Experiencing Disability in Undergraduate Civil Engineering Education: An Initial Examination of the Intersection of Disability and Professional IdentitiesAbstractWhile recent calls throughout the engineering education community have focused on increasingdiversity and broadening participation in STEM, these conversations typically center on race andgender with little to no work addressing disability. But research in higher education broadlysuggests that cognitive, physical, and learning disabilities can markedly impact the ways inwhich students perceive and experience school, develop professional identities, and move intothe engineering workforce. To address this gap, we build on emerging conversations that explorethe
2017 AAAS Science & Diplomacy Leadership Workshop.Dr. Linda R ShawDr. Marla A Franco, University of Arizona Marla A. Franco, Ph.D., serves as the Director of Assessment and Research for the Division of Student Affairs, Enrollment Management, Academic Initiatives, and Student Success at the University of Arizona, where she leads the design and implementation of research, assessment, and evaluation plans across 45 units and departments to support a data rich environment for improved student learning and strategic de- cision making. Dr. Franco has close to 20 years of experience in higher education, which has brought her countless opportunities to assess, research, and inform educational practice, particularly in
?” V. JOB OUTLOOKS Computer science student C.C. explains how the The Workforce Recruitment Program for CollegeAccessComputing [11], an organization that provides Students with Disabilities (WRP) is a recruitment andopportunities on the computing pathway for students with referral program that connects federal and private sectordisabilities, helped him discover his passion for research in employers nationwide with highly motivated collegeassistive technology, “I can’t say enough good things about students and recent graduates with disabilities. It is managedAccessComputing. First, they exposed me to research in by the U.S. Department of Labor's Office of DisabilityAssistive