development by creating a LinkedIn profile, updating their resume, writing acover letter, and ultimately applying for an internship. OPCD staff were invited to support theEGR 112 assignments. The following figures showcase excerpts from the IDP assignment andthe 4-year curricular mapping spreadsheet. Prior publications describe more details about theIDP, 4-year curricular mapping, and EGR 111 (Kenny, 2024; Kenny, Pierrakos, O’Connell,2021).Individual Development Plan (IDP) AssignmentOverview - An individual development plan (IDP) is a tool to assist you in personal and professional development. Its primarypurpose is to help you reach short-term and long-term career goals, as well as improve current performance. It is a process thatshould be iterative
faculty cope with traditional engineering education sowe can target more effective ways of teaching and learning engineering to retain these groupsand make our problem solving and solution generation more effective. Using Collaborative Autoethnography to write a counterstoryIn this section, we discuss how we intend to use collaborative autoethnography and variouspotential elicitation techniques to write our counter-story. The first stage of our study will focuson the experiences of professors and students in engineering education.Autoethnography is the study of culture through autobiography. It lends itself well to studyingthe experiences of minoritized individuals while also providing a space for catharsis [24].Collaborative
through education research.Dr. Michelle E Jarvie-Eggart P.E., Michigan Technological University Dr. Jarvie-Eggart is a registered professional engineer with over a decade of experience as an environmental engineer. She is an Assistant Professor of Engineering Fundamentals at Michigan Technological University. Her research interests include technology adoption, problem based and service learning, and sustainability.Dr. Leo C. Ureel II, Michigan Technological University Leo C. Ureel II is an Assistant Professor in Computer Science and in Cognitive and Learning Sciences at Michigan Technological University. He has worked extensively in the field of educational software development. His research interests include intelligent
. disproportionately impact certain groups of people (e.g., in healthcare or financial applications)? How could you ensure that the choice of data structure aligns with social responsibility? Content Considerations:Inclusive Belonging Content Considerations [...] Fundamentals of ProgrammingBefore Prompt AfterPractice writing
Paper ID #45164Latine STEM Doctoral Students’ Perceptions Regarding Doctoral MentoringRelationships - A Qualitative StudyDr. Dilara Yaya-Bryson Ph.D., University of North Carolina at Charlotte Dilara Yaya-Bryson is a postdoctoral researcher in the Department of Educational Leadership at the University of North Carolina Charlotte. She has conducted educational research on an international scale since 2010. Her work focuses on enhancing the quality of education services through an ecological perspective, including policies, workforce development, and cross-cultural experiences.Dr. Lisa R Merriweather, University of North
Paper ID #45212Use of a multi-level self-study to engage campus stakeholders and improveSTEM student learning outcomesDr. Jennifer Speed, Texas State University Jennifer Speed, Ph.D., is Assistant Vice President for Research Development at Texas State University, a Hispanic-Serving, public research university. For more than ten years, she has supported the development and implementation of programs intended to improve STEM student success, especially among students from underserved and underrepresented backgrounds. She has served a consultant for institutions of higher learning seeking organizational changes that improve
Cooper is Professor and Associate Head for Graduate Programs in the Department of Physics at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He received his B.S. in Physics from the University of Virginia in 1982, his Ph.D. in Physics from the University of Illinois in 1988, and he was a postdoctoral research associate at AT&T Bell Laboratories from 1988-1990. His research interests include optical spectroscopic studies of novel magnetic and superconducting materials at high pressures, high magnetic fields, and low temperatures. Since 2013, he has co-taught (with Celia Elliott) a graduate-level technical writing course each spring to physics and engineering graduate students.Dr. Lynford Goddard, University of Illinois
skills, suchas giving presentations, while Jacob has a desire to learn how to fairly grade students in his lab-based class that work independently rather than as a group, noting that historically students thatwork independently receive a lower grade. I think what really excites me, going back to your original question, is trying to incorporate not only the didactic, like teaching fundamental ideas, but then also teaching them kind of the soft skills required in academic science. It's actually really intimidating, for example, to give a poster presentation or talk in a good way, and so trying to help them with those things and incorporate that into the curriculum would be really cool. That excites me to allow
education areemerging, significant research gaps remain. Comparing to technologies designed to enhance softskills – such as social, communication [36], and writing skills [37] – the number of technologiesspecifically tailored for STEM education remains limited. Our literature review reveals that thisscarcity is even more pronounced for tools developed specifically for post-secondary STEMeducation. As shown in Table 2, the majority of tools reviewed (8 out of 13), along with manyothers, are designed primarily for K-12 students, overlooking the distinct, more advancedchallenges faced by SLWD in higher education. Unlike the K-12 education, interdisciplinarylearning has been a central focus of higher education and research to meet industrial demands[38