has co-authored over 100 referred conferences and jour- nals, five book chapters and two patents. She received the National Science Foundation’s Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and En- gineers and the 3M Untenured Faculty Award. She is active in the IEEE MTT-S (e.g. associate editor of MWCL, chaired IMS TPRC sub-committees, student paper competitions and scholarship committee) and is a co-founder of IMS Project Connect and Chair of MTT-S Technical Coordinating Committee for Integration and Packaging. She is the 2014 Sara Evans Faculty Scholar Leader Award, 2017 John Tate Advising Award, and 2018 Willie Hobbs Moore Distinguished Alumni Lecture Award and the 2019 IEEE N. Walter Cox Service Award
Paper ID #28230Retaining Women in Engineering: Finding the Perfect JobLynn Mayo P.E., RePicture Engineering Lynn Mayo holds a M.S. in civil engineering from Stanford University and a B.S in civil engineering from Bucknell University. After working for over 30 years as a civil engineer, she became CEO of RePicture Engineering, PBC. RePicture is dedicated to increasing interest and diversity in engineering by telling the stories of engineering projects, engineers, and organizations. Through the RePicture.com site, we are helping students discover careers shaping the future and helping companies attract innovators
American c Society for Engineering Education, 2021 Goals: a USF education will…• Educate future engineers within a Jesuit liberal arts tradition – to be problem-solvers for others• Value diverse perspectives and actively recruit a diverse student body, faculty, and staff• Provide innovative, interdisciplinary, project-based learning• Build upon connections with the industry and innovation of the San Francisco Program Educational ObjectivesWhat kind of person is the graduate of your program? What are they able to do within 3-5 years aftergraduating?•Demonstrate fluency with design thinking, systems thinking, creative problem solving, and self-directed scholarship as modes of
-efficacy through building Secondary independence and confidence. ● Build enthusiasm in the possibility of pursuing a Goals career in engineering. Secondary Goals of M-Power Tools: ● Provide mentorship and role models to middle school-aged participants. ● Teach girls to safely and effectively use power tools to accomplish project goals and demystify the process of building and fabrication (male dominated fields of engineering). ● Strengthen teamwork skills. ● Illustrate that engineers are vital contributors to the betterment of
others.Dr. Cara Margherio, University of Washington Cara Margherio is the Assistant Director of the UW Center for Evaluation & Research for STEM Equity (CERSE). Cara manages the evaluation of several NSF- and NIH-funded projects, primarily working with national professional development programs for early-career academics from groups underrepresented in STEM. Her research is grounded in critical race and feminist theories, and her research interests include community cultural wealth, counterspaces, intersectionality, and institutional change.Kerice Doten-Snitker, University of Washington Ms. Doten-Snitker is a Graduate Research Assistant at the University of Washington’s Center for Evalu- ation and Research for STEM
Questions for Group Group Projects Group Work Problem Solving SessionsWeber and Atadero. 2020 Annual CoNECD Conference. 7The frequent group projects and group problem solving activities in these courses have provided an opportunity to incorporate diversity related topics with a series of reflection questions after each project or a series of problem solving sessions that address individual behavior within the group, interactions with team members, demonstration of respect for group members contributions, and overall inclusion of group members
InspireRecruit and Enrich (ASPIRE) • Length of program: Two-week residential and non- residential program • Participants: High school students • Experiential-learning pedagogy: design, code, build, test, and 21st Century Skills • Activities: Hands-on project, facility tours, workshops and panels • Pre- and post-program evaluation • Community of supportProgram Goals • Increase the number of women and students from underrepresented ethnic and racial groups in engineering through experiential learning • Expose students to Internet-of-Things (IOT) • Teach students how to code in Python using Raspberry Pi • Allow students to apply the engineering design process through applied project What is Experiential Learning?Select Projects
NIFA grant, and is currently co-PI on three NSF-funded projects in engineering and computer science education, including a Revo- lutionizing Engineering Departments project. She was selected as a National Academy of Education / Spencer Postdoctoral Fellow and a 2018 NSF CAREER awardee in engineering education research. Dr. Svihla studies learning in authentic, real world conditions; this includes a two-strand research program fo- cused on (1) authentic assessment, often aided by interactive technology, and (2) design learning, in which she studies engineers designing devices, scientists designing investigations, teachers designing learning experiences and students designing to learn.Dr. Susannah C. Davis, Oregon
’ continuing in school, class, and their research project despite encountering obstacles. Isolation/Loneliness (Academic Disconnect) - derived from narratives that speak to participants’ difficulties with family and friends lack of understanding about what it is they are doing and/or having the time to talk to or associate with family and friends. Extant Knowledge-derived from narratives that speak to participants’ discussions about things they knew prior to joining this research study that may help them with their research project/dissertations. New Information-derived from narratives that speak to what the participants have learned in various courses each week. Future
, components that the majority of engineeringdepartments are adopting include rapid prototyping tools, such as additive manufacturingmachines (3D printers) and laser cutters [3], [4].Makerspaces and Engineering Education. Makerspaces have become popular withinengineering education. Integrating a makerspace into an engineering curriculum can be adaunting task given the scope and sequence of university engineering coursework. Recentresearch found that over a three-month period, students who took part in a course that integrateda class project within the makerspace were positively and significantly impacted in the domainsof technology self-efficacy, innovation orientation, affect towards design, design self-efficacy,and belonging to the makerspace [5
displacement contexts, such as refugee camps. Theoverall goal of this course was to prepare students to solve problems using engineering designeffectively. The LED course targeted the following learning objectives: 1) using a systematicproblem-solving method to identify, evaluate, and scope an engineering problem; 2) applying theengineering design process to generate ideas, critically evaluate and develop evidence-basedsolutions; 3) fostering the growth of reflective individuals and empower their social agency, and4) discussing and practicing professional competencies. Students develop a capstone projectwhere they applied the theoretical concepts learned in the course throughout the course. Thiscapstone project is an important component of our
Paper ID #28468Introducing Diverse Undergraduates to Computational ResearchDr. Bala Ram P.E., North Carolina A&T State University Dr. Bala Ram serves as a Professor in Industrial Systems Engineering and the Associate Dean for Aca- demic Affairs for the College of Engineering at NC A&T State University. As a faculty member, he played a significant role in the implementation of a PhD in Industrial & Systems Engineering. Dr. Ram served as the PI for a cross-disciplinary Research Experience for Undergraduates site sponsored by NSF. He is currently the PI for an NSF project on Innovation in Graduate Education. Dr. Ram
beginning and end of the semester. Coursebelonging and engineering identity was higher among first-generation and low-income studentsin EMath on the pre survey. Course belonging and math confidence increased on the post survey.Among students enrolled in an engineering projects course in fall 2018, at the end of thesemester students also enrolled in EMath had higher private regard and group identification (twomeasures of identity) compared to students not enrolled in EMath; the largest difference wasamong URM students. The results indicate that EMath might provide a supportive environmentwith benefits to students’ engineering identity, although confounding factors of additional cohortprograms and intersectional identities are complications to the
construction projects. Job titles include field engineer, project engineer,superintendent, as well as estimator, scheduler, and project manager.Students in the CEM Program receive training in construction materials, drafting,computer applications, construction surveying, structural design, soil mechanics,construction equipment, estimating, scheduling, accounting, project management,safety and law.Electrical EngineeringThis program trains students in the fundamentals of electrical engineering includingcommunications, controls, instrumentation, electronics, illumination and power. Atthe junior and senior level students may specialize in power, electronics, or controlsand instrumentation.Electronic Systems Engineering TechnologyGraduates from this
Lab at ODU and a lead of Area of Specialization Mechatronics Systems Design. She worked as a Visiting Researcher at Commonwealth Center for Advanced Manufacturing in Disputanta, VA on projects focusing on digital thread and cyber security of manufacturing systems.Dr. Rafael E. Landaeta, Old Dominion University Dr. Landaeta is an Associate Professor with tenure in the Department of Engineering Management and Systems Engineering at Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Virginia. He holds a Ph.D. in Industrial Engineering and an M.S. in Engineering Management from the University of Central Florida, as well as, a B.S. in Mechanical Engineering from UNITEC Venezuela. He serves as an Associate Editor for the
socioeconomically just engineering education. American c Society for Engineering Education, 2021 Week of Action: #EngineersShowUp as intersectional advocatesIntroductionIn this roundtable and open panel discussion, members of the engineering education communitywill reflect upon their experiences during a planned week of action that took place February 23rd– 29th as part of a larger project on addressing root causes of inequity. This event follows aplanning and organizing workshop held at the 2019 CoNECD conference, and continued effortssince then to meet virtually and plan towards collective actions to build awareness and shiftnarratives. Through these meetings and open-ended
models, broadening participation initiatives, and S-STEM and LSAMP programs.Dr. Catherine Mobley, Clemson University Catherine Mobley, Ph.D., is a Professor of Sociology at Clemson University. She has over 30 years experience in project and program evaluation and has worked for a variety of consulting firms, non-profit agencies, and government organizations, including the Rand Corporation, the American Association of Retired Persons, the U.S. Department of Education, and the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research. Since 2004, she been a member of the NSF-funded MIDFIELD research project on engineering education; she has served as a Co-PI on three research projects, including one on transfer students and another on
demonstrated skill and level ofperformance. We designed our course to cover the Ohio Department of Education’s Physicsstandards and created an interactive, project-based learning course to enable students to experienceand master the use of physics in everyday life. Learning was assessed by a pre/post evaluation ofcontent knowledge, testing on topics, daily assignments, and a final presentation on “applicationof physics in real life.”Community Partnerships Local companies have also expressed the dearth of professionals in STEM fields and seekto diversify their workforce [9, 10]. Schaefer, a structural engineering firm that has assisted inseveral building projects at the University of Cincinnati, cites how the supply of structuralengineers is not
., North Carolina A&T State University Keith Schimmel is a Professor of Applied Engineering Technology, Director of the Applied Science and Technology PhD Program, and Education Director for the NSF CREST Bioenergy Center at North Car- olina Agricultural and Technical State University.Dr. Marcia Gumpertz, North Carolina State University at Raleigh Marcia Gumpertz is professor of statistics at North Carolina State University. She serves as PI of the AGEP-NC Alliances for Graduate Education and the Professoriate - North Carolina Alliance project. American c Society for Engineering Education, 2021 How Do Departments Support Their
ID PCE MFGE EE Premajor Major Nat. Avg.Statistics: Brian L. Yoder, Engineering by the Numbers. ASEE 2016-2018https://datausa.io/profile/cip/industrial-product-design#demographics Access to Facilities & EquipmentPre-major engineering + design students did not have access tolab facilities or work space outside of scheduled class time. Skill Development Student Engagement Sense of Belonging Student SuccessFall 2019: WWUEngineering & Designmakerspace opens Students working on projects in the back of the teaching classroom Broad Goals• Create inclusive and equitable learning environments for WWU engineering
and ongoing recovery (via interviews), andmake comparisons between populations with different ethnic and socioeconomic demographics. The project is based ontheories of resilience from both educational and community perspectives and includes consideration of engineeringeducation practices.This current paper will outline the resiliency framework we are using and report on the first round of results from a surveyadministered in April of 2020. We will conclude by describing our next steps in the analysis of data collected.The Two UniversitiesThe two universities participating in this study are institutions in the California State University (CSU) system, with similarundergraduate enrollment: in Fall 2018 Cal State LA at 24,002, and Cal Poly at
Code.org’s perspective,so I encourage people to look at that report if you areinterested in that information.For this presentation, I want to focus on the idea thatcomputing is growing in this space and that leaves us withquestions of what that means. 4 • Started in 2017 as part of an NSF funded project to study the impacts of K-12 computing education on participants ‘- • Long term impacts? • Changes in landscape of activities/interventions • Improving research and reporting in this research area 5Which brings me to csedresearch.org. Let me give you a bit
address complex educational challenges, democratization of K-12 engineering education, and online and technology-based learning.Dr. Stacy S Klein-Gardner, Vanderbilt University Stacy Klein-Gardner’s career focuses on P-12 science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) education, particularly as it relates to increasing interest in and participation by females and URMs and teacher professional development. She is an Adjunct Professor of Biomedical Engineering at Vander- bilt University where she is serving as the external evaluator on the NSF-funded Engineering For Us All (E4USA) project. Dr. Klein-Gardner serves as the chair of the American Society for Engineering Education Board of Director’s Committee on P12
, Black women’s experiencesin society are not accounted for by combining Black men and White women’s experiences. Byleveraging identity and oppression within an inclusive culture, we resist a common simplificationof intersectionality to “multiple identities” and emphasize the contextual and reflexive nature ofidentity formation concerning cultural definitions of and allocations of power to social groups[40]. This paper conceives of student individuality in terms of these multiply defined minoritizedidentities that contribute to nuanced interactions and experiences in engineering cultureexperiences.MethodsThis paper is part of a larger pilot research project exploring students' shared experiences andbuilding inclusive classroom environments in
of participants’ drawings. While this paper focuses on our effortsto expand our codebook using CRT, the larger project aims to connect research to practice byproviding insight on children's perceptions of engineering and the types of engineering messagesthat might be present in informal programs and school environments. This work also highlightshow practitioners might create an inclusive environment for elementary-aged children during thiscritical time.MotivationBeyond the interests of the nation’s economic and technological competitiveness, broadeningparticipation in STEM is an essential issue of equity and social justice. Diversifying STEM iscritically influenced through experiences that allow young people to engage in STEM for “afuture
the Dissertation Institute, a one-week workshop each summer funded by NSF, to help underrepresented students develop the skills and writing habits to complete doctorate degrees in engineering. Across all of her research avenues, Dr. Matusovich has been a PI/Co-PI on 12 funded research projects including the NSF CAREER Award with her share of funding be ingnearly $2.3 million. She has co-authored 2 book chapters, 21 journal publications and more than 70 conference papers. She has won several Virginia Tech awards including a Dean’s Award for Outstanding New Faculty, an Outstanding Teacher Award and a Faculty Fellow Award. She holds a B.S. in Chemical Engineering from Cornell University, an M.S. in Materials Science
Paper ID #28386”She’s Walking into Like Systems Dynamics. What Is She Doing Here?” ANarrative Analysis of a Latina EngineerMrs. Tanya D Ennis, University of Colorado Boulder TANYA D. ENNIS is the current BOLD Center Director at the University of Colorado Boulder’s College of Engineering and Applied Science. She received her M.S. in Computer Engineering from the University of Southern California in Los Angeles and her B.S. in Electrical Engineering from Southern University in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Her career in the telecommunications industry included positions in software and systems engineering and technical project
co-author on an engineering textbook, Fundamentals of Engineering Thermodynamics, which is used worldwide in over 250 institutions. Dr. Bailey has served as the Principal Investigator (PI) on several externally funded efforts, most recently for the RIT NSF ADVANCE Institu- tional Transformation grant (2012-2019). The goal of this large-scale ($3.4M), multi-year university-level organizational transformation effort is to increase the representation and advancement of women STEM faculty. The project has resulted in impactful new programs, practices, and policies as well as a new dedicated unit within the Office of the Provost.Dr. Naveen Sharma, Rochester Institute of TechnologyLana Verschage, Rochester Institute of
and a PhD.In my experience in STEM, I have constantly been underestimated and mis labeled in theareas of which I found interest. This constant mis categorization and lack of representationcreated a strong sense of not belonging which drove me to me the representation in myfield and create the support structures that I did not have that would have made adifference for me walking my path. On this project I worked in conjunction with two stellarcolleagues Kathy Chen, situated to my left in the picture, the Executive Director of theSTEM Education Center at WPI, who is the daughter of immigrant parents from Taiwan, cis-female, middle-class, able-bodied, PhD. Kathy is someone who always felt as an outsider ornot belonging in STEM, she used her
Paper ID #28273Beyond Buzzwords and Bystanders: A Framework for SystematicallyDeveloping a Diverse, Mission Ready, and Innovative Coast Guard Work-forceDr. Kimberly Young-McLear, U.S. Coast Guard Academy Dr. Kimberly Young-McLear is currently an Assistant Professor (Permanent Commissioned Teaching Staff) at the U.S. Coast Guard Academy. She has served at a variety of Coast Guard units since 2003. She holds engineering and technical degrees from Florida A and M, Purdue, and The George Washing- ton University (Ph.D in Systems Engineering). She has taught a breadth of courses including Operations and Project Management