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Displaying results 691 - 720 of 1419 in total
Conference Session
Graduate Studies Division (GSD) Technical Session 7: Developing Graduate Students' Competencies and Identities
Collection
2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Julie M. Rieland, University of Michigan; Shamalee Goonetilleke, University of Michigan; Sarah Jane Bork, University of Michigan; Aaron W. Johnson, University of Michigan
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Graduate Studies Division (GSD)
voluntary convenience samplesurvey. Over 2,000 respondents from 26 countries and 234 institutions responded, revealing anoverwhelming mental health crisis in the graduate student population [9], [10]. They reportelevated rates of anxiety (41%) and depression (39%) in the sampled community, suggesting thatgraduate students are six times as likely to experience depression and anxiety compared to thegeneral public. Likewise, students have not been passive in their dissatisfaction with the state ofthe academy. In recent years, student labor organizing [11], labor strikes, and general protestmovements have become common reflecting the general themes of modern politics including themultiple epidemics of sexual harassment [12], [13], racism [14], [15
Conference Session
Design in Engineering Education Division (DEED) Technical Session 1
Collection
2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Nicholas Moses, University of Michigan; Shanna R. Daly, University of Michigan; Kathleen H. Sienko, University of Michigan
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education Division (DEED)
to reflectively consider these differences duringour research process.4. FindingsParticipants reported a variety of advantages and limitations of VR as a training tool compared to thetwo-dimensional (2D) video-based design observation practice they received as a part of their globalhealth program training, as well as the in-person design observation practice they gained whileworking in clinical environments. Findings are organized below into 1) a comparison of VR andclassroom-based design observation training, 2) a comparison of VR to in-person design observationpractice, and 3) description of the effectiveness of VR as a training tool.4.1 Advantages and limitations of VR compared to classroom-based design observation trainingmodesCompared
Conference Session
Research Methodologies – Session 2
Collection
2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Neha Kardam, University of Washington; Shruti Misra, University of Washington; Denise Wilson, University of Washington
Tagged Divisions
Educational Research and Methods Division (ERM)
quantitatively analyze how such reflection related to achievementgoals. In another example of NLP-in-the-loop, Zhang et al. [22] used NLP to identify bias,unseen relationships, and missed coding opportunities among teachers’ responses regardingquestions related to the digital divide. The authors first used traditional methods of qualitativeanalysis to arrive at a set of thematic codes, then they used NLP techniques to cluster the surveyresponses and examined the semantic content captured by these techniques. They compared thethemes resulting from the traditional approach to those arrived at through NLP to identifyincongruities associated with errors and inconsistencies among human coders.Our study focuses primarily on the fourth broad category of using
Conference Session
Multidisciplinary Engineering Division (MULTI) Technical Session 6
Collection
2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Masoumeh Farhadi Nia, University of Massachusetts, Lowell; Grace E. Callen; Gayatri Aroskar, University of Massachusetts, Lowell; Justin An, University of the District of Columbia; Kavitha Chandra, University of Massachusetts, Lowell; Charles Thompson, Ph.D., University of Massachusetts, Lowell; Kelilah Wolkowicz, University of Massachusetts, Lowell; Max Denis, University of the District of Columbia
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Multidisciplinary Engineering Division (MULTI)
; (iv) Student voice and choice; (v)Reflection; (vi) Critique and revision; and (vii) Public product. The public product in this instancewas this publication.The four graduate student members of this project came from two different institutions, three fromthe University of Massachusetts Lowell, majoring in Biomedical Engineering, ElectricalEngineering and Mechanical Engineering and one from the University of the District of Columbia,majoring in Mechanical Engineering. The group co-created the material for this research withfeedback from three faculty mentors in the two participating institutions. Faculty and studentinteraction is crucial in the co-creation process, and it has been found to provide many benefits onstudents’ educational
Conference Session
Equity, Culture & Social Justice in Education Division (EQUITY) Technical Session 4
Collection
2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Rebecca Zarch, SageFox Consulting Group; Sarah T. Dunton; Jayce R. Warner, University of Texas, Austin; Jeffrey Xavier; Joshua Childs, University of Texas, Austin; Alan Peterfreund, SAGE
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Culture & Social Justice in Education Division (EQUITY), Equity
involved framing of the BPC goals, assessingcurrent data systems for points of vulnerability and opportunity, a data request from the statesystems, data visualization, utilization and reflection.Data was drawn from reflective team journals; notes, collaborative materials and observationsmade during collaborative meetings; and the technical assistance requests made during theproject.When developing data infrastructure in support of BPC, diverse teams matter. Teams neededrepresentation from people who can access institutional or state data, understand the practicalcontext of the data to support interpretation, and help tie data to broader advocacy efforts.Ongoing team engagement, both within and across states, allowed the space to consider
Conference Session
Interdisciplinary Integration at the Program Level
Collection
2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
John Carrell, Texas Tech University; Joshua M. Cruz; Andrew Mark Herbert; Iris V. Rivero; Emily Lazarus; Erika Nuñez, Texas Tech University; Nafisha Tabassum; Xueni Fan, Texas Tech University
Tagged Divisions
Liberal Education/Engineering & Society Division (LEES)
intentionalacts in how students understand empathy and the “meaning context” for which the relationshipbetween students and their subjects are made. The interdisciplinary or even transdisciplinaryapproach for developing and analyzing empathy embedded in engineering education provides alink to expand into other analysis techniques, such as discourse analysis.Others have certainly seen the benefits of discourse to think through empathy in education.Warren [20], for instance, reflects on the ways that adopting different, critical classroomdiscourses is important for creating and expressing a culturally sensitive and empatheticdisposition. Nolan [21] understands teacher discourses and dispositions as almost synonymous,explaining that teachers’ dispositions
Conference Session
Mechanical Engineering Division (MECH) Technical Session 3: Student Success
Collection
2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Muzammil Arshad, Texas A&M University; Rebecca R. Romatoski, St. Ambrose University
Tagged Divisions
Mechanical Engineering Division (MECH)
in controlled motivation or amotivation.MethodsAutoethnographyAutoethnography [17] is a technique that uses self-reflection for recognition, exploration,appreciation and documentation of personal experiences. The autoethnographic approach wasapplied to elaborate and understand the results obtained from the research goals. Both authorsperformed research based on a structured approach and collected data. The following questionswere used to understand the results and answer the complexity of an effective learning strategy: • What was the background and context of your teaching experience? • What teaching and learning changes were implemented during the teaching experience? • What were the lessons learned from your teaching
Conference Session
Experimentation and Laboratory-Oriented Studies Division (ELOS) Technical Session 2: Manurfacturing, Simulation, Safety, and Technical Writing
Collection
2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Yan Wu, University of Wisconsin - Platteville
Tagged Divisions
Experimentation and Laboratory-Oriented Studies Division (DELOS)
to their reviewed writingaccording to a detailed rubric. After the peer review, each student has a chance to revise theirown report. By focusing on only part of the full-length report, the grading burden is also reduced. Direct and indirect assessments of students’ technical writing skills were carried out inthree semesters of the implementation of the ‘scaffold peer review’ approach in a junior levellaboratory course. Results of the assessments show significant improvement of the technicalwriting skills of students. Students’ reflection on about this approach and their perception abouttechnical writing in general also confirmed the positive impact of this approach. Although theimplementation is within the Engineering Physics program
Conference Session
Design in Engineering Education Division (DEED) Poster Session
Collection
2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Yuwei Deng, King's College London; Wei Liu, King's College London
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education Division (DEED)
]. Ultimately, designthinking exercises thinking skills and overall literacy, both during and after achieving learningoutcomes [12].5. CONCLUSIONSThis study first aims to classify engineering design thinking in curriculum design, analyse thecharacteristics and connotations of different introduction approaches, and establish a basicframework and methodology for the study of design thinking in the field of higher engineeringeducation. Finally, the study concludes with a detailed analysis of keywords and key coursetypes in design thinking in higher engineering education, laying the foundation for futureresearch. The backbone of existing research is reflected in the case studies, individualisedcurriculum design, the connotative purpose of the curriculum
Conference Session
Exploration of Written and Team Communication
Collection
2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Kristin L. Schaefer P.E., UH; Jorge Rosales; Jerrod A. Henderson, University of Houston
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Educational Research and Methods Division (ERM)
and thinking styles, whereas higher analytical thinking scoresindicate more logical, rigid writing and thinking styles [9]. Lower clout scores indicate more of aself-focus, a “follower” not caring as much about relative social status, whereas higher cloutscores indicate a “leader” with more focus on dominating the others in a group [10]. While lowerauthenticity scores can reflect a measure of deception, they also indicate a prepared or sociallycautious response, whereas higher authenticity scores indicate more spontaneous, complex,honest, and unfiltered conversations [11], [12]. Lower emotional tone scores indicate a morenegative attitude, whereas higher emotional tone scores indicate a more positive outlook in thetext [13]. LIWC provides
Conference Session
Chemical Engineering Division (ChED) Technical Session 10: Teaming and Professional Skills
Collection
2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Cheryl Carrico, P.E., E4S, LLC; Holly M. Matusovich, Virginia Tech; Sreyoshi Bhaduri, ThatStatsGirl
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Chemical Engineering Division (ChED)
Advisor to the leadership at Sisters in STEM. Sreyoshi frequently collaborates on several National Science Foundation projects in the engineering education realm, researching engineering career trajectories, student motivation, and learning. Sreyoshi has been recognized as a Fellow at the Academy for Teaching Excellence at Virginia Tech (VTGrATE) and a Fellow at the Global Perspectives Program (GPP) and was inducted to the Yale Bouchet Honor Society during her time at Virginia Tech. She has also been honored as an Engaged Ad- vocate in 2022 and an Emerging Leader in Technology (New ELiTE) in 2021 by the Society of Women Engineers. Views expressed in this paper are the author’s own, and do not necessarily reflect those
Conference Session
Investigating Student Pathways to and through Undergraduate and Graduate Programs
Collection
2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Collette Patricia Higgins; Melissa Wood Aleman, James Madison University; Robert L. Nagel, James Madison University & Carthage College
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Educational Research and Methods Division (ERM)
-identified as part of a racial or ethnic minority; the remainder identified as White.Each of these seven students participated in one 60–90-minute semi-structured interview [54-55].Interviews were designed to create a space for the participants to reflect on their K-12experiences and how those K-12 experiences influenced their decision to major in engineering.The first three student participants were interviewed in-person in a private office on theuniversity campus. The remaining four students were interviewed via Zoom. As a first step to theinterview, all participants were asked to develop a timeline of their formative experiencesleading to becoming an engineering major. Timelines were developed initially by students at thebeginning of the
Conference Session
Interdisciplinary Integration at the Course Level
Collection
2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Mary K. Pilotte, Purdue University, West Lafayette; Rich Dionne, Purdue University, West Lafayette
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Liberal Education/Engineering & Society Division (LEES)
learned”. The reflective component is critical for students toconsider how elements of their design worked or failed to meet their design expectations.Likewise, as a pedagogical instrument, the reflective component of the presentation offers thestudent a formative opportunity to “rethink” how any future instance of similar design practicemight be enhanced.PedagogyCorrect content with fitting assessments can only have the greatest impact if aligned withstrategic and purposeful pedagogical approaches. The THTR59700 course is at the core activelearning-oriented and engages technical knowledge across students' academic advancement,keeping the developmental growth of students in mind. In particular, the pedagogicalframeworks that most clearly relay
Conference Session
Graduate Studies Division (GSD) Technical Session 1: Recruitment and Support in Engineering Graduate Programs
Collection
2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Meredith Leigh Hooper, California Institute of Technology; Jacqueline Rose Tawney, California Institute of Technology ; Emily Hope Palmer, California Institute of Technology; James Ragan, California Institute of Technology; Morgan Louise Hooper, California Institute of Technology; Yazmin Gonzalez, California Institute of Technology
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Graduate Studies Division (GSD)
; for example, Chen et. al. states that “[s]tudents from all backgrounds may find theexperience [of an unexpectedly poor academic performance] threatening to their competence, butstudents from minority groups must also contend with anxiety that this performance ‘confirms’negative academic stereotypes attributed to their group memberships”[10].Often, these biases and stereotypes reflect an automatic judgment without an awareness ofindividuals’ specific abilities or experiences [11] [12]. Thus, the format of assessment, rather thanthe rigor, quality, or intended learning can have undue effect on educational outcomes. Forexample, IGEN performed a case study on a top-ranked physics program which noticed its“passage rate [for a qualifying exam] had
Conference Session
Design in Engineering Education Division (DEED) Technical Session 12
Collection
2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Shruti Misra, University of Washington; Denise Wilson, University of Washington; Soyoung Kang, University of Washington
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education Division (DEED)
,sequential, mixed methods approach (N = 163) was used to assess the importance of industrymentor and teammate support using quantitative data analysis techniques followed by thematic(qualitative) analysis to explain those results.Likert-type items were analyzed using exploratory factor analyses and resulted in six constructs.Two constructs reflected student perceptions of their learning: engineering design and decision-making skills and adaptability skills. Two forms of support emerged from the factor analysis:industry mentor support and teammate support, and two control variables also emerged: designself-efficacy and preparedness. Support and control variables were then used as dependentvariables in regression models for the two learning outcomes
Conference Session
International Division (INTL) Technical Session #2: Global Engagement
Collection
2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Brad Putman, Bucknell University; Khaled A. Al-Sahili, An-Najah National University; Alia Gilbrecht, An-Najah National University; Karen Bunch Franklin; Shilpa Girish, Clemson University; Fabricio Leiva; Abdelhaleem Khader, An-Najah National University
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
International Division (INTL)
Engineering Student Teams) program is a GVT programestablished in Canada. It was designed to create a realistic work experience for engineeringstudents within a virtual global team project. They were involved in active experiments whilelearning and reflecting on a new experience with a learning concept known as global competencymodules (GCMs), which is a key component of GVT that supports virtual learning andcollaboration activities globally, including intercultural competence, decision making,communication, and relationship building. The InVEST study showed that intercultural activitiesprovide a unique lens to students to exhibit intercultural sensitivities to virtual global teamprojects and can facilitate better collaboration with students from
Conference Session
Assessment-Driven Practices in ECE
Collection
2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Curt Schurgers, University of California, San Diego; Saharnaz Baghdadchi, University of California, San Diego; Alex Phan, University of California, San Diego; Huihui Qi, University of California, San Diego; Maziar Ghazinejad, University of California, San Diego; Minju Kim, University of California, San Diego; Marko V. Lubarda, University of California, San Diego
Tagged Divisions
Electrical and Computer Engineering Division (ECE)
the course. This approach is rooted in the work on early intervention strategies.The idea is to focus on at-risk students. In this context, we do not consider the oral assessmentprimarily as being part of a summative assessment strategy. Instead, it is designed to be a touchpoint for a meaningful one-on-one interaction between a student and a member of theinstructional team. The value of early interventions for at-risk students is to increaseconnectedness to instructional staff and resources, and student engagement and self-efficacy. Theoral assessments were implemented explicitly with this focus. We also considered additionalbenefits, such as serving as formative assessments for the students to reflect on their level ofconceptual mastery and
Conference Session
Promoting Well-Being in Engineering Education: Strategies and Perspectives
Collection
2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Matilde Luz Sánchez-Peña, University at Buffalo, The State University of New York; Anne M. McAlister, University at Buffalo; Nichole Ramirez, Purdue University; Douglas B. Samuel; Syed Ali Kamal, University at Buffalo, The State University of New York; Xinrui Xu, Huazhong University of Science and Technology
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Educational Research and Methods Division (ERM)
consensus existing around certain categories. Negative identities tend to reflect elements that do not comply with societal expectations. Because of the multiple spaces where we develop identities, we have multiple social identities and they differ in their nature and strength [70]. An engineering
Conference Session
Equity, Culture & Social Justice in Education Division (EQUITY) Technical Session 13
Collection
2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Bridget M. Smyser, Northeastern University; Susan F. Freeman, Northeastern University
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Culture & Social Justice in Education Division (EQUITY), Equity
inclusion and equity are not. Some viewinclusion as a tool wielded by those in authority. Inclusion requires the group to include theindividual, rather than for the individual to take on that burden. An ideal DEI environmentencourages and hears authentic selves. People who want to improve DEI should engage inrepeated reflection to allow their ideas to evolve over time. Those at the top of the hierarchy,who are often not from minoritized groups, particularly need to reflect on their privileges andpositionalities in order to enact effective change [10].Engineers are still viewed by society as oblivious and antisocial, which lessens the appeal ofengineering to some. Others see engineering as heavily aligned with military and corporateinterests rather
Conference Session
Engineering Ethics Division (ETHICS) Technical Session _Monday June 26, 11:00 - 12:30
Collection
2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Alice Fox, Stanford; Benjamin C. Beiter, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Ethics Division (ETHICS)
, educators attemptingto address the Collingridge Dilemma by better training engineers and designers in ethics needto take a more comprehensive approach to ethics beyond one-off courses in professional ethicsor generic humanities ‘liberal arts’ curriculum requirements (i.e. ethics is nonfungible withlanguage, history, religion, etc.).Additionally, to account for value dynamism, an approach to ethics is needed that is not onlyfocused on legal standards, regulatory guidelines, or ethical checklists. These approaches of-ten grow stagnant if they are not updated regularly, uphold hegemonic societal values anddominant images of user groups (see [27] for additional examples), inhibit critical reflection,and settle for very narrow definitions and
Conference Session
Student Division (STDT) Technical Session 4: Minoritized Student Experiences
Collection
2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Aimee Sayster, Clemson University ; Jessica Allison Manning, Clemson University; Catherine E. Brawner, Research Triangle Educational Consultants; Catherine Mobley, Clemson University; Marisa K. Orr, Clemson University; Rebecca Brent, Education Designs, Inc
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Student Division (STDT)
third point of reference to reflect on and givea rich description of their experience in the US. Through qualitative analysis of these cases, wewill address the question: In what ways do Black students who are first- or second-generationimmigrants from Africa and have studied abroad leverage community cultural wealth inengineering in the US?We use Yosso’s Community Cultural Wealth (CCW) framework to highlight the strengths thesestudents leverage in engineering. CCW is an asset-based framework developed to highlight thestrengths of the students from Communities of Color. There are six assets used as a guiding lensto inform research in these communities: familial, social, aspirational, navigational, resistance,and linguistic capital that students
Conference Session
Pre-College Engineering Education Division (PCEE) Technical Session 7: Partnerships Making It Real! II
Collection
2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Sabina Anne Schill, Florida International University; Stacy S. Klein-Gardner, Vanderbilt University
Tagged Divisions
Pre-College Engineering Education Division (PCEE)
, and one preferred not to answer.They represented 19 states or US territories and 28 unique universities.Each liaison typically supported one high school, though some supported two or three. Afterobtaining IRB approval, the e4usa research team used a protocol for focus groups with universityliaisons to encourage reflection and discussion. Questions asked included, ● What, if any, prior existing relationships did you and/or your university have with your partner school(s) prior to your involvement with the e4usa course? ● What support resources provided by e4usa have been most helpful to you? In what ways have these resources been helpful? ● Do you have any suggestions for how to increase liaison participation?This
Conference Session
Equity, Culture & Social Justice in Education Division (EQUITY) Technical Session 3
Collection
2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Eleazar Marquez, The University of Texas, Rio Grande Valley; Samuel Garcia, The University of Texas, Rio Grande Valley
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Culture & Social Justice in Education Division (EQUITY), Equity
student populated surveyed consisted of 68% male and 32%female, of which 95% are Hispanic/Latino. The authors employed a qualitative research design,and the primary method of data collection was a self-developed survey instrument consisting of atotal five open-ended questions. The process for developing the survey items consisted ofquestions that sought to examine instructional and pedagogical strategies implemented to teachstudents rigorous engineering concepts based on students’ experiences in the course. As such, thequestions provided students the opportunity to delineate, reflect, and share valuable insight andexperiences that can help develop and refine effective and equitable engineering pedagogy.The data analysis consisted of an open
Conference Session
Computing and Information Technology Division (CIT) Technical Session 3
Collection
2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Jeff Erickson, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign; Jason Xia, University of Illinois at Urbana - Champaign; Eliot Wong Robson; Tue Do; Aidan Tzur Glickman; Zhuofan Jia; Eric Jin; Jiwon Lee; Patrick Lin; Steven Pan; Samuel Ruggerio; Tomoko Sakurayama, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign ; Andrew Yin; Yael Gertner, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign; Brad Solomon, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Tagged Divisions
Computing and Information Technology Division (CIT)
are organized into “guided problem sets”,each containing a series of exercises related to a single problem or skill. Guided problem sets arenot intended to replace written homeworks or exams, but rather to replicate the kind of interactiveleading questions that a student might be asked in a discussion/lab section or in office hours.The design goals for these guided problem sets reflect the goals for other components of the course,including lectures, labs, and grading rubrics. First, for each type of problem, auto-graded exercisesshould reinforce the solution process recommended in other parts of the course for that problemtype. Said differently, we want to proved the students with working examples, not just more workedexamples. A good example
Conference Session
Mentorship, Retention, Minority Participation, and Examining the Experiences of Women
Collection
2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Carl Anthony Moore Jr., Florida A&M University - Florida State University; Chiang Shih, Florida A&M University - Florida State University
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Minorities in Engineering Division(MIND)
, and career traineeship inaerospace-centric fields. The streamlined process of recruitment and project-based learning incollaboration with NASA and other aerospace professionals has shown to be effective in trainingthe first cohort of undergraduate and graduate students during the first year of programimplementation.During the summer of 2022, 6 NASA interns and 6 summer Research Experiences forUndergraduate (REU) students participated in the 10-week summer program with professionaldevelopment (PD) program featuring project management, career planning, RCR training,self-reflection, and technical communication. Because research shows that STEM students citepositive mentoring experiences as the most crucial factor in their retention, we developed
Conference Session
Faculty Development Division (FDD) Technical Session 12
Collection
2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Amy L Brooks, Oregon State University; Jeff Knowles; Elliott Clement, Oregon State University; Prateek Shekhar, New Jersey Institute of Technology; Shane A. Brown, P.E., Oregon State University
Tagged Divisions
Faculty Development Division (FDD)
87 students in a class session are called upon to do other than simply watching, listening, and taking notes. Case-based teaching Asking students to analyze case studies of historical or 65 hypothetical situations that involve solving problems and/or making decisions. Collaborative Asking students to work together in small groups toward a 65 learning common goal. Concept tests Asking multiple-choice conceptual questions with distracters 50 (incorrect responses) that reflect common student misconceptions. Cooperative
Conference Session
Ocean & Marine Engineering Division Technical Session 2
Collection
2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Daniel Brahan, US Coast Guard Academy; Thomas W. Denucci, United States Coast Guard Academy; Jaye Falls, United States Naval Academy; Paul H. Miller, P.E., United States Coast Guard Academy; Peter A. Sousa, United States Coast Guard Academy
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Ocean and Marine Division (OMED)
professional woodworkers employed inthe machine shop will lend a hand for a special piece or two if extra skill is required. Thestudents create a jig and begin assembly after all pieces have been cut. Up to this point most ofthe work is done in one large group, but once boat assembly begins the students typically pick ateam and focus on just one hull. This fosters some friendly competition in class and tends to keepthe students focused and engaged as they strive to build the “better” boat. Figures 1 and 2 showthe students early in the assembly process, stitching the panels and frames of the boats.Homework in the class is a weekly reflection on the construction process. Students areintroduced to new tools and techniques during the week and are
Conference Session
Community Engagement Division 1 - Empowering Students and Strengthening Community Relationships
Collection
2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Sydney Donohue, University of New Mexico; Anjali Mulchandani, University of New Mexico
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Community Engagement Division (COMMENG)
ultimately help facilitate more effective interactions betweenacademia and community.One major limitation is evident within the body of outreach literature. The vast majority ofoutreach literature has historically addressed outreach in a top-down manner where academia isdelivering knowledge in a one-way exchange to recipients. Relatively recently, the research hasbeen reflecting the validity of the knowledge and expertise non-academic communities alreadyhold and that outreach should be a two-way exchange of knowledge. [8], [9]Additionally, most outreach studies focus on outcomes surrounding the recipients of outreachevents. [10] We aim to focus on the other side of outreach: those who participate in facilitatingthe outreach. This will act as a first
Conference Session
Values in Engineering: Ethics and Justice-Oriented Engineering
Collection
2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Madeline Polmear, Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Tagged Divisions
Liberal Education/Engineering & Society Division (LEES)
questions to establish the context from which the students were speaking. I approachedthese conversations with humility as I sought to learn with the participants as they are experts intheir own experience.LimitationsThe findings are reflective of the students who chose to participate in the study and thus self-selected to engage in an interview on ethics and responsibility that was conducted in English.The university at which the interviews took place is Dutch and English speaking, but mostBachelor’s programs are taught in Dutch, which was the native language of all of theparticipants.There is ongoing conversation around the inclusion of demographic questions in interviews [28],including where they should be placed and what effect they might have
Conference Session
AERO 5: Student Success
Collection
2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Brian D. Ritchie, The Ohio State University
Tagged Divisions
Aerospace Division (AERO)
generated a map of all the questions they had about theirproject. This tied Making Connections to Curiosity, helping them see that the 3C’s worktogether. At the end of the second semester, the students again generated concept maps for theirproject and combined them into one overall map for the team as well as reflecting on the changesfrom their initial map. Creating Value is also tied to an assignment done at the start of theproject as well as after it ended. In this case, teams filled out a stakeholder value matrix.In addition to the small assignments directly tied to one of the 3C’s, the TILT framework wasused for the major assignments (project proposal, proposal presentation, final report, finalpresentation) in the courses to explain how each of