Asee peer logo
Well-matched quotation marks can be used to demarcate phrases, and the + and - operators can be used to require or exclude words respectively
Displaying results 691 - 720 of 1116 in total
Conference Session
Critical Conversations on Being Valued
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Kalynda Chivon Smith, North Carolina A&T State University; Cristina Poleacovschi, Iowa State University of Science and Technology; Scott Grant Feinstein; Stephanie Luster-Teasley, North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Culture & Social Justice in Education, Equity
programs.Limitations and Future Research The findings of this study are compelling, but are limited in their scope. The number ofparticipants recruited for the current study was appropriate for a qualitative study [18], but therewere much fewer women than men and much fewer students attending the HBCU than the PWI.These numbers reflect the larger population of males and students attending the PWI; however,the lack of female students and students attending the HBCU may suggest differences in theirexperiences that are an artifact of this study rather than a reflection of Latinx students’ livedexperiences. In addition to the differences in gender and institution participation, there were alsodisparities in representation across race and national origin
Conference Session
Industrial Engineering Division Technical Session 2
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Sanaz Motamedi, University of Florida; Kierra Marquis; Hannah Levine
Tagged Divisions
Industrial Engineering
contrasted againstwith the varying technological abilities of the older generations. With academic successdependent on the instruction of the generations before Generation Z, the need for clear,consistent, well delivered eLearning services becomes very significant.Limitation. It is worth noting that this study has some limitations. All of the participants are allISE students at University of Florida located in Gainesville, FL. This creates several limitationsfor this study. First, the age range is limited to the older population within Generation Z. Forthis reason, the results of this study are only a reflection of the user acceptance of this age range.Second, all participants are learning in the state of Florida the region could impact a
Conference Session
Engineering Physics and Physics Division Technical Session 2
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Geraldine L. Cochran, Rutgers University; Bryce Troncone, Rutgers University; Bianca R. Evangelista, Rutgers University; Pablo J. Cueva Vera, Rutgers University; Gafar O. Tajudeen, Rutgers University; Nazeer Mosley, Rutgers University; Russell Thomas Soto, Rutgers University; Nathaniel Debebe Asefa, Rutgers University; Nkenna Opara, Rutgers University; Corey Ptak, Rutgers University
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Physics and Physics
intervieweessaid “Be patient.” Understanding that students personal lives and home situation impact theirability to perform academically is probably the first step. Then, implementing policies andpractices in the course that reflects this understanding would be an obvious next step. This maymean providing more flexibility when it comes to deadlines, allowing and responding to studentcommunication regarding a need for accommodations – temporary or permanent (through thefull term of the course), and rethinking assessment practices.Racial Injustice. We found that racial injustice impacted the experiences of Learning Assistantsand the students they supported. The crisis of continued racialized violence against Black peoplehas an impact on students. Following
Conference Session
Multidisciplinary Endeavors: Mechatronics, Robotics, and Technology
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Alyson Grace Eggleston, The Citadel; Robert J. Rabb P.E., The Citadel
Tagged Divisions
Multidisciplinary Engineering
trait modeling, so as to provide feedback and reinforcement of both positive and negative traits.DiscussionStudents who participated in the fall 2019 and spring 2020 weekly teleconferences with theirproject advisors had mixed reactions to the VMC mode. Initially, they felt it was extra time toassemble the team and meet after classes were complete for the day. As a residence-onlyinstitution, none had to commute, but they valued their out-of-class time. This sentiment passedrather quickly as team members realized some of the benefits of having the team meet frequentlywith the advisor who recording the meeting. This historical collection of meetings helped to keepall team members accountable—especially when the weekly agenda reflected tasks
Conference Session
Continuing Professional Development Division Technical Session 1
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Oludare Adegbola Owolabi P.E., Morgan State University; Oludayo Samuel Alamu, Morgan State University; Jumoke 'Kemi' Ladeji-Osias, Morgan State University; LaDawn E. Partlow, Morgan State University; Mehdi Shokouhian, Morgan State University; Kathy Ann Gullie, Gullie Consultant Services LLC; Krishna Bista; Sotonye Ikiriko, Morgan State University; Mulugeta T. Dugda, Morgan State University
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Continuing Professional Development
] investigated the relationship between learning settings (classroom,laboratory/home) and instructional use of the Analog Discovery Board on potential studentoutcomes. Their study noted that faculty and students benefited from the use of the AD Boardsand there were increases in constructs reflecting required affective pre-requisites to learning,including interest in content, motivation to learn, and confidence in ability to learn.Fowler and Schmalzel [8] stressed the importance of measurements in the STEM field asmeasurements are precursor to control, management, and improvement of engineering systems.They also noted that instrumentation is needed to perform the measurements. Hence, for effectiveinstrumentation, sensors must reliably and accurately
Conference Session
MASS: Mastery, Assessment and Success of Students
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Amie Baisley, University of Florida; Keith D. Hjelmstad, Arizona State University
Tagged Divisions
Mechanics
of students Statics 3 FA19−FA20 105 105 50 8 268 Dynamics 8 SP17−FA20 127 207 142 38 514 Deformable Solids 8 SP17−FA20 154 240 155 47 596The population data is broken down by the final grade received in the course to allow us to show how thecourse grade reflects on mastery. Note that during a semester the students are given feedback based onhow they are progressing in their mastery of each objective, never a letter grade. This mastery-gradingapproach is cumulative throughout an entire semester which often takes students until
Conference Session
Electrical and Computer Division Poster Session
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Carl B. Dietrich, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University; Nicholas F. Polys, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University; Christian W. Hearn, Weber State University; Kenneth Reid, University of Indianapolis; Joshua Alexéi García Sheridan, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
Tagged Divisions
Electrical and Computer
known as antenna ranges.many of the same students will soon be relied upon to design much more complex systems andtheir components.2. BackgroundProject-based / Problem-based learning (PBL) has been increasingly prevalent throughoutengineering curricula. Pedagogically, both approaches are similar: students work collaborativelyto address complex, ill-structured problems which reflect problems encountered in real lifewithin engineering. In this pedagogical approach, students engage in self-directed learning togather relevant knowledge and identify knowledge gaps; instructors serve as coaches to helpstudents identify necessary information to solve these problems. Problems are framed to fosterskills in knowledge acquisition and problem solving, as
Conference Session
Diversity and Two-year Colleges Part 1
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Miguel Velez-Reyes P.E., University of Texas at El Paso; Ivonne Santiago P.E., University of Texas at El Paso; Victor Manuel Garcia Jr., The University of Texas at El Paso; Irma Y. Torres-Catanach, The University of Texas at El Paso; Dawn M. Horton, University of Massachusetts, Amherst; Yajaira Mejia, The City College of New York; Dugwon Seo, Queensborough Community College; Jorge E. Gonzalez, City University of New York, City College; Joseph Barba, City University of New York, City College; Fenot Aklog, Teachers College Columbia University; Fred Moshary, City University of New York, City College; Jeff Sivils, El Paso Community College; Yasser Hassebo, The City University of New York, LaGuardia CC
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Two-Year College
of academic careers for fellows across theintersectional identities of race/ethnicity, gender, first-generation status, personal experience as acommunity college student, and Pell Grant status as an undergraduate. Given the need forcommunity colleges to hire faculty in STEM fields that are reflective of their racially and ethnicallydiverse student population, the research findings will serve to offer recommendations for futurework that is geared towards effectively preparing Hispanic STEM doctoral students to consideracademic careers at teaching-intensive institutions such as community colleges.To achieve the above-referenced goals in this grant, three research tasks are being pursued. Theprimary, and most labor intensive, is conducting semi
Conference Session
Women in Engineering Division Technical Session 8
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Gretchen A. Dietz, University of Florida; Kayla Julianna Kummerlen, The University of Florida; Elliot P. Douglas, University of Florida
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Women in Engineering
, similar to Martin and Garza [39]. This approach allows us to centerKayla’s experiences, and dismantle the “researcher-participant hierarchy” [37, p.1]. As Kaylajourneyed through her undergraduate career, she journaled her experiences in a shared document.Gretchen went through the entries probing for deeper reflections, finding underlying themes, andraising new questions. Over the course of a year, Kayla and Gretchen met bi-weekly to go overKayla’s experiences and discuss things such as the impact of gender, impacts on her engineeringexperience, interactions with classmates, and interactions within work settings.Specific to this paper, we focused on Kayla’s experiences with her internship over the summer of2020. Kayla journaled her experiences and
Conference Session
Design Methodologies 2
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Hannah D. Budinoff, The University of Arizona; Vignesh Subbian, The University of Arizona
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education
. Figure 1. Flow Diagram for Study SelectionWhat types of assets do students bring into engineering programs? What are implications ofasset-based approaches to engineering, engineering design process, and design pedagogy?Different student groups hold different assets in the form of cultural wealth and/or funds ofknowledge. Here, we summarize (see Table 1) assets by student subpopulations and theirimplications to engineering and engineering design education. Neither the student subgroups northeir corresponding assets and asset categories are meant to be exhaustive in nature. Thesummary in Table 1 reflects evidence found in the literature and are only meant to be illustrativeand of practical value to engineering educators.Table 1. Summary of assets
Conference Session
NSF Grantees Poster Session
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Samuel Enrique Blair, Texas A&M University; Henry David Banks, Georgia Institute of Technology; Julie S Linsey, Georgia Institute of Technology; Astrid Layton, Texas A&M University
Tagged Topics
Diversity, NSF Grantees Poster Session
learned certain tools, or whichtools they had used prior to this semester and their college entry. Given the time between whentools were used and when students completed the surveys in question, their answers may nothave perfectly reflected their experiences. This difficulty in recalling the timeline of tool usageand when tools were learned is compounded particularly with simple tools and features of themakerspace, such as hand tools, whiteboards, or even a desk. Given that such tools and featureshave particularly interesting ramifications for makerspaces efficacy and their outcomes, theinformation lost from this could be considerable.While the information gathered does not perfectly capture how makerspaces are being used andthe motivations
Conference Session
Engineering Technology Capstone Projects
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Jorge Antonio Tito P.E., University of Houston
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Technology
the project, and to obtain more technical conclusions. Also, the theory ofmatrix analysis will be implemented in courses of structural analysis including more applicationof advanced software.The surveys about team working shows that the students expressed interest in the topics, mainlybecause of the practical applications and importance for society. Also, students show highperformance working in teams, which is reflected in the quality and timing to complete thecapstone projects. The capstone related with the coliseum was done during the Covid-19pandemic and students used different online tools to permit a successful coordination of theirtasks, which also reflected their high team working skills.This type of project permitted the application
Conference Session
Computers in Education 9 - Technology 1
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Mahgol Nowparvar, Pennsylvania State University ; Xing Chen, Pennsylvania State University ; Omar Ashour, Pennsylvania State University ; Sabahattin Gokhan Ozden, Pennsylvania State University Abington; Ashkan Negahban, Pennsylvania State University
Tagged Divisions
Computers in Education
" ) OR LIMIT-TO ( EXACTSRCTITLE , "ASEE Annual Conference Proceedings" ) )Next, we perform co-occurrence analysis [5]–[7] to classify and map co-occurred words andphrases among the collected papers related to PBL and VR to describe research trends. Figure 3presents an illustrative example of co-occurrence analysis with three hypothetical documents(Doc 1-3) and the resulting map/network of keywords/phrases (denoted by A, B, C, E, R, W, X). (a) The three documents and their keywords used in the example of co-occurrence analysis. The size of nodes and length of links reflect the number of co-occurrences
Conference Session
Student Division Technical Session 4
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Tyler Milburn, The Ohio State University; Krista M. Kecskemety, The Ohio State University
Tagged Divisions
Student
‘second’ industrial revolution, includingelectrical engineering [2], mechanical engineering [3], and chemical engineering [4]. In theUnited States, civil engineering’s professional society was formed in 1852, followed by miningand metallurgical engineering in 1871, mechanical engineering in 1880, electrical engineering in1884, and chemical engineering in 1908. Although professional societies can also be used to datethe official establishment of a discipline, they do not completely reflect the status of thatdiscipline’s educational standards and curricula. As the education of engineers began to shifttowards science-based education and away from vocationally-based education as a result ofWorld War II, a more diverse set of engineering disciplines
Conference Session
Teaching Methodology & Assessment 2
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Mary E. Johnson, Purdue University at West Lafayette ; Yilin Feng, California State University, Los Angeles
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Aerospace
the HODA and practice the systems tools they learn from CST course byexplaining their experience and observations. The original debriefing has four steps [10]: “tellthe story; graph the variables; make the system visible; and identify the lessons” (pp.7-9). Anadditional step, which is to explore the connection between the HODA and the aviation industry,is included in the CST course by the instructor. In the CST course, the debriefing includes in-class debriefing and an after-class full report.In-class debriefingThe in-class debriefing led by the team leaders is conducted immediately after the HODA. Theleaders guide students to discuss their observations and reflections on the system structureexisting in the HODA using a series of steps.Step 1
Conference Session
Engineering Economy Course Strategy Panel Session
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Michael B. O'Connor P.E., New York University
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Economy
Instruction using revised Bloom Taxonomy References[1] L. W. Anderson, and B. S. Bloom. “A taxonomy for learning, teaching, and assessing: A revision of Bloom's taxonomy of educational objectives.” Longman, 2001.[2] American Society of Civil Engineers. "Civil engineering body of knowledge for the 21st century: Preparing the civil engineer for the future." [Online] American Society of Civil Engineers, 2019.[3] K. Whalen, “The Reflective Learning Framework: A guide for students and educators.” (2018). [Online] https://asp.mcmaster.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/The-Reflective- Learning-Framework-08.2018.pdf[4] S. Buckles, Stephen, and J. J. Siegfried. "Using multiple-choice questions
Conference Session
NSF Grantees Poster Session
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Zhen Zhao, Arizona State University, Polytechnic campus; Adam R. Carberry, Arizona State University; Jean S. Larson, Arizona State University; Michelle Jordan, Arizona State University; Wilhelmina C. Savenye, Arizona State University; Kristi L. Eustice, Arizona State University; Allison Godwin, Purdue University at West Lafayette; Gillian Roehrig, University of Minnesota - Twin Cities; Christopher Barr, Rice University; Kimberly Farnsworth, Arizona State University
Tagged Topics
NSF Grantees Poster Session
expertise of the team. Coordinated iterative cycles of reflection and action were usedfor instrument development [30-31]. The instrument currently has seven baseline categories thatcould be applied to all ERC population groups and will be used to conduct cross-ERCcomparisons. Table 1 documents the baseline categories (excluding demographics):understanding of the ERC, impact on skills, culture of inclusion, mentorship experience, futureplans, and program satisfaction. These six categories were extracted from the NSF ERC BestPractices Manual [3] and ERC program solicitation [32] as cross-cutting categories that NSFrecommends evaluating to monitor ERC progress and impact around workforce development andculture of inclusion initiatives. Comparisons
Conference Session
Student Division Technical Session 2
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Kevin Zhu, University of Toronto; Aoran Jiao, University of Toronto; Xinyue (Crystal) Liu, University of Toronto; Scott Ramsay P.Eng., University of Toronto
Tagged Divisions
Student
pedagogicalresearch because they quantitatively and non-invasively reflect brain activity. However,commercially available EEG devices are often either prohibitively expensive, or do not offerthe correct capabilities such as enough electrodes. This work-in-progress study aims toaddress this gap through the design of a low-cost, easy-to-use, and effective EEG headset forengineering educational research studies. The current study includes a relatively small sample size (N=6); however, it doesidentify some preliminary trends. For example, although most participants found the authors’current design to be more comfortable than commercially available designs, the design alsohad a much larger range of reported comfort levels. Additionally, no distinct
Conference Session
Remote Physical Laboratories: Experimentation and Laboratory-oriented Studies
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
John Whitefoot, University of Pittsburgh; Jeffrey S. Vipperman, University of Pittsburgh
Tagged Divisions
Experimentation and Laboratory-Oriented Studies
acoustic reverberation times of a room intwo states: either relatively empty or with added materials to absorb sound. The reverb time wascalculated using both the full bandwidth recorded signal and a filtered signal using the standard250 Hz octave band. The learning objectives were to: 1) Read and apply key, excerpted aspectsof a test standard (in this case, ISO 3382-2 [12]); 2) Adapt a test standard to an at-homeenvironment and identify key differences with the test standard; 3) Record acoustic data andperform simple processing using MATLAB to calculate the reverberation time of a room; 4)Design a digital bandpass filter to filter data into the 250 Hz acoustic octave band [13]; 5)Generate conclusions on the acoustic absorptivity and reflectivity
Conference Session
Women in Engineering Division Technical Session 3
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Kaitlyn Anne Thomas, University of Nevada, Reno; Whitney Gaskins, University of Cincinnati; Kelly J. Cross, University of Nevada, Reno
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Women in Engineering
. After the first read-through, we assigned one or more codes to specific lines of text in the transcripts andsupplemented the codes with comments. The comments included further detail explaining whythe codes were used, the feelings of the coder at the time of coding, or possible links to previousliterature or concepts. This thematic analysis led to the four emergent themes based on the datafrom the six interviews. These four themes reflected trends in the experiences of these women.The codes “Confidence/Pride and Empowerment” and “Moment of Pride” were present in theoriginal codebook, but their definitions leaned toward circumstances that did not match thesenew code definitions. Instead, lack of confidence or valuing one’s own achievement
Conference Session
First-year Programs: Computation in the First Year
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Bethany Luke, Valparaiso University; Ruth E. H. Wertz, Valparaiso University
Tagged Divisions
First-Year Programs
critique) they referenced some specific aspect of the learningenvironment or experience that could be improved. Including such examples and descriptionstakes more time and effort to produce as a more careful reflection of the student’s learningexperience, and thus could be seen as an indicator for student engagement.We expected that if the course improvements increased the level of student engagement, twothings would happen in the course evaluation comments: (1) sentiments would discernibly shiftfrom primarily negative to primarily positive; and (2) sentiments would discernibly shift fromaffective to behavioral and cognitive. As expected, with better alignment between courselearning objectives, pedagogical methods, and assessments, the overall
Conference Session
NSF Grantees Poster Session
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Karinna M. Vernaza, Gannon University; Saeed Tiari, Gannon University; Scott Steinbrink, Gannon University; Lin Zhao, Gannon University; Varun K. Kasaraneni, Gannon University
Tagged Topics
NSF Grantees Poster Session
increasing behavior until the completion of the project.Additionally, the survey provided open-ended questions where students could identify the factorsthat affected the changes in their perceptions. This group was very satisfied with theirexperience and one stated that “…it got more exciting and we could see the project comingtogether.” This comment was shared by all 80% of this group. This is clearly reflected in theincreases in enthusiasm.Note that this student cohort was also included in the Alumni survey, as these students graduatedin the spring of 2019. Artifact Display Case, Project 1 7 Average Student Response
Conference Session
Computation Related
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Muzammil Arshad, Texas A&M University; Rebecca R. Romatoski, St. Ambrose University
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Mechanical Engineering
studentlearning and success in engineering courses for all modes of learning including the traditionalFace-to-Face, hybrid and online modes of learning. It can further be concluded that the samecourse structure can be confidently used for all engineering courses as well as science courses,thereby, helpful for all STEM related courses.At St. Ambrose, both self-reflection of instructor and student feedback mid-course and end ofcourse evaluations were very positive. Additionally, the grades of students were high andmeasured effort and understanding.The instructor solicited formal anonymous feedback in the middle of the semester in addition tothe required end of course evaluations. The mid-course feedback from electronics students wasthe best out of the last
Conference Session
Pre-College Engineering Education Division Technical Session 15
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Stacy S. Klein-Gardner, Vanderbilt University
Tagged Divisions
Pre-College Engineering Education
outcome-oriented and driven by a need to complete a particular tasks, requiringsome expertise to do so [7]. Part of becoming an engineer is learning how to participate inengineering discourse and this process is complex, interactional, and non-trivial [7]. Thesecommunication processes are also reflective of professional engineering practices [8]. Onedesired aspect of having students participate in engineering design challenges is that they learnan age-appropriate engineering design process to support the growth of routines in engineeringdiscourse.McCormick, Wendell, & O'Connell [9] remind us that engineering offers the chance for students“to work toward important goals that teachers already have for children: to become betterdecision makers
Conference Session
Community Engagement Division Technical Session 4
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Ziliang Zhou, California Baptist University
Tagged Divisions
Community Engagement Division
community but also instilled some disciplines in students who needed to juggle theirbusy class schedule and the other activities. Students also reflected later that this course addedthe needed breaks for otherwise a brutal first year.Common engineering service activities our students engaged through this course included localcounty science fair, school district STEM events, tutoring to fellow students, and many others.However, the most popular service opportunity for most students was the annualMATHCOUNTS competition, simply due to the large number of students involved. It was alsothe most convenient one since it was on campus (travel not needed). For many students, findingopportunities and serving for 30 hours within two years presented a
Conference Session
Computing and Information Technology Division Technical Session 3
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Jia Zhu, Florida International University; Leila Zahedi, Florida International University; Monique S. Ross, Florida International University
Tagged Divisions
Computing and Information Technology
with the extracted strategic directions to determine whether there is a mismatchbetween CSER’s research foci and the strategic directions with the academic publications. Theauthors of the papers often selected the publication keywords based on their work knowledge,mainly using generic terms as they reflect a rough overview of a scientific discipline or representpopular themes [3]. To investigate whether the keywords chosen by authors align with the topicsrepresented through the paper abstracts, we explored the NLP technique named Term Frequency-Inverse Document Frequency (tf-idf).Tf-idf [45] is a method that identifies important terms by the product of two statistics, term fre-quency and inverse document frequency. It is intended to reflect
Conference Session
Engineering Libraries Division Technical Session 2: Special Topics
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Erin Rowley, University at Buffalo
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Libraries
part of the course.Another faculty member mentioned spending time reflecting on how best to approach groupprojects in the online environment. They stated, “I had a group project in the spring and they hada hard time working together in terms of common times and just engaging at a distance, so ifthey’re not all on campus, and not even in the same time zone, it created some challenges.”In terms of a positive impact due to COVID-19, one faculty member mentioned that recordinglectures as videos provided the opportunity to “flip the classroom” and change their typicalteaching method. This was something they had wanted to incorporate previously but did not havethe time or opportunity. However, one faculty had the opposite experience. As a more
Conference Session
Community-Engaged Engineering Education Challenges and Opportunities in Light of COVID-19 Paper Presentations 2
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Juan C. Lucena, Colorado School of Mines
Tagged Divisions
Community Engagement Division, Equity, Culture & Social Justice in Education, Liberal Education/Engineering & Society
NGOs decision-makingwith respect to the communities they serve. So it is ultimately their commitment andaccountability to their values (see 4.1.1.1 above) and accountability practices that determinetheir downward accountability with communities.Three key variables determine how NGO accountability to communities is reflected inpractice: depth, openness and frequency. Depth is related to communities' access to NGOmanagement, what knowledge communities have of NGOs, how relevant topics discussed atmeetings are to communities, who gets to speak at these meetings, and how controversialissues are handled at these meetings. Openness is reflected on meeting’s agenda, format andconduct. Can community concerns be formally aired during meetings with them
Conference Session
Pre-College Engineering Education Division Technical Session 13
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Marcelo Caplan, Columbia College
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Pre-College Engineering Education
https://www.facebook.com/EducacionMML/videos/674893209771107 b) Live broadcast. The Live broadcast is done through the social networks of the Municipality of Lima-Peru. While the facilitator presents the activity, the group members read the chat and comment/respond /interact with the participants (Figure 2). Figure 2. Live transmission example https://www.facebook.com/EducacionMML/videos/253309426000090c) Closure of activity. After participating in the activity, the group members share their reflections and attend to the participants' questions and communications through the Facebook Live chat (Figure 3). Figure 3. Close of the live transmission with the members of the
Conference Session
DISTINGUISHED LECTURE: 2020 Best PIC and Zone Papers
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Asmit De, Pennsylvania State University; Mohammad Nasim Imtiaz Khan; Karthikeyan Nagarajan, Pennsylvania State University; Abdullah Ash Saki; Md Mahabubul Alam; Taylor Steven Wood, Pennsylvania State University; Matthew Johnson, Pennsylvania State University; Manoj Varma Saripalli; Yu Xia, Pennsylvania State University; Stephanie Cutler, Pennsylvania State University; Swaroop Ghosh, Pennsylvania State University; Kathleen M. Hill; Annmarie Ward
Tagged Topics
ASEE Board of Directors
3.07(1.07) 4.00(0.82) from other disciplines Accurately recognize goals that reflect the disciplinary backgrounds of 3.00(1.18) 4.00(0.82) other team members Talk about a project design using other discipline language 2.86(1.17) 3.86(1.07)rated as the least confident (M = 2.86). A total of 13 students completed 4 sets of knowledgequestions and confidence level rating in the survey. There were 8, 6, 10, and 3 students whoprovided the correct answers respectively.Post-survey: In student rating of the 8 topics in terms of their importance to future career, 3topics received the highest scores: Integration of