also make them successful as a doctoral student (Holbrook et al., 2014). This gap causesstudents to often lose focus of their primary responsibilities, such as research and maintaining apositive relationship with their advisor, instead of focusing their efforts less effectively on otheractivities such as coursework or extracurricular tasks that do not hold the same significance inthe doctoral journey. It is not until later in the Ph.D. process that students face the reality thattheir efforts were misaligned with the best activities for degree progress (Artiles, 2019; Artiles etal., 2018). This far into the Ph.D. process, it often seems too late to refocus and make timelydegree progress, causing students to lose motivation and, in some severe
-Director of the EPICS Program. She holds a B.S.E.E., M.S.E.E., and Ph.D. in Engineering Education, all from Purdue. Her research interests include the professional formation of en- gineers, diversity, inclusion, and equity in engineering, human-centered design, engineering ethics, and leadership. American c Society for Engineering Education, 2021 Longitudinal Qualitative Case Study of One Engineering Student’s Perceptions of Ethics and Social Responsibility: Corvin’s StoryIntroductionOver the past several decades, there has been a growing awareness of the need to developengineers who can navigate the rapidly changing nature of professional engineering work
, and marketing. He received a Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering from UC Santa Barbara, studying with the inventor of the blue and white LED, and an MBA from the University of South Carolina, Moore School of Business.Dr. Sarah E. Zappe, Pennsylvania State University Dr. Sarah Zappe is Research Professor and Director of Assessment and Instructional Support in the Leonhard Center for the Enhancement of Engineering Education at Penn State. She holds a doctoral degree in educational psychology emphasizing applied measurement and testing. In her position, Sarah is responsible for developing instructional support programs for faculty, providing evaluation support for educational proposals and projects, and working with
in-person face to face experience to a virtualexperience. Online learning is an effective method of instruction, provided that devices andtechnology platforms are accessible and screen time is monitored and limited. WOCSECincludes workshops for standardized testing, the college application process, scholarshipresources, shadowing opportunities, summer internships and the required high school coursesrequired of most collegiate engineering programs. Students were given a pre-survey the first dayof the camp to assess their attitudes and perceptions towards entering STEM fields. In an effortto measure student’s change in perception, students completed a post survey. In addition to thepre-post survey, a semi-annual quantitative and qualitative
for the Center for Nanotechnology in Society at Arizona State University. Rider is a Research Collaborator with the Sustainability Science Education program at the Biodesign Institute. His research focuses on wicked problems that arise at the intersection of society and technology. Rider holds a Ph.D. in Sustainability from Arizona State University, and a Master’s de- gree in Environmental Management from Harvard University and a Bachelor’s degree in Environmental Science from University of New Hampshire. Before earning his doctorate, he has worked for a decade in consulting and emergency response for Triumvirate Environmental Inc.Rachel Sinclair, University of Virginia Rachel Sinclair is a graduate with a
conveys success comes with time and by sharing lived experiences. Kate depicts that our image of success is co-constructed by interacting with others which informs our own understanding of success. Then iteratively over time, you’ll see yourself as successful and see others as successful. Kate maps the “different levels of success” by explaining the transition from understanding to seeing others as successful. Although Kate critiques the competitive workplace environment and societal definitions of success, she sees success as an end goal with multiple paths. Kate has described the process of becoming successful through goal obtainment. If goals are salient to how Kate defines success, then her lower grit-factor score
bebeneficial for supporting virtual collaboration: idea boards (or whiteboards) that come with alarge selection of templates (diagrams and flowcharts); colorful “sticky notes” that allowcollaborators to emulate face-to-face low-fidelity design synthesis processes; a real-time displaythat indicates active team members; empathy-mapping templates to assist teams in mapping endusers’ attitudes, behaviors, needs and pain points; and journey-mapping templates to assist teamsin capturing their design process. Unlike many of its competitors, Miro supports both discreteand continuous brainstorming processes, meaning that users can visualize either independentsteps and thoughts throughout the process or a continuous flow. These features allow theplatform to
Paper ID #34273Engaging Women Engineering Undergraduates as Peer Facilitators inParticipatory Action Research Focus GroupsDr. Susan Thomson Tripathy, University of Massachusetts Lowell Dr. Susan Thomson Tripathy received a Ph.D. in Anthropology from Harvard University in 1989. Her doctoral research was funded by a Fulbright-Hays Doctoral Dissertation grant, and utilized ethnographic fieldwork in rural Bihar, India, to analyze the politics and artistic development of a local dance form. From 1995-2007, Tripathy taught behavioral sciences at Middlesex Community College (MCC), where she was an active participant and
identities and intersectionality.Madison Natarajan, University of Massachusetts Boston Madison Natarajan is a doctoral student in the Counseling Psychology Ph.D. program at University of Massachusetts Boston. Madison received her MS. in Clinical Mental Health Counseling at Lipscomb University in Nashville, TN. Her research and clinical interests stem from a feminist/intersectional per- spective looking at religion and sexuality, evaluating how religious identities and morals influence self- concept in the areas of sexuality, sexual expression, self-esteem, and sexual agency.Anushka SistaDr. Kerrie G Wilkins-Yel, University of Massachusetts - Boston Kerrie Wilkins-Yel, Ph.D. is an Assistant Professor of Counseling Psychology
ways to break out of the traditional engineering mold and to make engineering more broadly accessible to students. His research interest is the application of mobile computing to interesting, human-focused problems. He holds three degrees in computer engineering including graduate degrees from Virginia Tech and an undergraduate degree from NC State University.Dr. Stewart Thomas, Bucknell University Stewart Thomas is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Bucknell University in Lewisburg, Pennsylvania. He received the B.S. and M.Eng. in Electrical Engi- neering from the University of Louisville in Louisville, KY. and the Ph.D. in Electrical and Computer Engineering from