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Displaying results 35971 - 36000 of 40831 in total
Conference Session
Educational Research and Methods Division (ERM) Technical Session 19
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Lucas J. Wiese, Purdue University ; Alejandra J. Magana, Purdue University
Tagged Divisions
Educational Research and Methods Division (ERM)
to(a) expert opinions and (b) real machine learning code relevant to Alaina’s Dilemma. First, theexpert opinions came from accessible public-facing news outlets that reported on the manner:MIT Technology Review [53] and The Lever [54]. Second, the machine learning code wasdemonstrated to the students during class. This was an end-to-end machine learning project [55],from downloading and cleaning the data to training and refining the model, which was modifiedfor students’ skill level by the instructor.Introducing outside perspectives and expert opinions helps induce “safe” conflict in the students’beliefs and perspectives. Here, they further learn to consider outside information in theirdecision-making process and that ethical dilemmas are
Conference Session
Educational Research and Methods Division (ERM) Technical Session 7
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Xiuhao Ding, University of Illinois at Urbana - Champaign; Meghana Gopannagari, University of Illinois at Urbana - Champaign; Kang Sun, University of Illinois at Urbana - Champaign; Alan Tao, University of Illinois at Urbana - Champaign; Delu Louis Zhao; Sujit Varadhan, University of Illinois at Urbana - Champaign; Bobbi Lee Battleson Hardy, University of Illinois at Urbana - Champaign; David Dalpiaz, University of Illinois at Urbana - Champaign; Chrysafis Vogiatzis, University of Illinois at Urbana - Champaign; Lawrence Angrave, University of Illinois at Urbana - Champaign; Hongye Liu, University of Illinois at Urbana - Champaign
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Educational Research and Methods Division (ERM)
aforementioned digitalnote project. In total, students were surveyed three times across different semester checkpoints. Inthis paper, the following subset of open-ended questions from the later two surveys were selectedfor analysis: 1. Evaluation 1: What benefits do you see from using digital notes? 2. Evaluation 2: What complaints do you have for digital notes in helping you learn new materials? (or frame as how satisfied are you?) 3. Errors: What errors in the digital notes have you noticed after using it for the past weeks? 4. Satisfaction: How do you describe your experience of using digital notes as a whole? And how do you describe your experience of using certain features of digital notes? 5. Adaptation: Have you developed new
Conference Session
Technological and Engineering Literacy/Philosophy of Engineering Division (TELPhE) Technical Session 1
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Steffen Peuker, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo
Tagged Divisions
Technological and Engineering Literacy/Philosophy of Engineering Division (TELPhE)
disagree 8 What additional support or resources do you think would be helpful for Text input students who are interested in using AI in their work? 9 Please share any other thoughts or experiences you have related to the use of Text input AI.Figure 1: Survey Instrument LogicThe survey instrument was made available to all first-year students (N=244) via in-classannouncement and on the learning management system (LMS). The script used during class andthe notice posted on the LMS are as follows:[Name of Instructor] is conducting a research project investigating the use of generative AI toolsin first-year ME courses. Here is the link to the survey which is part of the research project:[link to survey]Please note that your
Conference Session
Educational Research and Methods Division (ERM) Technical Session 22
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Mohammad Faraz Sajawal, University of Oklahoma; Javeed Kittur, University of Oklahoma
Tagged Divisions
Educational Research and Methods Division (ERM)
problem-solving strategies rather than resorting to unethical practices such as cheating. “I believe over time it will replace many jobs such as journalism, story writing, coding, and others that primarily use language to complete tasks. However, for engineering specifically, I see it as an important aid in helping to determine root cause analysis for complex system where NDI is required or to cut costs on proof of concepts by being able to simulate things more accurately. But this is still at least four to six years away from being even remotely reliable for engineering information. Currently it's really only good for basic tasks or writing code, which writing code for a project using ChatGPT does save a tremendous amount
Conference Session
Professional Development and Engineering Ethics Education
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Bailey Kathryn McOwen, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University; Dayoung Kim, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Ethics Division (ETHICS)
minimize the effects ofnegative social identification can provide socialization opportunities to students. Additionally,establishing self-belief in engineering students can be accomplished by socialization of students;allowing them to observe one another’s goal setting and accomplishing those goals will allowthem to model their behaviors after each other. Consider long-term, independent projects thatmodel professional projects which require incremental goal setting and accomplishments; oftenthese take place in capstone or senior design projects, but introduction to these types of projectsearlier not only expose students to various types of engineering careers, but also allow them toexercise self-belief in lower-stakes opportunities.Finally, one
Conference Session
Graduate Studies Division (GSD) Technical Session 3: Advising in Graduate Education
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Zilong Pan, Lehigh University; Anand Jagota, Lehigh University; Volkmar Dierolf, Lehigh University; Himanshu Jain, Lehigh University
Tagged Divisions
Graduate Studies Division (GSD)
, collaboration, time management, ethics andresearch integrity, analytics (e.g., data science/statistics), project management, and criticalthinking — faculty members were asked to rate from 'very important' to 'not important at all.'The results showed that 'very important' is the largest proportion for all qualities or skills.Additionally, faculty members mentioned various skills that they also consider important,including writing, marketing, hands-on experiences, entrepreneurial skills, networking, self-assessment, and independent research skills.When asked if they would like to encourage collaborative research between their PhD studentsand non-academic partners (e.g., an industrial lab), 78% of the participants provided a positiveanswer (see Fig. 8
Conference Session
MECH - Technical Session 11: Integration of Problem-Solving and Design Thinking
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Amanda Sterling, Auburn University
Tagged Divisions
Mechanical Engineering Division (MECH)
interviews. The forensic activity was very interesting as well as beneficial to my future career. It provided me with experience that covered the entire range of a real-world engineering problem from start to finish. The first portion of the project - taking measurements of and analyzing a metal shaft - provided an opportunity to take what we had learned in the class on the theoretical level and apply it to a real life scenario. It taught us what kind of measurements are necessary to fully define a problem as well as what kind of techniques are     best suited for taking those measurements. This helped us to visualize what is actually going
Conference Session
Technological and Engineering Literacy/Philosophy of Engineering Division (TELPhE) Technical Session 3
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Haley Williams, University of California, Berkeley; Denia Djokic, University of Michigan
Tagged Divisions
Technological and Engineering Literacy/Philosophy of Engineering Division (TELPhE)
noveltechnical domain, nuclear engineering developed within a new organizational context [8].Previously, physicists practiced their research within university science departments, but with thedevelopment of wartime research efforts, such as the Manhattan Project, top physicists andengineers found themselves employed by government and military-funded research initiatives.Post-WWII, these government research efforts continued via the establishment of nationallaboratories. The first national laboratory, Argonne National Laboratory, cites its establishmentin 1946 as having the goal to perform “cooperative research in nucleonics”, another term used todescribe the field of ‘nuclear engineering’ or ‘atomic energy’ [9]. This time period was markedby specific
Conference Session
Sociotechnical Integration and Programmatic Reform
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
David Tomblin, University of Maryland, College Park; Nicole Farkas Mogul, University of Maryland, College Park; Christin J. Salley, University of Michigan
Tagged Divisions
Liberal Education/Engineering & Society Division (LEES)
discussions and projects. We ask students to question the traditional classroom formatand infrastructure, including how STS instructors administer classes. Practicing in thecommunity are instances of student agency related to community-based course activities andoutside of courses, such as desires to change something about communities, the campus,engineering classes, and their lives in general. Agency to change communities involves skillsand aspirations to disrupt the status quo and ask critical questions of science and technology.Navigating constraints refers to performing agency in the real world and is the most theoreticaldimension of the model. This study only follows students in the two-year STS program, so wedon’t have extensive data about how
Conference Session
Educational Research and Methods Division (ERM) Technical Session 18
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
John Mario Bonilla; Miguel Santiago Valarezo; Miguel Andres Guerra, Universidad San Francisco de Quito
Tagged Divisions
Educational Research and Methods Division (ERM)
Paper ID #44122WIP: Unannounced Tests and Examinations to Improve Student Performanceand Build Academic IntegrityJohn Mario BonillaMiguel Santiago ValarezoDr. Miguel Andres Guerra, Universidad San Francisco de Quito MiguelAndres is an Assistant Professor in the Polytechnic College of Science and Engineering at Universidad San Francisco de Quito USFQ. He holds a BS in Civil Engineering from USFQ, a M.Sc. in Civil Engineering in Construction Engineering and Project Management from Iowa State University, a Ph.D. in Civil Engineering with emphasis in Sustainable Construction from Virginia Tech, and two Graduate Certificates from
Conference Session
Identity Formation and Engineering Cultures
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Timothy Duane Reedy, University of Maryland, College Park; David Tomblin, University of Maryland, College Park
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Liberal Education/Engineering & Society Division (LEES)
practices that work to downplay, obfuscate, or dismiss entirely the influence of socialand structural factors that reproduce educational disparities among historically marginalizedgroups in engineering and further drive them away from the field [4], [5], [13]. The broadersocietal implication of this problem is that it limits the diversity of perspectives that practiceengineering, which perpetuates the development of the unjust and inequitable distribution oftechnological consequences. We see this, for example, in the pervasiveness of algorithmic bias,infrastructure projects that harm minority communities, and a lack of (or undone) technologiesthat could benefit women and people of color [14], [15]. The recognition that we need to designculturally
Conference Session
Open-Ended Problems and Student Learning
Collection
2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Amanda S. Fry, Purdue University; Monica E. Cardella, Purdue University, West Lafayette; Heidi A. Diefes-Dux, Purdue University, West Lafayette
Tagged Divisions
Educational Research and Methods
how to improve as well as an understanding of how to make animprovement10.Because quality feedback is important, investigating the traits of good feedback is critical. Theaim of this study is to examine how students perceive and respond to feedback received from aGraduate Teaching Assistant (GTA) and their peers. This study is part of a larger project thatfocuses on the feedback that students receive as they iterate through multiple drafts of theirsolutions to MEAs. In addition, this study is part of a greater research endeavor to developpedagogical approaches around feedback on open-ended problem solving that enhancesinstructor and peer feedback and facilitates students learning to interpret and respond to feedback.II. MethodA. SettingThree
Conference Session
Student Learning and Assessment II
Collection
2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Amir Karimi, University of Texas, San Antonio; Randall D. Manteufel, University of Texas, San Antonio
Tagged Divisions
Mechanical Engineering
2200 K). Discuss the results. Also compare the results for the thermal efficiency with that obtained from equation (9.8) of the textbook17and discuss the differences.In addition to the external problems, six pop quizzes, five midterm exams and a comprehensivefinal exam were given during the semester. Two group design projects and one individual openended project were also assigned.Table 3 shows the grade distribution for Thermodynamics-II taught by the same instructor. Inspring 2008 and spring 2009 textbook problems were used for all home work assignments. Inspring 2008 a limited number of students were using solution manual or similar resources incompleting their homework assignments, because a new edition of the textbook was adopted
Conference Session
Innovative Program and Curricular Development
Collection
2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Catherine Frances Ibes, Saint Catherine University; Yvonne Ng, St. Catherine University
Tagged Divisions
K-12 & Pre-College Engineering
and the University of Minnesota as a mechanical and aerospace engineer, she worked in industry as an automation design engineer and contract programmer. She made computer sci- ence a more appealing topic for her all-women undergraduate student body by presenting this technically valuable course in a project-oriented comprehensive manner. She is currently the director of the Center of Excellence for Women, Science and Technology where she administers the college’s National Science Foundation scholarships for Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) majors and fa- cilitates various recruiting, advising and placement activities for STEM majors and minors
Conference Session
Innovations in Materials Education
Collection
2010 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Kathleen Kitto, Western Washington University
Tagged Divisions
Materials
collaborative learning activities.Simultaneously, there was a change to a collaborative term long research project in the coursefrom individual term long projects. Additionally, all active, in-class exercises were completed inthese same collaborative teams this academic year. No attempt was made to separate the effectsof these two, simultaneous changes. A separate paper3 covers the initial observations fromchanging to the collaborative approach for completion of the research project and a more detailedpaper that includes the outcomes for this academic year is being prepared. No doubt part of thechange in the outcomes described in this paper is due to the increase in the amount andfrequency of collaborative work as outlined in the research literature16
Conference Session
Educational Research
Collection
2010 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Erin Crede, Virginia Tech; Maura Borrego, Virginia Tech
Tagged Divisions
Educational Research and Methods
qualitativeexploration of the ways the authors addressed the issue of data integration, or mixing. During thequalitative phase we examined the same sample to explore the themes that emerge regarding theissue of integrating the data. The sample chosen for this study included 16 journal articlespublished in seven journals from 2005 to present. Table 1 summarizes how the data werecollected from the sample population for the two major phases of the project. Table 1. Research Design: Questions, Data Collection and AnalysisResearch Phenomenon of Interest Data Collection Data AnalysisQuestion How do current articles Articles were identified based on Elements from each article published
Conference Session
Myths About Gender and Race
Collection
2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Carroll Suzanne Seron, University of California, Irvine; Erin A. Cech, University of California, San Diego; Susan S. Silbey, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Brian Rubineau, Cornell University
Tagged Divisions
Liberal Education/Engineering & Society, Minorities in Engineering, Women in Engineering
” and values of the profession.20 Through interaction with facultyand peers and experiences inside and outside the classroom, students engage in anticipatoryprofessional behavior as they begin to master professional competencies, gain comfort withuncertainty, identify with valued symbols, enact expected norms, espouse professional truismsand learn to project a confident, capable image to others.10,11,17,18,21Socialization includes, then, assimilating the profession‟s “myths,” or the symbols, norms, andtruisms of engineering. Building on the centrality of scientific method, engineering embodies acommitment to meritocracy: an anchoring point of engineering‟s “folk wisdom” is thatindividuals who work hard and have the appropriate skills in math
Conference Session
Engaging Upper Level Classes
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
Ronald Welch
ispossible through the proper use of instructional technology. Sound innovative? Sounds new? Notreally, these types of techniques have been used for many years at the United States MilitaryAcademy and probably at most schools at the turn of the century. Hands-on models were oncethe corner stone of every class in mechanics, but many classrooms today are only equipped witha textbook, a chalkboard (if lucky), and a computer projection system. Is this enough? No! Howcan faculty return to a style in today’s classrooms that is more conducive to student-centeredlearning? This paper will present the daily classroom activities in a basic Mechanics course (andother courses as well) that greatly improve the quality of the instruction and student
Conference Session
Emerging Trends in Engineering Education Poster Session
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
Lason Watai; Arthur Brodersen; Sean Brophy
Engineering Education"Figure 2. The STAR Legacy CycleB. Significance and relevance of The STAR Legacy Cycle to the engineering practiceIn order for engineering lab courses to be developed following the challenge-based STARLegacy Cycle, it is necessary to relate the cycle to the engineering process. The cycle was firstdeveloped to organize instruction and manage learning activities and resources in a classroomsetting. It has never been implemented in engineering lab course design8. So an objective of thisstudy has been to evaluate the appropriateness of the Cycle in a practical engineering lab course.Analyzing the cycle for significance and relevance to an engineering process revealed that itcoincided with the engineering project development process
Conference Session
Computing Tools for Engineering Education
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
Theodor Richardson; Jed Lyons
meet the resultant requirements by thesoftware written.It is likely that most educational software undergoes the traditional software life cycle of (i)requirements analysis, (ii) design, (iii) construction, (iv) testing, (v) installation, (vi) operation,(vii) maintenance, and (viii) retirement1. However, it is not always certain that the product istested by and for the correct stakeholders in the educational system. The software herein is anupdate of a product called Math with Montague (MM); it was initially a senior project on recordat Bethany College in West Virginia. The original software was intended for use as skillspractice software based on the West Virginia state standards for mathematics. It enjoyed limitedsuccess when presented at
Conference Session
Track 1: Technical Session 7:Beyond Math Readiness: Understanding Why Some Women Pursue Engineering
Collection
2024 Collaborative Network for Engineering & Computing Diversity (CoNECD)
Authors
Olivia Ryan, Virginia Tech Engineering Education; Susan Sajadi, Virginia Tech
Tagged Topics
CoNECD Paper Sessions, Diversity
understand major choice in specific‬ ‭engineering disciplines, but this study will focus on engineering major choice generally.‬‭ igure 1‬F‭Conceptual Model from Main et al.’s study‬‭[40]‬‭.‬‭ ote: This study focuses on the high school life stage from the conceptual model. The figure was‬N‭adapted to highlight this portion of the model.‬‭ ethodology‬M‭Qualitative researchers study things in their natural setting to make meaning of phenomena as‬ ‭people experience them‬‭[41]‬‭. A common type of methodology‬‭in qualitative research are case‬ ‭studies – a case study allows researchers to study a phenomenon in its bounded context‬‭[42]‬‭.‬ ‭This project used a case study to understand the factors influencing women students' pursuit of‬
Conference Session
Student Beliefs, Motivation and Self Efficacy
Collection
2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Micah Stickel, University of Toronto; Siddarth Hari, University of Toronto; Qin Liu, University of Toronto
Tagged Divisions
Educational Research and Methods
active learning, Page 24.1207.4 4) Gives prompt feedback, and 7) Respects diverse talents and ways of learning.A more thorough discussion of the student-centered theoretical framework behind the invertedclassroom can be found in a recent review paper by J. Bishop and M. Verleger 7.Research Project DescriptionThis paper reports on one of the research questions associated with a two-year study on theinverted classroom approach conducted at the Faculty of Applied Science and Engineering at theUniversity of Toronto, which is a large research-intensive public university. The study comparesthe relative perception and performances of two cohorts, one
Conference Session
CIP Technical Session
Collection
2013 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Samantha Ruth Brunhaver, Stanford University; Shannon Katherine Gilmartin, Stanford University; Michelle Marie Grau, Stanford University; Sheri Sheppard, Stanford University; Helen L. Chen, Stanford University
Tagged Divisions
College Industry Partnerships
-level Other occupationsNote: Fields that respondents in our final sample selected are highlighted.Table 2. Engineering sub-occupation fieldsEngineering practitionersEngineering consultantsEngineering managers, first-lineEngineering managers, mid-levelEngineering research associates and assistantsEngineering teachers and professorsEngineering technologists, technicians, and surveyorsOther engineers or engineering-related technologistsNote: Sub-fields that respondents in our final sample selected are highlighted.We combined first-line and mid-level engineering managers into a single group called“managers”. First-line engineering managers typically supervise engineering teams and projects,whereas the NSF describes mid-level
Conference Session
Mathematics Division Technical Session 1
Collection
2013 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Ravi T. Shankar, Florida Atlantic University; Don Ploger, Florida Atlantic University; Agnes Nemeth, Florida Atlantic University; Steven Alan Hecht Ph.D., Nova Southeastern University
Tagged Divisions
Mathematics
robotics and alternative assessment strategies in their classroom5, 6.II.C. Background: The journey towards our previous projects started when we came to knowthat a local school had a robotics club, but no robots. The students, both boys and girls, met oncea week to discuss, but could make no headway on how to finance their club. Purchase, operation,and maintenance of commercially available robots13, 14 were beyond their means and capability.We wanted a simple low cost solution that they could easily comprehend and build upon. To thisend, we offered a course to engineering undergraduate students in the fall of 2011. The resultwas a blueprint (for both hardware and software) for building a low cost robot4. We havepublished the details elsewhere15
Conference Session
Engineering and Public Policy I
Collection
2013 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Rylan C. Chong, Purdue University, West Lafayette; Dennis R. Depew, Purdue University, West Lafayette; Ida B Ngambeki, Purdue University, West Lafayette; Melissa Jane Dark, Purdue University
Tagged Divisions
Engineering and Public Policy
. Depew served as Dean of the College of Applied Sciences at Western Carolina University from 1999- 2002. During his days in the classroom, Dr. Depew won or was nominated for numerous teaching awards, including the James G. Dwyer Award presented to the Outstanding Teacher in the College of Technology. He has served as principal investigator or co-principal investigator for over $2 million dollars in external grants to support academic programs and applied research projects in his department and college and serves as a reviewer for programs funded by the National Science Foundation. He is the author of more than 60 technical publications and papers and has served as a technical consultant for Fortune 500 companies on
Conference Session
Best of Computer in Education Division
Collection
2013 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Hatem M Wasfy, Advanced Science and Automation Corp.; Tamer M. Wasfy, Indiana University Purdue University, Indianapolis; Riham M Mahfouz, Thomas Nelson Community College; Jeanne Peters, Advanced Science and Automation Corp.
Tagged Divisions
Computers in Education
Corp. Jeanne Peters is the vice president of Advanced Science and Automation Corp. Peters received a B.A. in Math/Computer Science from the College of William and Mary. She worked at NASA Langley Re- search Center in Hampton, Va. for over 20 years as a senior programmer/analyst for George Washington University, University of Virginia, and Old Dominion University. She co-authored over 70 journal and conference papers in the areas of: computational mechanics, finite element method, shells/plates, compos- ite material panels, and tires. She has also worked on numerous projects to create advanced engineering design and learning environments for space systems which include multimodal user interfaces. Peters directs
Conference Session
Experience in Assessing Technological Literacy
Collection
2013 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Denise M Wilson, University of Washington; Cheryl Allendoerfer, University of Washington; Ryan C. Campbell, University of Washington; Elizabeth Burpee; Mee Joo Kim, University of Washington- Seattle
Tagged Divisions
Technological and Engineering Literacy/Philosophy of Engineering
) for one class (n=9) and Page 23.1369.5between 2.6 and 3.9 for another class (n=13). Problem areas are shown to vary depending on thegroup, but for both classes as a whole, the lowest mean score occurred for the basic literacy issueindicating the writing’s “closing synthesizes the elements, supports the main idea and finalizesthe paper”.Additional conference papers include Rhoulac and Crenshaw’s 2006 study[15] of 15 technicalreports written by seniors in civil engineering at Howard University, as well as Poltavtchenkoand Tingerthal’s 2011 study[16] of 9 group project reports written by construction managementstudents at a public middle-sized
Conference Session
Computer-Supported Pedagogy and Assessment
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Tammy VanDeGrift, University of Portland
Tagged Divisions
Computers in Education Division (COED)
many engineering andcomputer science. Video creation posed more work and time for both students and instructors;however, there are educational benefits of requiring students to review and explain their work: itprovides authentic engineering communication practice and seeds a habit of metacognition.Introduction and Related WorkEducators design pedagogical methods, activities to support student learning, and assessments ofstudent learning, while often considering the theoretical framing of how students learn. Whileengineering and computer science learning experiences include hands-on, practical experienceswith active learning exercises, laboratory work, experiments, projects, and internships, examsremain a primary tool for assessing students
Conference Session
Cultivating Community, Wellness, and Character Development
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Lorena S. Grundy, Tufts University
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Chemical Engineering Division (ChED)
first, and in the second, became confused aboutthe solution to an example problem. Reflecting on these two episodes and their implications formy instructional practice led to the following research questions: 1. In what ways does confusion manifest in an interactive classroom environment? 2. How can an instructor engage in reflective practice to make sense of and shift their framing of their confusion and mistakes?MethodsParticipants, Positionality, and ContextThis work is part of an ongoing ethnographic research project in which I serve as an instructor inthe chemical engineering department at a private, research-focused university while studying thefactors impacting instruction in the department from within. For this paper, I focus
Conference Session
Civil Engineering Division (CIVIL) Technical Session - Effective Teaching 2
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Julie Anne Wildschut, Calvin University
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering Division (CIVIL)
studentsentered class. After five to ten minutes, solutions were projected using the lecture slides whilestudents switched writing tools and self-graded their quizzes. Several example retrieval practicequizzes are included in the appendix. Usually, quizzes were completed individually, butsometimes they were completed with a partner to encourage community or shared learning. Thelevel of difficulty varied depending on the goal and timing within the semester. Sometimes thesepractices were easier, reviewing past information and sometimes they were harder to preparestudents for an upcoming test. Retrieval practice quizzes included questions on assigned reading,previous lecture content, and homework. This encouraged students to keep pace with readingsections