), 108-137.Erichson, E. A. & Bollinger, D. U. (2011). Towards understanding international graduate student isolation in traditional and online environments. Educational Technology Research and Development, 59, 309-326.Johnson, D. R., Wasserman, T. H., Yildirim, N. & Yonai, B. A. (2014). Examining the effects of stress and campus climate on the persistence of students of color and white students: An application of Bean and Eaton’s Psychological Model of Retention. Research in Higher Education, 55, 75-100.Katz, J., & Hartnett, R. T. (Eds.) (1976). Scholars in the Making. Cambridge, MA: Ballinger Publishing Company.CLIMATE AND ENGINEERING GRADUATE STUDENTS
University Dr. Nadia Kellam is Associate Professor in the Polytechnic Engineering Program at Arizona State Uni- versity. Prior to this position, she was an Associate Professor at the University of Georgia, where she was co-director of the interdisciplinary engineering education research Collaborative Lounge for Un- derstanding Society and Technology through Educational Research (CLUSTER). In her research, she is interested in understanding how engineering students develop their professional identity, the role of emo- tion in student learning, and synergistic learning. A recent research project uncovers the narratives of exemplary engineering faculty who have successfully transitioned to student-centered teaching
SEAS program coordinator from NCSU work cooperatively to structure and provideadditional professional development to the trainees, including sessions on succeeding in graduate schooland successfully applying to Ph.D. programs. Relationships between the faculty and students at bothinstitutions have been strong, and both doctoral candidates and trainees periodically present their researchat meetings on both campuses. This presentation and paper will provide an overview of the challengesencountered and progress made in the first three years of the five-year Bridge-to-Ph.D. program.IntroductionThere are large disparities in the enrollment of African-American students in doctoral programs in thescience, technology, engineering, and mathematics
State University.Miss Amanda James Reed c American Society for Engineering Education, 2019Intersectional perspectives: Interpersonal contributors to moments of doubt for graduate women of color in STEM Kerrie G. Wilkins-Yel, Bianca L. Bernstein, Jennifer M. Bekki, Nelson O. Zounlome and Amanda Reed1. Introduction The status of women of color in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM)fields was first addressed by Malcom and colleagues in the 1978 publication - The Double Bind:The Problem of Being a Minority Women in Science. Here, these researchers coined the term“double bind” to refer to the unique challenges faced by
Kinesiology and has been Director of the ADVANCE Faculty Affairs and Diversity Office for over 10 years. Her research is in the areas of Endocrinology, Reproductive Biology and Sexually Dimorphic Disease as well as on Mid-Career Mentoring. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2019 Paper ID #24814Dr. Keith A. Schimmel P.E., North Carolina A&T State University Keith Schimmel is an Associate Professor of chemical engineering, Director of the Applied Science & Technology PhD Program, and Education Director for the NSF CREST Bioenergy Center at North Car- olina A&T State University