an innovative solution to their challenge problem. Each team was expected to develop aproject/research proposal, similar to an internal research grant, to present at the culminating postersession. Furthermore, students had the opportunity to participate in various technical training andprofessional skills workshops throughout the weekend. A focus of the hackathon was to exposestudents to topics related to computational neuroscience, as part of a scientific engagement effort.Following the end of Net-Hack, winning teams were recognized and awarded with certificates anda prize.Prior to Net-Hack 2022, students were given a pre-survey to indicate their challenge preferences,demographic information, and self-reported imposter phenomenon (IP) and
Paper ID #42586Engagement in Practice: A Road Map for Academia and Non-Profit CollaborationKerrie Danielle Hooper, Florida International University Kerrie Hooper is currently an Engineering and Computing Education Ph.D. student at Florida International University. She obtained her Bachelor of Science in Computer Science from the University of Guyana in 2019 and then worked for two years in the industry as a Data Analyst & Systems Administrator, before pursuing her doctoral degree. Her research interests are in AI ethics, responsible technology in education, women’s careers in computing, and arts-based approach to STEM