Montreal, Quebec, Canada
June 22, 2025
June 22, 2025
August 15, 2025
Graduate Studies Division (GSD)
18
https://peer.asee.org/55341
Dr. Jennifer Herman is an Assistant Professor of Practice in the Department of Engineering Education at the Ohio State University, where she teaches undergraduate and graduate level courses in technical and research communication. Her research interests include research writing pedagogy and undergraduate development of sociotechnical thinking.
Leah Wahlin is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Engineering Education at Ohio State University. She teaches writing and information literacy courses and engineering for sustainable development courses in Global Engineering. Her multi-disciplinary research and scholarship interests are focused on professional communication competencies, writing pedagogy, sociotechnical and systems thinking, and teamwork skills.
Dr. Kuzawa teaches the graduate Engineering Research Communications course in addition to working with graduate students in the co-curricular program. She also provides writing consultations to early career faculty seeking grants to support their work.
Engineers and engineering educators must communicate effectively across a range of genres, situations, and professional contexts, including industry, policy- and decision-making, and academic settings. Developing these abilities means producing the “disciplinary conventions of writing in one’s field” (Lin, 2022), which are taught across contexts in a variety of ways (Cunningham, 2019; Lala et al., 2018; Mehrubeoglu et al., 2023; Russell et al., 2024). Although studies demonstrate that engineering communication instruction is valued, these studies focus on training students to communicate in technical engineering disciplinary contexts. Few studies have examined how doctoral students in Engineering Education (EEd) develop competencies for communicating engineering education research (EER). EER’s study designs, methods, theories, and communication styles diverge from those in technical engineering disciplines, aligning more closely with the social sciences (Klassen & Case, 2022), fields to which many students (and, perhaps, faculty) have had less prior exposure or formal training. As a result, writing proposals and papers and developing presentations for EER represents a shift in the expected communication skills and literacies needed to be successful. Additionally, for EER PhD students, gaining acceptance and recognition as an EER researcher—part of developing a researcher identity—requires adapting and developing the skills, competencies and conventions for making meaning they learned in technical domains to engage successfully with and navigate the new epistemological frameworks used to make meaning in EER. Because understanding of these frameworks is demonstrated in writing and presentations, researchers must write, and developing a researcher identity includes incorporating a writer identity as well. This paper presents and analyzes a case study of one EER graduate program’s efforts to support its PhD students in transitioning to the academic conventions of EER communication and writing. We document how we, a team of writing studies experts, leveraged our expertise in academic literacies (Lea & Street, 2006; Lin, 2022), rhetoric (Paretti et al., 2014) and genre analysis (Berdanier, 2019) to establish a communication-focused community of practice (Lave & Wenger, 1991; Wenger, 1998) in an EER PhD program at a large, mid-western university. By documenting this project in its pilot phase and the role of our unique expertise in its development, we hope to achieve two goals: 1.) to encourage other EER programs to address and explore the specific challenges and needs of students transitioning from engineering technical domain undergraduate programs to EER graduate programs; 2.) to demonstrate how EER programs can leverage expertise of faculty from writing studies and technical communication to develop evidence-based practices that support students’ transition.
Herman, J. J., & Wahlin, L., & Kuzawa, D. (2025, June), A co-curricular research communication community of practice: Developing research communication competencies for engineering education graduate students Paper presented at 2025 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition , Montreal, Quebec, Canada . https://peer.asee.org/55341
ASEE holds the copyright on this document. It may be read by the public free of charge. Authors may archive their work on personal websites or in institutional repositories with the following citation: © 2025 American Society for Engineering Education. Other scholars may excerpt or quote from these materials with the same citation. When excerpting or quoting from Conference Proceedings, authors should, in addition to noting the ASEE copyright, list all the original authors and their institutions and name the host city of the conference. - Last updated April 1, 2015