scoping review of the literature on undergraduate engineering studentperceptions, attitudes, and emotions on failure.How students perceive and respond to failure can have a significant impact on their growth anddevelopment [1], [2]. This relationship is complex and can draw upon many factors includingmindset [3]-[5] (e.g., Dweck’s implicit theories of intelligence beliefs), motivation and self-regulation [6], [7] (e.g., measured through the Motivated Strategies for Learning Questionnaire,MSLQ), and emotions [8], [9] (e.g., examined with the Achievement Emotions Questionnaire,AEQ). First, students with a growth mindset can see failure as a learning opportunity whereasthose with a fixed mindset may be more inclined to see a failure in terms of
-cohort surveys. Facilitators also kept running logs for reflective practice after each CoPsession, and generated summative evaluations of participant work at the end of each rotation. Prior to beginning each six-week rotation in a tool domain, participants were asked torate their confidence in their ability to achieve each of the four domain goals (operation,teaching, maintenance, and contribution) using a survey, which is provided in Appendix B.Participants were also assessed for changes in their entrepreneurial mindset [7] and their21st-century skills [8] with measures of the “Seven C’s”: connections, curiosity, creating value,creativity, communication, collaboration, and critical thinking. After the final session of thatrotation
apersonal goal while concurrently collecting data on both the technical and emotional challengesfaced along the way.To formulate the dataset for this examination, I included journal entries after work sessions onprojects, weekly reflections from my summer research experience, a final project reflection, andpictures representing milestones with captions to explain emotional experiences. These elementsprovided insight into both my conceptual understanding and emotional mindset, structuredthroughout the period from May to December 2024.Project Overview and BackgroundThe emotionality of music is often conveyed through techniques like tempo, articulation, andpitch. For example, slow tempos and smooth legato articulation can evoke sadness, while
entrepreneurial mindset. Her previous research experience includes examination of implicit bias in the classroom and application of VR technologies to improve student engagement. Darby hopes to pursue a career in STEM education and educational research.Dr. Kaitlin Mallouk, Rowan University Kaitlin Mallouk is an Associate Professor of Experiential Engineering Education at Rowan University. Prior to beginning that role, she spent five years an Instructor in the Mechanical Engineering and Experiential Engineering Education Departments at Rowan. ©American Society for Engineering Education, 2024 Exploring the Relationship between Transfer Students’ Social Networks and their Experience of
Paper ID #42380The Effect of Ego Network Structure on Self-efficacy in Engineering StudentsDavid Myers, Rowan UniversityMatthew Currey, Rowan UniversityLuciano Miles Miletta, Rowan UniversityDarby Rose Riley, Rowan University Darby Riley is a doctoral student of engineering education at Rowan University. She has a special interest in issues of diversity and inclusion, especially as they relate to disability and accessibility of education. Her current research is focused on the adoption of pedagogy innovations by instructors, specifically the use of reflections and application of the entrepreneurial mindset. Her previous