- Conference Session
- FPD XI: Assessing First-Year Programs, Experiences, and Communities
- Collection
- 2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
- Authors
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Shannon Ciston, University of New Haven; Maria-Isabel Carnasciali, Ph.D., University of New Haven; Jean Nocito-Gobel, University of New Haven; Cory Carr
- Tagged Divisions
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First-Year Programs
43% of non-participants identified Engineering community as a benefit, while 48% of LLC participants and43% of non-participants identified class work collaboration as a benefit). Additional perceivedbenefits of the LLC included: accessibility of tutors (20), friendships with other engineeringstudents (9), an environment that promoted positive study habits and work ethic (7), benefitsrelated to the building facilities and the particular dormitory (4), and LLC programming such asguest lectures and field trips (3).Of all responses, by far the most common perceived drawback was potential for social isolationand reduced opportunities to meet students of other majors. 53 respondents expressed thisconcern. “Social isolation to engineering majors
- Conference Session
- Ethics in different disciplines
- Collection
- 2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
- Authors
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Diana Bairaktarova, Purdue University, West Lafayette; Demetra Evangelou, Purdue University, West Lafayette
- Tagged Divisions
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Engineering Ethics
engineering faculty do not accept enoughresponsibility for the teaching of engineering ethics.7 Engineering ethics courses are notmandatory and when offered through engineering schools are integrated through the curriculumin a variety of different forms. While the methods of ethics instruction and assessment are oftenleft to the discretion of the instructor, methods of curricular incorporation are mostly establishedat the institutional level. The predominant methods of curriculum incorporation include: requiredcourses within the discipline, elective courses outside the discipline, across-the-curriculum, andthe linking of ethics with society.8 As Ohland and Barry state: “applied ethics plays a critical rolein engineering, health, business, and law