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 results 511 - 540 of 1731 in total
Conference Session
NSF Grantees Poster Session
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Eunice Chow, WestEd; Linlin Li, WestEd; Nagarajan Akshay, University of California San Diego; Alec Barron, University of California, San Diego; Susan Yonezawa, University of California, San Diego; Victor Hugo Minces, University of California, San Diego
Tagged Topics
NSF Grantees Poster Session
reflects the learning process [13], [14], [15]. Although the potential for STEMand music integration has long been recognized, the idea has been slow to become popular withmainstream audiences, such as school children in their classrooms. A previous experience by thisteam, supported by the National Science Foundation’s grant “Connecting STEM to Music andthe Physics of Sound Waves”, developed and implemented a set of activities geared towardsengaging underserved children in STEM through the connections with music. In it, members ofthis team visited 8th-grade classrooms and worked together with teachers, helping childrenexplore how physical objects and digital tools vibrate and create sound. The experience provedto greatly improve the children’s
Conference Session
NSF Grantees Poster Session
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Amy B Chan Hilton, University of Southern Indiana
Tagged Topics
Diversity, NSF Grantees Poster Session
Faculty Communities Exploring Data and Sharing Their StoriesMotivation and Project OverviewThis NSF Improving Undergraduate STEM Education (IUSE: EHR) Institutional andCommunity Transformation (ICT) capacity-building project is designed to support faculty tocollaboratively explore questions on student learning and success in introductory and gatewayundergraduate STEM courses, such as early engineering courses as well as prerequisite math andscience courses. The project is motivating faculty to consider evidence-based teaching strategiesby including them as co-designers of learning analytics tools and storytellers inspired by the dataand their reflections. Learning analytics uses data about learners and learning to draw
Conference Session
NSF Grantees Poster Session
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Jessica D Gale, Georgia Institute of Technology; Meltem Alemdar, Georgia Institute of Technology; Roxanne Moore, Georgia Institute of Technology
Tagged Topics
Diversity, NSF Grantees Poster Session
indicate consistent use of digital Engineering Design ID Materials Process Log (EDPL) during implementation of 8th grade curricula, as suggested. Several teachers also observed using the EDPL with 6th and/or 7th grade classes as well. Teacher Interviews document teacher reflections on which stages of the EDP they Facilitation/Student found most challenging to facilitate. Challenges related to the Ideate and Engagement in Evaluate stages were most common. For example, Teacher 1 described Engineering Design students’ reluctance ideate and the challenge of facilitating iteration: Process “The biggest thing that they struggled with is the ideate
Conference Session
NSF Grantees Poster Session
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Melissa Joan Caserto, University at Buffalo, The State University of New York; Jessica E S Swenson, University at Buffalo, The State University of New York; Aaron W. Johnson, University of Michigan
Tagged Topics
NSF Grantees Poster Session
examining conceptual knowledge gains, affect, identity development, engineering judgment, and problem solving.Dr. Aaron W. Johnson, University of Michigan Aaron W. Johnson (he/him) is an Assistant Professor in the Aerospace Engineering Department and a Core Faculty member of the Engineering Education Research Program at the University of Michigan. His lab’s design-based research focuses on how to re-contextualize engineering science engineering courses to better reflect and prepare students for the reality of ill-defined, sociotechnical engineering practice. Their current projects include studying and designing classroom interventions around macroethical issues in aerospace engineering and the productive beginnings of
Conference Session
First-Year Programs Division GIFTS: Great Ideas For Teaching Students
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Melissa M. Simonik, State University of New York at Binghamton; Koenraad E. Gieskes, State University of New York at Binghamton
Tagged Divisions
First-Year Programs Division (FYP)
semester by goingthrough this process and to provide a thoughtful conclusion on how this exercise can help themin the future. Reports were reviewed from four engineering communications sections, eachtaught by a different instructor, from the Fall 2023 semester for a total of 89 reports. Notes weretaken on anything that students indicated to be useful about the assignment, including things theylearned, applied, reflected on, etc.The secondary aims of the study will be addressed using quantitative data collected from first-year engineering students enrolled in the engineering communication course at *university*during the Fall 2021, Fall 2022, and Fall 2023 semesters. Phase 1, Phase 2, and Phase 3 gradesfrom the Teamwork Report assignment will be
Conference Session
Mr. Burns' Brainchild: AI in the Springfield STEM Classroom, Release the Hounds!
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
S. Shailja, University of California, Santa Barbara; Satish Kumar, University of California, Santa Barbara; Arthur Caetano, University of California, Santa Barbara; Ayush Pandey, University of California, Merced
Tagged Divisions
Pre-College Engineering Education Division (PCEE)
research projects. We also explorewhether a dual advising structure with a research mentor and a communication teaching assistantenhances student’s self-efficacy in computing. For both of these questions, we define key variablesto quantify student mastery and their computational thinking using qualitative student feedbackand student reflection using GPT-3. We provide a reproducible blueprint for using large languagemodels in this task to assess student learning in other contexts as well. We also correlate our resultswith a pre- and post-course Likert survey to find significant factors that affect student self-efficacyand belonging in AI.With our course design and dual advising mentoring model, we find that students showed a sig-nificant
Conference Session
Krusty's Creations: Robotics and Electronics in Springfield STEAM, Hey Hey!
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Norman Henry Philipp P.E., Ed.S., Pittsburg State University; Randy Winzer, Pittsburg State University; Byron Keith McKay
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Pre-College Engineering Education Division (PCEE)
underscores the program's commitment to advancing STEAMeducation by empowering educators to inspire the next generation of innovators and problem-solvers in their classrooms and communities.Mobile Roadshow InitiativeThe AIR Program at Pittsburg State University is pioneering a mobile roadshow initiative toenhance access to its transformative workshops. Recognizing barriers to STEAM education, theprogram aims to bring robotics opportunities directly to underserved communities [3].This initiative offers condensed versions of the Summer Youth Workshops in a portable format,making STEAM learning more accessible to communities facing resource limitations orlogistical challenges. Beta-tested in October 2022, the roadshow concept reflects the
Conference Session
Civil Engineering Division (CIVIL) Technical Session - Effective Teaching 1
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Corinna Marie Fleischmann P.E., United States Coast Guard Academy; Hudson V. Jackson P.E., United States Coast Guard Academy; Kassim M. Tarhini P.E., United States Coast Guard Academy
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering Division (CIVIL)
project, anticipated capstone specific products and deliverables, design and testingapproaches, timelines, and plans for demonstrating each of the ABET Student Outcomes. EPICScourse standard assessment practices applied to capstone projects include notebook documentationof work and accomplishments, weekly and summative reflections, design review presentations,transition documents, and peer evaluations. The notebook is filled with data on all the project-related activities the students are actively involved in, often with links to specific work artifacts,explanations of them, and concise narratives explaining the student's specific individualcontribution to them. The weekly and summative semester reflections ask students to write brieflyabout
Conference Session
Accountability and Stewardship
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Tamecia R. Jones, North Carolina State University; Chrystal S Johnson; Siddika Selcen Guzey, Purdue University
Tagged Divisions
Liberal Education/Engineering & Society Division (LEES)
. Engineering Design Process.PATHWAYS are thematically based curricular units reflecting categories of injustices that havegreat impact at the individual and community level which can also be connected to each other tohighlight systemic consequences. There are five PATHWAYS: Health, Traffic & Transportation,Economics, Gentrification, and Environment. The PATHWAYS have historical roots and policydecisions intended to sustain inequities which led to engineering artifacts that continue to haveimpact on students and communities today. One such example is the evolution of transportationsystems across the nation. The gentrification PATHWAY highlights a phenomenon that is a rippleeffect of redlining, which has connections to housing, schools, pollution
Conference Session
Innovative Pedagogical Strategies II
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Ilya Y. Grinberg, SUNY Buffalo State University; Jill Singer; Jikai Du, SUNY Buffalo State University
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Technology Division (ETD)
serves as a learning tool forstudents, helping them to become more aware of their academic and professional strengths andweaknesses while supporting their efforts to identify strategies for expanding their knowledgeand improving their metacognitive skills.The method comprises several variants that reflect different educational settings. Currently, themethod includes EvaluateUR, EvaluateUR-CURE, and Evaluate-Compete(https://serc.carleton.edu/evaluateur). EvaluateUR, the initial variant of the method, wasdeveloped at SUNY Buffalo State University to provide feedback about student learningoutcomes from a summer research program with students conducting 8-10 weeks of independentresearch with mentoring provided by faculty. For more details about the
Conference Session
Educational Research and Methods Division (ERM) Technical Session 19
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Wei Lu, Texas A&M University; Behbood Ben Zoghi P.E., Texas A&M University
Tagged Divisions
Educational Research and Methods Division (ERM)
faculty and industry 100 sponsor) Project Charter 100 *Should be signed by your industry sponsor as commitment of resources toward your project and authorization of work. Methodology 150 Submit PowerPoint slides for Project Plan to Communication professor n/a Project Plan Presentation (Capstone & Communication faculty and industry 100 sponsor) Project Plan 200 Midterm Reflection 50 TOTAL TCMT631. Capstone I
Conference Session
Biomedical Engineering Division (BED) Postcard Session (Best of WIPs)
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Tyler George Harvey, Clemson University
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Biomedical Engineering Division (BED)
of a shortanswer question in which students succinctly describe their post-graduation plans, a freeresponse question which asks students to reflect on their personal strategic focus as a member ofthe BME community, and a copy of their professional résumé at the time they were enrolled inthe course.To date, we have collected over 1000 individual student assignments between both courses andare currently in the process of pairing them so the same students can be tracked across the twotime points. In addition to the students’ assignments, we are also collecting information about thefirst position students attained post-graduation, if available, from public sources such asLinkedIn or the alumni directory. Once data from all three time points is
Conference Session
College Industry Partnerships Division (CIP) Technical Session 3
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Ryan C Cooper, University of Connecticut
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
College Industry Partnerships Division (CIP)
Collegesand Employers (NACE) Career Competencies framework into engineering courses. More thanthree quarters of engineering students are seeking career advancement or career changes withengineering degrees. The integration of NACE Career Competencies helps translate ABETstudent outcomes into practicable career readiness strategies. The courses used projects andguided reflection students to practice eight career competencies: Career and Self Development,Communication, Critical Thinking, Equity and Inclusion, Leadership, Professionalism,Teamwork, and Technology. Preliminary observations from student reflections and advisinginterviews suggest students are intrinsically motivated to connect course exercises to careercompetencies. This study provides a
Conference Session
WIP: Student Success and Sustainability
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Chris Barr, University of Michigan; Taylor Ashley Dotto, University of Michigan; Joseph Gilbert Restivo, University of Michigan; Christina Said, University of Michigan; Rinrada Watchara, University of Michigan; Laura Hirshfield, University of Michigan; Elaine C Wisniewski, University of Michigan; Xiaoxia Nina Lin, University of Michigan
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Chemical Engineering Division (ChED)
completion of the activity and/or demo. • Completing focus groups with students not in the design group to see if their activity is pedagogically beneficial. • Developing protocols for implementation of the activity and/or demo for faculty and graduate students to teach in their classes.All teams presented their final prototype via poster and a demonstration at the College ofEngineering’s capstone design symposium as well as a final oral presentation in class.Student Authors’ ReflectionsOur team was brought together in our senior Chemical Product Design course. We were joinedby our collective interest in creating a product related to undergraduate chemical engineeringacademia. During initial brainstorming, we reflected on our
Conference Session
Biomedical Engineering Division (BED) Technical Session 2
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Tugba Ozdemir, South Dakota School of Mines and Technology; Jillian Irene Linder, South Dakota School of Mines and Technology; Erdal Şenocak, Tokat Gaziosmanpaşa University
Tagged Divisions
Biomedical Engineering Division (BED)
reflections areshown in Figure 5 with the list of questions in the table below. Based on the survey students'confidence in being a tissue engineer averaged 4.15 ± 0.38. Also, students’ confidence in designinga tissue engineering bioreactor averaged 4.15 ± 0.80. Students' confidence in using the maker spaceand their tools in other projects, like a capstone or senior design project, averaged 4.77 ± 0.44. Thenext question surveyed students' opinions about themselves being good at engineering andaveraged 4.0 ± 0.82. When we asked students about their confidence in applying their theoreticalknowledge in tissue engineering the responses averaged 4.23 ± 0.44. Next, we asked about theirability to work in a team to accomplish a goal, the results averaged 4.77
Collection
ASEE Mid-Atlantic Section Spring Conference
Authors
Eileen Haase PhD, The Johns Hopkins University; Gyeongtae Sun Moon, The Johns Hopkins University; Meera R Bhat, The Johns Hopkins University
previously mentioned topics throughout the semester and plan to test their dilemmas effectively MCQ quiz from the baselineefficacy next fall. We will first administer a baseline quiz at the beginning of the • BMED can present complex ethical challenges for BME questions. Open-endedsemester and then an end-of-semester quiz to assess the lab managers’ freshmen and LMs must be prepared to navigate these reflection question for eachunderstanding of the topics presented. We
Collection
2023 ASEE GSW
Authors
Marsha Phillips; Lacy White; Mia K. Markey
prompt ex: something you saw that gave you a glimpse of what needs work to help this community’s future live up to its promise. 2. In each Story Circle, once everyone has had a chance to share a story, the group reflects together on what was revealed. 3. When people return from their small groups to the group of the whole to share what they’ve experienced, leaders will have an opportunity to synthesize what folks have learned into a shared intention. 4. Try this: when you bring the Circles back together into a group of the whole, instead of a detailed report- back (e.g., “someone said this, then someone said that”), ask a representative from each Circle to add to a list of values or covenants for local cultural
Collection
2024 ASEE PSW Conference
Authors
Shannen Allado, California State Polytechnic University, Pomona; Lily G. Gossage, California State Polytechnic University, Pomona
transfer students. Majority of students in both cohorts are first- reflects the program's success in nurturing a supportive community where students can thrive academically and socially. generation (i.e., first in the family to attend college), historicallyMission Statement underrepresented minorities, and/or from low-income Transfer students place more value on industry and professional development with 63.3% in 2022 and 70.8% in 2023. Interpersonal
Collection
2024 ASEE-GSW
Authors
Jennifer A Cross, Texas Tech University; Md Rashedul Hasan, Texas Tech University; Diego Alejandro Polanco-Lahoz, Texas Tech University; Mario G. Beruvides P.E., Texas Tech University; Kelli Cargile Cook, Texas Tech University; Jason Tham, Texas Tech University
Factor (EF) is primarily linked toCovid-19 (EF2) as the impact of other factors is more variable across participants. In addition tofurther illumination of the responses for the activity codes, examination of the subcode data revealedan interesting pattern where several individual overall program codes have negative response patterns– matriculation (bureaucratic & academic issues before first class) (OP2), fellowship requirements(OP3), and bureaucratic and administrative issues after first class (OP4) - even though the aggregatevalue of the response code for Overall Program (OP) is (slightly) positive as shown in Figure 2. Ascan be seen by the subcode names, all of these reflect activities that participants viewed as eitherbureaucratic or
Conference Session
Track 3: Technical Session 9: Exploring the Intersectionality of Engineering Postdoctoral Scholars in the LEGACY Scholars Program
Collection
2024 Collaborative Network for Engineering & Computing Diversity (CoNECD)
Authors
Jameka Wiggins, The Ohio State University; Monica Farmer Cox, The Ohio State University; Ayanna Howard, The Ohio State University; Beenish N/A Saba, The Ohio State University; Martina Leveni, The Ohio State University; Shawanee' Patrick, The Ohio State University
Tagged Topics
CoNECD Paper Sessions, Diversity
peers.Multiple Apprenticeship Model (Walker et al., 2008) Each of these features should shape the relationship between the scholar and their mentors. Faculty with scholarly and professional expertise help students self-reflect upon the Intentionality process of creating scholarly ideas and communicating them to others in their field. Multiple Students engage with numerous intellectual mentors. Relationships Collective All parties share responsibility for the development of students’ learning. Responsibility Allow individuals to learn mentoring techniques and be recognized and rewarded for Recognition demonstrating
Conference Session
Track 6: Technical Session 1:Technology Students' Recognition of Algorithmic Data Bias through Role-Play Case Studies
Collection
2024 Collaborative Network for Engineering & Computing Diversity (CoNECD)
Authors
Ashish Hingle, George Mason University; Aditya Johri, George Mason University
Tagged Topics
CoNECD Paper Sessions, Diversity
Foundation Awards#1937950, 1939105; USDA/NIFA Award#2021-67021-35329. Any opinions, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this Aditya Johri johri@gmu.edu material are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the funding agencies. The research study has been approved by the George Mason University Institutional Review Board at George Mason University. bit.ly/mason-tech-ethicsThis talk is about a research
Collection
2024 South East Section Meeting
Authors
Mohammad Abdul Ahad, Georgia Southern University; Thomas Murphy, Georgia Southern University; Rami Jubrail Haddad, Georgia Southern University
a complementary access point and reinforcing the commitment to providecomprehensive educational resources.Course WebsiteIn the realm of open educational resources (OER), the accessibility and relevance ofmaterials are crucial. To address this, a dedicated website (https://sites.google.com/georgiasouthern.edu/digitaldesign) was developed using Google Sites,serving as a central hub for disseminating the OER materials related to the Digital Designcourse both to students and the broader OER community. This website is actively managedand regularly updated by the development team, ensuring that the content remains current,reflecting the latest advancements in software and hardware. Additionally, it allows fordynamic adaptation to align with the
Conference Session
Student Division Technical Session 5: Self- Efficacy
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Jeffrey Luke Morrison, University of South Florida; Chris S Ferekides, University of South Florida; Dhinesh Balaji Radhakrishnan, Purdue University
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Student Division (STDT)
engineering course Itook. In this course, students were put into groups and had to complete an engineering task (inmy case, build a simple robot); however, the class’s primary learning outcomes focused on non-technical concepts like engineering ethics, which made this course like a mini capstone wherestudents had to find the information themselves to complete their projects. Reflecting on thisproject, I realized that researching and building circuitry for robots was the primary reason forselecting Electrical Engineering. Therefore, when I look at the department’s RED program, I seea similar ideology: an attempt to teach students more about the professional side of engineeringand empower students to take responsibility for learning. I still have not
Conference Session
Faculty Development Division (FDD) Poster Session
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Sarah Baka, Youngstown State University; Cory Brozina, Youngstown State University
Tagged Divisions
Faculty Development Division (FDD)
environment (Sonawane et al., 2021, p. 9). Fromthe student perspective, mentees experience a sense of belonging, productive goal setting,feelings of accomplishment, and emotional support (AuCoin & Wright, 2021, pp. 610-611).Moreover, participants in one study reflected that faculty mentoring was “more helpful thanother interventions” serving as a “crucial opportunity to learn about science, scientists, andscientific process…” (Ceyhan et al., 2019, p. 258). Chelberg and Bosman (2019) found facultymentorship to be especially impactful to underrepresented STEM students as it aided in their“development, retention, persistence, and navigation of the postsecondary setting” (p. 45).Zeller’s et al. (2008) research further emphasizes that mentoring
Conference Session
Mechanical Engineering Division (MECH) Poster Session
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Sandra Anstaett Metzler P.E., The Ohio State University; Annie Abell, The Ohio State University
Tagged Divisions
Mechanical Engineering Division (MECH)
/controversial topics c. Reflect upon their own professional identity and personal ethical values and the intersection with the discipline 3. Demonstrate ethical decision-making. 4. Demonstrate societal awareness through an ability to identify needs, challenges, and problems in a local, regional, and global context. a. Engage as a citizen leader professionally and academically b. Demonstrate engagement in professional societies c. Demonstrate the consideration of social justice in decision-makingD. Teamwork, Leadership, and InclusivityProgram Goal: The successful student will be able to contribute to a successful team by takingon different roles within the team, and through creating a collaborative
Conference Session
Pre-College Engineering Education Division (PCEE) Poster Session
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Daniel Loke, Nanyang Technological University; Jeffrey D Radloff, SUNY, Cortland; Ibrahim H. Yeter, Nanyang Technological University
Tagged Divisions
Pre-College Engineering Education Division (PCEE)
education from teachers' perspectives. Moreover, the articles focused onlyon K-12 education were peer-reviewed articles and should be available in full text. We includedthose studies published between 2020 and 2024. This publication range was chosen to reflect themost current AI applications and practices being used in educational contexts and to capture thelatest related best practices. We then established exclusion criteria to omit any study that failed tomeet inclusion benchmarks. These included studies that were non-empirical, outside thespecified timeframe, and not written in English. Each selected study was initially evaluated forits relevance to the topic through reading the titles and abstracts, ensuring it met the qualitystandards
Conference Session
NSF Grantees Poster Session
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Li Liu, California State University, Northridge; Andy Lin; Taeyou Jung, California State University, Northridge; Mauro Carassai, California State University, Northridge
Tagged Topics
NSF Grantees Poster Session
thepersistence of students enrolled in a minority-serving institute in STEM majors and themotivation to pursue a STEM career, particularly in careers at the human-technology frontier.References[1] World Health Organization and United Nations Children’s Fund. Global report on assistive technology. World Health Organization, 2022.[2] A. Manduca, E. Iverson, M. Luxenberg, R. Macdonald, D. McConnell, D. Mogk, and B. Tewksbury. Improving undergraduate stem education: The efficacy of discipline-based professional development. Science Advances, 3(2):e1600193, 2017.[3] K. Shinohara, N. Jacobo, W. Pratt, and J. Wobbrock. Design for social accessibility method cards: Engaging users and reflecting on social scenarios for accessible design
Conference Session
Engineering Physics and Physics Division (EP2D) Technical Session 1
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Oluwapemiisin Gbemisola Akingbola, Morgan State University; Pelumi Olaitan Abiodun, Morgan State University; Oludare Adegbola Owolabi P.E., Morgan State University; Frank Efe, Morgan State University; Hannah Abedoh, Morgan State University
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Physics and Physics Division (EP2D)
the student,rather on the instructor as the case with the traditional form of leraning [4]. This has brought asignificant improvement during the learning process of many students. Active learning is apedagogical tool that has helped promote ‘students’ cognitive capabilities when it comes tomastery of the content [5]. Meaningful conversations, proper reflection, and content mastery areproducts of this learning mode [6].Experiment-centric-pedagogy (ECP), an instructional technique that facilitates activite learning,offers an alternate route for acquiring technical skills and information both inside and outside ofthe classroom. ECP enabls students with different learning styles to learn at their own pace and intheir own settings. Instructors
Conference Session
Educational Research and Methods Division (ERM) Technical Session 26
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Xinfeng (Kevin) Quan, Westlake University; Chaoyi Wang, Zhejiang Normal University ; Chenhui Zhang, Self-employed
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Educational Research and Methods Division (ERM)
students’ agentic engagement, self-efficacy, growth mindset, and other related aspects. 1In recent years, there has been increasing attention paid to students’ epistemic beliefs and theirimpact on learning efficacy. Epistemic belief, which reflects students’ views on the nature ofknowledge and knowing, plays a crucial role in the cognitive, metacognitive, and affectivedimensions of students’ learning. Research has demonstrated that interventions targeting epistemicbeliefs can significantly enhance learning outcomes (Greene et al., 2018). Epistemic cognition -mostly measured in terms of belief (Greene et al., 2018) – is identified as the apex of
Conference Session
Multidisciplinary Division Technical Session 11
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Temileye Omopariola Ibirinde, Morgan State University; Pelumi Olaitan Abiodun, Morgan State University; Adebayo Iyanuoluwa Olude, Morgan State University; Oludare Adegbola Owolabi P.E., Morgan State University; Niangoran Koissi, Morgan State University
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Multidisciplinary Engineering Division (MULTI)
, which is our desired result of the relevant cognitive load.This theory was used in designing the instructional modules for the course where experiment-centric pedagogy was implemented, as shown in Figure 2. 1. Information 2. Purpose of the 3. Instructional module Process 4. Reflection about the module a. Module Title a. Questions a. Materials needed a. Reflection b. Placement within the b. Module objectives b. Procedures curriculum c. Formative assessment c. Primary/ Secondary audience d. Summative assessment d. Standards