design actions and thinking. Her studies often involve educational and professional contexts with cross-disciplinary collaborations. She has a B.S. in General Engineering (Systems Engineering & Design) and M.S. in Systems and Entrepreneurial Engineering, both from the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. Dr. Goldstein earned her Ph.D. in Engineering Education at Purdue University in 2018. Prior to pursuing her Ph.D., she worked as an environmental engineer specializing in air quality, influencing her focus in engineering design with environmental concerns.Ernest-John IgnacioGretchen Forman Assistant Director, Grainger Engineering First-Year ExperienceHannah Dougherty © American Society
Paper ID #38092A Third University is Possible? A Collaborative Inquirywithin Engineering EducationJoseph Valle Joseph ’Joey’ Valle holds a doctorate in Materials Science and Engineering from the University of Michigan - Ann Arbor. Their engineering education research focuses on understanding and seeking ways to undo oppression based harm in engineering. They hold a B.S.E in materials science and engineering from MIT and a M.S.E in materials science and engineering from the University of Michigan - Ann Arbor, with a focus on electrochemical energy storage systems.Donna M Riley (Kamyar Haghighi Head, School of
Postdoctoral Research Diversity Fellowship (SBPRDF) program in 2010and selected the American Society of Engineering Education (ASEE) to administer it. The SBPRDFplaced postdoctoral Fellows with high-tech start-up companies, allowing Fellows to learn to collaborate ina multidisciplinary environment and develop an understanding of the expectations and constraintsinvolved in successful entrepreneurship. In return, the Fellows applied their academic expertise to theimportant work of product realization in a globally competitive market.In 2019 NSF/IIP (Industrial Innovation and Partnerships) selected ASEE to administer the InnovativePostdoctoral Entrepreneurial Research Fellowship (IPERF) program as a successful extension to theprevious SBPRDF grant. The
Paper ID #37392Work in Progress: Collaborative Environments inArchitecture and Civil Engineering Education – Case StudyJohanna AcostaJacoba Ubidia Jacoba Ubidia is a research assistant at Universidad San Francisco de Quito in the Civil Engineering department. She holds a B.A. on Architectural Studies & Environmental Science from the University of Toronto and a B.Sc. in Civil Engineering from Universidad San Francisco de Quito.Miguel Andrés Guerra (Professor of Civil Engineering and Architecture) Miguel Andrés is an Assistant Professor in the departments of Civil Engineering and Architecture at Universidad San
Collaborative Autoethnography: Examining Professional Formation and Workplace Sustainability in Discipline-based Engineering Education ResearchAbstractIn this paper, we explore challenges faced by early-career researchers in developing andsustaining a robust discipline-based research enterprise and strategies to overcome thosechallenges. We use collaborative autoethnography methods of self-reflection and shareddiscourse to navigate a conversation between a mid-career engineering education researcher andher postdoctoral researcher. The paper weaves our stories to explore experiences in the culture ofengineering education related to professional formation and research sustainability. In narratingour
education, asset-based pedagogy, broadening participation, and engineering identity.Jacob Grohs Jake Grohs is an associate professor in the Department of Engineering Education at Virginia Tech. His primary research interests focus on systems thinking, applied educational research through multi-stakeholder partnerships, and collaborative change. © American Society for Engineering Education, 2022 Powered by www.slayte.com Benefits, Roles and Tensions: Understanding the Process of Collaboration in Rural Engineering Education Contexts Research Statement Driven by calls from organizations like
in working collaboratively with several universities in Asia, the World Bank Institute, and USAID to design and conduct workshops promoting active-learning and life-long learning that is sustainable and scalable. Dr. Lawanto’s research interests include cognition, learning, and instruction, and online learning.Wade H Goodridge (Associate Professor)Assad Iqbal (Graduate Research Assistant) Assad Iqbal is a Graduate Teaching/Research Assistant and doctoral candidate in Engineering Education Department (EED) at the College of Engineering, Utah State University USA. He is a Computer Information System Engineer and a Master in Engineering Management with almost 14 years of teaching experience in undergraduate engineering
design to gain a comprehensive understanding of engineering students experiences. In recent time, He was recognized as the outstanding doctoral researcher by the department of engineering education, USU. He and his colleagues received the Russel Sage grant to explore factors influencing the retention of Black immigrants with PhDs in the United States. Also, in April 2022. He won the best graduate poster presentation for the college of engineering in the student research symposium at Utah State University. Ibukun has a rich research experience in collaboration with his advisor and faculty in and outside of the United State. As an independent researcher, He is undertaking a systematic literature review and metanalysis on
goal of finding literature on how urban gardening partnershipswith university engineering programs can collaborate with and support urban gardens. Aftersettling on key words (Engineering Education, Community, Gardening), we found articlesexploring the intersection of these topic using various online libraries and database searchengines (Google Scholar, Wiley Online Libraries via Ohio State University, Ebsco Host via OhioState University, Ohio State University Libraries). Table 1 details each of these search terms thatwere created for each key word. The search terms produced insufficient results on their own aswe struggled to connect the resulting literature to our research question. To further narrow oursearch results, search terms were
mechanical engineering students to enhance their academic success and transition them into a career in STEM.Subha Kumpaty Dr. Subha Kumpaty is a professor of mechanical engineering and program director of master of science in engineering at the Milwaukee School of engineering. Besides teaching a variety of engineering courses in both undergraduate and graduate programs, he leads the research experiences for undergraduates program sponsored by the National Science Foundation. He has led Engineering Education track of the ASME International Mechanical Engineering Congress for more than a decade. He currently co-leads the S-STEM grant with Dr. Fertig which provides scholarships and activities to 20 diverse mechanical
Paper ID #36828Expanding Structural Engineering Education throughVirtual RealityJenna Wong (Assistant Professor) Dr. Wong is an Assistant Professor in the School of Engineering at San Francisco State University. Her research interests focus on the structural resilience/sustainability, high performance structures, and engineering education. Her doctorate research at UC Berkeley investigated the applicability of seismic isolation and supplemental viscous damping to nuclear power plants with focus on seismic resilience and safety. After receiving her PhD, Dr. Wong began a post-doctoral fellowship at Lawrence
Paper ID #37818Defining Engineering Education Research: The ElevatorPitchJeffrey Wayne Paul I am a Engineering Education Research PhD student with a passion for life-long learning. My current research is focused on how we can develop pedagogical content knowledge in instructors using nudge theoryRenato Alan Bezerra RodriguesNikita Dawe PhD Candidate, Department of Mechanical & Industrial Engineering and Collaborative Specialization in Engineering Education, University of TorontoSherry-ann Ram (Ms) Graduate Student at the University of TorontoNicholas James RuparMandeep Raj PandeyRobyn Paul (PhD Student
. MethodologyThe study will utilize a bibliometric analysis to determine the current temporal and spatialtendencies of diversity and inclusion within systems engineering education publishing.Bibliometric analysis is an established and assiduous technique for scrutinizing vast quantities oftechnical data to realize emerging patterns for a particular topic. A bibliometric analysis mayuncover emerging article trends, publication performance, collaboration patterns, researchelements, and explore the intellectual structure of a specific realm within the existing literature[4]. This study hypothesizes that both diversity and inclusion research within systems engineeringeducation is increasing. The bibliometric approach consists of querying academic databases
, Teaching Stream)Nikita Dawe PhD Candidate, Department of Mechanical & Industrial Engineering and Collaborative Specialization in Engineering Education, University of TorontoRubaina Khan Rubaina Khan is a doctoral candidate at the University of Toronto, Canada. Her research interests lie at the intersection of engineering design, learning communities and reflective practice. Prior, to pursuing graduate studies, Rubaina spent 10 years in autonomous marine vehicles research and, teaching robotics and design to engineering students in Singapore. © American Society for Engineering Education, 2022 Powered by www.slayte.com Conceptualizing First Principles
Paper ID #37889Can the COVID-19 pandemic boost collaborative onlineinternational learning (COIL) in engineering education? – Areview for potential implementationsErick Vasquez Erick S. Vasquez is an Associate Professor in the Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering at the University of Dayton. His educational research interests are community-based learning, open-ended laboratory experiments, teamwork, collaborative and active learning, and Transport Phenomena computational modeling. Erick was born in El Salvador and there received his BEng in Chemical Engineering at UCA. He obtained his MS from Clemson University
Paper ID #38278Building a Sustainable University-Wide InterdisciplinaryGraduate Program to Address DisastersMarie C. Paretti (Professor) Marie C. Paretti is a Professor of Engineering Education at Virginia Tech, where she is Associate Director of the Virginia Tech Center for Coastal Studies and Education Director of the interdisciplinary Disaster Resilience and Risk Management graduate program. She received a B.S. in chemical engineering and an M.A. in English from Virginia Tech, and a Ph.D. in English from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Her research focuses on communication and collaboration, design
Paper ID #37389Problem-based learning in STEM: Facilitating Diversity andChange in Pre-college Engineering Education through OnlineCollaborative Teacher Communities in virtual STEMlabs(Work in Progress) (Diversity)Svend Hauekrog Christiansen (Ph.D. Fellow) Ph.D. Fellow at Aalborg University in cross-institutional collaboration in engineering in higher education. Prior practical experience as a research assistant working with STEM and Problem-based Learning. In addition, I have my master's degree in Techno-Anthropology, providing me with theoretical and practical socio-technical expertise.Lykke Brogaard Bertel
approach. Working in small teams over Zoom, participating engineering,education, and fifth grade students designed, built, and coded bio-inspired COVID companionrobots. The goal for the engineering students was to build new interprofessional skills, whilereinforcing technical skills. The collaborative activities included: (1) training with HummingbirdBitTM hardware (e.g. sensors, servo motors) and coding platform, (2) preparing robotics lessonsfor fifth graders that explained the engineering design process (EDP), and (3) guiding the fifthgraders in the design of their robots. Additionally, each undergraduate engineering studentdesigned a robot following the theme developed with their preservice teacher and fifth gradepartners. The intervention
proportional reasoning [28]. The use of robotics isknown to bring innovative engagement in STEM classrooms and foster problem-solving andteamwork skills [29]. Furthermore, some studies have described how robots can nurture students’skills in team collaboration and technical communication [30-32]. In summary, the number ofrobotics-related educational research studies has experienced a steady increase [33-35].Nonetheless, thus far, only a few studies have focused on developing and integrating real-worldcase scenarios when applying educational robotics in classrooms. This paper will specificallyaddress how robotics laboratories and projects can be used in first-year engineering education tohelp students develop teamwork skills. The outcome of the study
and with collaborators has been recognized for the best paper published in the Journal of Engineering Education in 2008, 2011, and 2019 and from the IEEE Transactions on Education in 2011 and 2015. Dr. Ohland is an ABET Program Evaluator for ASEE. He was the 2002–2006 President of Tau Beta Pi and is a Fellow of the ASEE, IEEE, and AAAS. © American Society for Engineering Education, 2022 Powered by www.slayte.com New Engineering Education initiative of China: A Policy DebriefExecutive Summary This article discusses and critiques one Chinese national strategy, New EngineeringEducation (NEE). To maintain globally technical and scientific competitions
Paper ID #37314Diverse Perspectives, Engineering in Context, andExperiential Learning in Engineering EducationLauren Kuryloski (Assistant Professor of Teaching) Lauren Kuryloski is an Assistant Professor of Teaching in the Department of Engineering Education at the University at Buffalo. She teaches Technical Communication courses at both the undergraduate and graduate level.Amy Baird Amy Baird is an Assistant Professor of Practice in the Department of Engineering Education at the University at Buffalo. She teaches STEM Communications and Ethics in Engineering and Computing to undergraduate engineering and
about ethical practice and facilitate collaboration [1]. While engineering codes of ethicsdo not necessarily mobilize care, as Warford [2] notes, that does not make care unimportant:“The absence of care from the most visible normative value statements in the profession... isproblematic.” Indeed, care is increasingly visible in engineering education scholarship. Even as itemerges as an important mode of discussion and action, care is an unstable category andmobilized to mean different things in different contexts.Though care may not be present in many statements about the profession, engineering educationscholars are writing about it. For many scholars, care for students can guide faculty to enhanceindividual relationships through various
Paper ID #37029Digital transformation in engineering education: a gapbetween teaching and managementInesmar Carolina Briceno Rivero Techonology and System profesional, with extensive knowledge in programming, Teacher with more than 15 years of experience at the university level in the area of information technology. Solid knowledge in object-oriented programming and agile methodologies, ability to analyze, manage and document projects and Digital transformation.Maria Elena Truyol María Elena Truyol, Ph.D., is full professor and researcher of the Universidad Andrés Bello (UNAB). She graduated as physics teacher
leads departmental activities in ABET accreditation. He is Engineering Technology Accreditation Commission (ETAC) of ABET Commissioner and served as program evaluator representing IEEE since 2005. Grinberg has over 57 peer-reviewed journal and conference publications and numerous presentations in his field. He is IEEE Senior Member and currently holds a position of the American Society for Engineering Education (ASEE) Zone 1 Chair and ASEE Board of Directors member. In addition, he is recognized scholar and author in World War II military history. The book he co-authored, Red Phoenix Rising: The Soviet Air Force in WWII, was named an Outstanding Academic Title by the Choice Magazine.Saquib Ahmed (Dr)Joaquin Carbonara
relations of the institution since 2008. Since February 2019, he took the position of Vice-President for European and International Relations. © American Society for Engineering Education, 2022 Powered by www.slayte.com Facilitation of a Global Engineering Education Experience through Consortium Membership: Perspectives from Four Member InstitutionsIntroductionThe benefits of an international component within an engineering degree are clear: a broadperspective on the world and the issues the global community faces, gain in global and culturalcompetencies, institutional collaboration and relations, and innovation in engineering education,to name but a few. These
personal bias in STEM, online and in-person, in addition to faculty training on power and privilege. Her research interests include diversity and inclusion in STEM, intersectionality, teamwork and communication skills, assessment, and identity construction. Her teaching philosophy focuses on student centered approaches such as problem-based learning and culturally relevant pedagogy. Dr. Cross’ complimentary professional activities promote inclusive excellence through collaboration. She is an NSF CAREER awardee, delivered multiple distinguished lectures, and has received a national mentoring award. © American Society for Engineering Education, 2022 Powered by
collaboration, design education, and identity (including race, gender, class, and other demographic identities) in engineering. She was awarded a CAREER grant from the National Science Foundation to study expert teaching in capstone design courses, and she is PI or co-PI on numerous NSF grants exploring communication, teamwork, design, identity, and inclusion in engineering. Drawing on theories of situated learning and identity development, her research explores examines the ways in which engineering education supports students’ professional development in a range of contexts across multiple dimensions of identity. © American Society for Engineering Education, 2022
member among multiple other committees. In addition, he is involved with various professional organizations at the national level, including the American Society for Engineering Education (ASEE), the Associated School of Constructions (ASC), the Construction Research Congress (CRC), and the Center for Infrastructure Transformation and Education (CIT-E). At the international level, he serves as the Associate Editor for the ASC International Journal of Construction Education and Research and maintains collaborations with faculty in Brazil, Ecuador, and Spain.Peter CanevariTimothy James LarsenElizabeth Diacik© American Society for Engineering Education, 2022 Powered by www.slayte.com Re-contextualizing Civil Engineering
engagement with coding and robotics, and early childhood preservice teacher learning.Nidaa Makki Nidaa Makki is a Professor in the LeBron James Family Foundation School of Education at the University of Akron, with expertise in STEM Education. She has served as co-PI on several NSF projects, investigating STEM education interventions at the K-12 and undergraduate levels. She also has expertise as program evaluator for various STEM education programs, and has led teacher professional development in Physics Modeling, Engineering Education, and Problem Based Learning. Her research interests include teacher learning and practices in science education, engineering education, and student learning and motivation for STEM
Paper ID #37986Work-in-Progress: Examining how faculty formal andmultidisciplinary networks shape ethical worldviewsSamuel Aaron Snyder (Graduate Research Assistant) Sam is a 5th year doctoral candidate in the engineering education department at Virginia Tech. His dissertation focuses on using social networks to examine change in higher education through the lens of ethics. His other work examines measuring the cultural change happening at the university level as a result of the newly implemented general educaiton system at Virgin Tech through faculty interviews, student surveys, and social network analysis via Zoom