attention and efforts onefacultyoneresistance.org18 One model of how to respond Report Support Recommit19 Report • Unit, college, university levels • Law enforcement: campus, local, state (state investigation unit), federal (FBI, Office of Civil Rights) • Non-profits: SPLC, AAUP, AAC&U • Other online harassment support orgs: Heart Mob, Troll Busters, Crash Override, Online SOS20 Support • Physical and emotional safety of the target • AAUP chapters – engage impartial observers in meetings with administrators • ASEE Diversity Committee – sending indicators of support to target’s supervisors, P&T committees, etc. • Review other suggested plans and resources listed on
do your research methods employed tostudy engineering education align with your social justice values? In what ways could you examine orimprove upon your research methods to reflect a critical intersectional frame? How might that framebe relevant to your work and change-making in the field of engineering education? Participants willleave the workshop with an increased awareness of how to do engineering education research thatreflects social justice values, paired with concrete methodological ideas to run with. 1 Aligning your Research Methods with your Social Justice Values Plan for the workshop
diversity, inclusion, and equity. After establishingthe current literature taking on issues of equity in engineering as well as a summary of thenetwork analysis already conducted through our ROAR grant, we will describe our owntheoretical framework, initial analysis of outcomes from other educational organizing campaigns,and initially planned actions for the CoNECD event and how it fits into our research.Background and FrameworkMany scholars have explored the problem of equity, diversity, and social responsibility inengineering as a discipline more broadly [1], [2], [3], [4], but there is little work done on the fieldand positionality of academics in engineering education specifically and their change-makingstrategies or interests for seeding