate students. In addition to rigorous technical educations where theory isbalanced with hands-on, laboratory-based work, our students experience emphasis on leadership,teamwork, and oral and written communication.All engineering and computer science students participate in a year-long senior design project which issponsored by local industry. Teams of students mentored by a faculty member and a liaison engineersolve real-world engineering problems. Students design, build and test their own solution, writeproposals and reports, and present the result to their sponsors. By bridging the gap between academiaand industry, the senior design project prepares