strategies that address challengesand barriers to recruitment, retention and success of minority students. Among the strategiesdeveloped for this project are two summer programs that were implemented for the first time insummer 2009. The Summer Math Jam is a two-week intensive mathematics program designedto improve student preparation for college-level math courses. The Summer EngineeringInstitute is a two-week residential summer camp that offers participating students the opportunityto gain insight into the engineering academic program through a combination of lectures, hands-on laboratory activities, workshops and projects with engineering professionals. Preliminaryresults indicate success of both programs. Math Jam participants show improvement
clearly emphasizeprofessional skills and ABET program outcomes (Criteria 3 d, f, g, h, i,). With shared goalsof providing undergraduates with a rich educational experience in which research,communication and critical thinking are central to achievement and to the development ofintegrity in engineering, such collaborations produce an instructional program that readiesstudents for the requirements of continuous learning and complex analysis essential to asuccessful, principled engineering career. This paper will describe the contributions toundergraduate engineering education that non-engineering faculty and academic departmentshave brought to the Pitt freshman engineering experience. Through the description of thecurricula and strategies developed