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Evaluating Freshmen Engineering Students’ Experience in a First-Year Engineering Program and Lessons Learned during Covid-19 Pandemic

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Conference

2022 First-Year Engineering Experience

Location

East Lansing, Michigan

Publication Date

July 31, 2022

Start Date

July 31, 2022

End Date

August 2, 2022

Conference Session

Technical Session M5B

Tagged Topic

Full Papers

Page Count

7

DOI

10.18260/1-2--42223

Permanent URL

https://peer.asee.org/42223

Download Count

151

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Paper Authors

biography

Heath Aren Schluterman University of Arkansas

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Dr. Heath Schluterman is a Teaching Associate Professor and the Associate Director of Academics for the First-Year Engineering Program at the University of Arkansas. Dr. Schluterman completed his B.S. and Ph.D in Chemical Engineering at the University of Arkansas.

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Aysa Galbraith University of Arkansas

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Dr. Aysa Galbraith is a Teaching Assistant Professor and an academic advisor of First-Year Engineering Program at University of Arkansas. She received her PhD in Chemical Engineering from Chemical and Biomolecular Department at North Carolina State University. She is responsible from teaching Introduction to Engineering course sequence, developing course material, and advising freshman engineering students. She also serves as the coordinator for the Honors Research Experience.

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Leslie Bartsch Massey University of Arkansas

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Leslie Massey is an instructor in the First-Year Engineering Program at the University of Arkansas. She received her BS in Biological Engineering and MS in Environmental Engineering from the University of Arkansas. She previously served as a project manager at a water resources center, but returned to the University of Arkansas to teach general Introduction to Engineering and to coordinator for the First-Year Honors Innovation Experience.

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biography

Brandon Crisel

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I am a 12 year veteran instructor at the University of Arkansas with a BS and MS in Mathematics with emphasis in Statistics and applied Math as well as an MS in Industrial Engineering. I began working in the Math Department, teaching service courses such as College Algebra, Math for Elementary Teachers 1&2, Mathematical Reasoning, and Finite Mathematics. I also helped spearhead the Math Department's online initiative to create an online program for our service courses while simultaneously implementing a flipped course teaching method to the traditional classes. I was also the Testing Coordinator, where I managed the Testing and Tutoring Centers and their staff as well as created, maintained, and supported the Online Math Placement Test and its related documentation. I had worked in conjunction with the First-Year Engineering Program (FEP) to support students that were underprepared in math, and an opportunity arose to take a position that would be a 50/50 split between Math and FEP. I have taught many semesters of Introduction to Engineering themed in Electronics, Robotics, and Structures as well as support courses such as Fundamentals of Success in Engineering Study and Engineering Applications of Math. I have since moved entirely to a full time instructor for FEP, where I have helped redesign the Electronics and Robotics theme and where I have worked to create a common Computing theme for all incoming students.

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Candace Auburn Rainwater University of Arkansas

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Abstract

This is a full paper abstract. The mission of our First-Year Engineering Program (FEP) is to help first year engineering students build a solid foundation for their education. All new students take a common set of classes, dependent upon their initial math placement, which includes an introduction to engineering class. In addition to covering fundamentals of engineering topics, this class introduces different engineering fields allowing students to make an informed choice of major. However, FEP is more than just a set of classes. It also provides orientation, peer mentoring, tutoring and supplemental instruction, academic advising, basic career advising, and academic skills development. Historically, FEP has provided social opportunities for students to encourage building peer relationships from the start. Our university pivoted to online learning during spring 2020 due to the Covid-19 pandemic. FEP returned in fall 2020 with hybrid class models in Introduction to Engineering courses where students could choose to attend in-person or remotely. Classrooms returned to fully in-person learning in fall 2021. The goal of this paper is to explain the adjustments in Introduction to Engineering courses and explore the differences in student performance in these courses before, during, and after Covid-19 related adjustments. We will examine the students’ grade distributions with a specific interest in any changes in the DFW (grades of D, F, and withdrawal) rates. We will also compare course and instructor ratings for the courses before, during and after pandemic-related course adjustments. While we suspect that the student learning and performance suffered during 2020-2021 academic year due to online and hybrid delivery methods, we also have observed a shift in student attitudes and expectations after returning to our normal, in-person delivery method in 2021-2022 academic year. We anticipate that this shift requires us to adjust our course content and course delivery in future semesters. We will examine positive learning experiences that resulted from changes in the course mandated by the pandemic and look for opportunities to marry historical elements of the program with newer, well-received practices to create the most suitable learning experience for our students.

Schluterman, H. A., & Galbraith, A., & Massey, L. B., & Crisel, B., & Rainwater, C. A. (2022, July), Evaluating Freshmen Engineering Students’ Experience in a First-Year Engineering Program and Lessons Learned during Covid-19 Pandemic Paper presented at 2022 First-Year Engineering Experience, East Lansing, Michigan. 10.18260/1-2--42223

ASEE holds the copyright on this document. It may be read by the public free of charge. Authors may archive their work on personal websites or in institutional repositories with the following citation: © 2022 American Society for Engineering Education. Other scholars may excerpt or quote from these materials with the same citation. When excerpting or quoting from Conference Proceedings, authors should, in addition to noting the ASEE copyright, list all the original authors and their institutions and name the host city of the conference. - Last updated April 1, 2015