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 all 5 results
Conference Session
Track: Special Topics - Social Justice & Reform Technical Session 2
Collection
2019 CoNECD - The Collaborative Network for Engineering and Computing Diversity
Authors
Alice L. Pawley, Purdue University, West Lafayette; Erin A. Cech, University of Michigan; Stephanie Farrell, Rowan University; Donna M. Riley, Purdue University, West Lafayette
Tagged Topics
Diversity, Special Topic: Social Justice & Reform
Paper ID #24889Targeted harassment of engineering education researchers: How to connectwith community and support your colleagues under attackDr. Alice L. Pawley, Purdue University-Main Campus, West Lafayette (College of Engineering) Alice L. Pawley is an Associate Professor in the School of Engineering Education and an affiliate fac- ulty member in the Gender, Women’s and Sexuality Studies Program and the Division of Environmental and Ecological Engineering at Purdue University. Prof. Pawley’s goal through her work at Purdue is to help people, including the engineering education profession, develop a vision of engineering
Conference Session
Track: Special Topic - Social Justice and Reform Technical Session I
Collection
2019 CoNECD - The Collaborative Network for Engineering and Computing Diversity
Authors
Emily Alicia Affolter, University of Washington; Elizabeth Litzler, University of Washington; Cara Margherio, University of Washington; Emily Knaphus-Soran, University of Washington
Tagged Topics
Diversity, Special Topic: Social Justice & Reform
Evaluation & Research for STEM Equity (UW CERSE) and an affiliate assistant professor of sociology. She has been at UW working on STEM Equity issues for more than 13 years. Dr. Litzler is a member of ASEE and a former board member of the Women in Engineering ProActive Network (WEPAN). Her research interests include the educational climate for students, faculty, and staff in science and engineering, assets based approaches to STEM equity, and gender and race stratification in education and the workforce.Dr. Cara Margherio, University of Washington Cara Margherio is the Assistant Director of the University of Washington Center for Evaluation & Re- search for STEM Equity (CERSE). Cara manages the evaluation of
Conference Session
Track: Special Topic - Social Justice & Reform Technical Session 4
Collection
2019 CoNECD - The Collaborative Network for Engineering and Computing Diversity
Authors
Dianne Grayce Hendricks, University of Washington; Celina Gunnarsson, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Camille Birch, University of Washington
Tagged Topics
Diversity, Special Topic: Social Justice & Reform
Paper ID #24893Design and Implementation of an Engineering for Social Justice CurriculumDr. Dianne Grayce Hendricks, University of Washington Dr. Dianne Hendricks is a Lecturer in the Department of Human Centered Design and Engineering and the Director of the Engineering Communication Program at the University of Washington. She designs and teaches courses involving universal design, technical communication, ethics, and diversity, equity and inclusion. She co-founded HuskyADAPT (Accessible Design and Play Technology), where she mentors UW students in design for local needs experts with disabilities and also leads outreach
Conference Session
Track: Special Topic - Social Justice & Reform Technical Session 3
Collection
2019 CoNECD - The Collaborative Network for Engineering and Computing Diversity
Authors
Rachel M. Johnson, University of Minnesota; Michelle Kay Bothwell, Oregon State University; Devlin Montfort, Oregon State University; Kali Furman, Oregon State University
Tagged Topics
Diversity, Special Topic: Social Justice & Reform
Paper ID #24809Measuring the Conceptualization of Oppression and PrivilegeRachel M Johnson, University of Minnesota Rachel Johnson is a PhD student in Biomedical Engineering at University of Minnesota. Her research interests are cardiac tissue engineering and biopreservation. She earned her BS at Oregon State University in Bzioengineering.Michelle Kay Bothwell, Oregon State University Michelle Bothwell is an Associate Professor of Bioengineering at Oregon State University. Her teaching and research bridge ethics, social justice and engineering with the aim of cultivating an inclusive and socially just engineering
Conference Session
Track: Special Topic - Social Justice & Reform Technical Session 5
Collection
2019 CoNECD - The Collaborative Network for Engineering and Computing Diversity
Authors
Kristin Boudreau, Worcester Polytechnic Institute; Leo Ryan Bunyea, Worcester Polytechnic Institute; David DiBiasio, Worcester Polytechnic Institute; Rozwell Johnson; Zoe Reidinger
Tagged Topics
Diversity, Special Topic: Social Justice & Reform
colleagues to develop role-playing games teaching engineering within its complex humanistic context. NOTE: this paper has co-authors.Mr. Leo Ryan Bunyea, Worcester Polytechnic InstituteDr. David DiBiasio, Worcester Polytechnic Institute David DiBiasio is Associate Professor of Chemical Engineering and Department Head of ChE at WPI. He received his ChE degrees from Purdue University, worked for the DuPont Co, and has been at WPI since 1980. His current interests are in educational research: the process of student learning, international engineering education, and educational assessment. Collaboration with two colleagues resulted in being awarded the 2001 William Corcoran Award from Chemical Engineering Education. He served