2023 Collaborative Network for Computing and Engineering Diversity (CoNECD)
New Orleans , Louisiana
February 26, 2023
February 26, 2023
February 28, 2023
Diversity and CoNECD Paper Sessions
25
10.18260/1-2--44807
https://peer.asee.org/44807
133
Jennifer Love is a full-time faculty member at Northeastern University in the College of Engineering's Center for STEM Education. She earned a BS in Mechanical Engineering from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in 1993, a MS in Biomedical Engineering from The University of Iowa in 1997 and a Doctorate in Education (EdD) from Northeastern University in 2022. She worked as a professional engineer in the medical device and athletic footwear industries for 10 years before joining the faculty at Northeastern in 2006. Her most recent teaching position was in the First Year Engineering Program at Northeastern for 10 years, where she helped to establish the First Year Engineering Learning & Innovation Center makerspace and their new "Cornerstone" integrated project-based learning curricula.
Claire Duggan is the Executive Director of The Center for STEM Education at Northeastern University. She has led and/or collaborated on multiple educational initiatives impacting the science and engineering landscape.
Dr. Jacqueline Isaacs joined Northeastern in 1995 and has focused her research pursuits on assessment of the regulatory, economic, environmental and ethical issues facing the development of nanomanufacturing and other emerging technologies. Her 1998 NSF Career Award is one of the first that focused on environmentally benign manufacturing. She also guides research on development and assessment of educational computer games where students explore environmentally benign processes and supply chains in manufacturing. She has been recognized by Northeastern University, receiving a University-wide Excellence in Teaching Award in 2000, the President’s Aspiration Award in 2005, and a College of Engineering Excellence in Mentoring Award in 2015. An ELATE Fellow, Dr. Isaacs has served in numerous administrative leadership roles at Northeastern, currently as Vice Provost for Faculty Affairs..
Johné M. Parker is Acting Associate Dean, Diversity, Equity and Inclusion for the College of Engineering and an Associate Professor of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering at the University of Kentucky. She received her BME, MSME and Ph.D. degrees from the George W. Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering at the Georgia Institute of Technology and has industrial experience with Shell Oil Company and Mobil Chemical Company. Dr. Parker has received both federal and industrially-sponsored funding, including an NSF CAREER award; her research interests include systems and controls, focusing on the use of emerging technologies to provide feedback. She is also very interested, and actively engaged, in engineering education research, particularly as it relates to broadening participation.
Keisha Norris is the Assistant Director of academic advising and diversity initiatives in the College of Engineering and Computing at Miami University.
stEm XXXX Academy {redacted title}
Keywords: engineering, undergraduate, race/ethnicity, gender
As part of the National Science Foundation’s (NSF) INCLUDES (Inclusion across the Nation of Communities of Learners of Underrepresented Discoverers in Engineering and Science) program, the new Engineering PLUS (Partnerships Launching Underrepresented Students) Alliance seeks to strengthen and expand the future United States engineering workforce by encouraging and supporting the identification, recruitment, and persistence of Black, Indigenous and People of Color (BIPOC) and female students in engineering. To accomplish this, we seek to support evidenced-based interventions through the engagement and support of a professional learning community of “stEm PEERs” (i.e., science, technology, Engineering and mathematics Practitioners Enhancing Engineering Regionally), who will be equipped to facilitate the design, implementation, and assessment of evidence-based practices at their own institutions and beyond, and to build increased capacity through inclusivity and equity within the engineering academic experience. Our overall mission is to lead transformative, systemic and sustainable change that increases the growth rate in the number of BIPOC and women pursuing engineering to achieve a national target of 100,000/30,000 (BS/MS-PhD) degrees by 2026. The Alliance will leverage the wealth of best practices for broadening participation in engineering that has emerged from research over the last several decades to provide the collaborative infrastructure needed to support sustainability and scale-up of successful strategies.
One key component of the Engineering PLUS Alliance program is the development and scale of a professional learning community through engagement in the stEm PEER Academy. Our inaugural stEm PEER Academy engaged seventeen (17) practitioners from 15 United States higher education institutions, including community colleges, public and private universities and colleges, for a virtual kick-off week in June 2022. Practitioners applied to the program in Fall 2021 with an implementation project idea they wanted to subsequently develop at their own institutions that addresses the Engineering PLUS Alliance’s core mission. Applicants were reviewed and accepted based on their current experience, project focus and institutional commitment to implementation. The stEm PEER Academy participants explored the following topics over five virtual meeting days:
1) Understanding the engineering education pathway landscape with emphasis on diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI). 2) Understanding models and interventions that work for women and BIPOC students to enroll and facilitate degree attainment. 3) Building partnerships and engaging stakeholders. 4) Planning, implementing, assessing, and scaling evidence-based strategies through a stEm PEER’s own implementation project. Participants indicated in a qualitative survey they had a largely positive experience. They expressed a high degree of passion for diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) in STEM education. They agreed that their expectations had been met, particularly around enhancing their knowledge around high-impact practices (HIPs) in STEM education and forming a sense of connection and community.
Suggestions for improvement generally revolved around three themes: 1. Extend the program’s duration since five consecutive full-day meetings were an intense experience. 2. Expand networking opportunities, both regionally and within their cohort. 3. Increase direct mentoring between their fellow PEERs and with academy facilitators.
Future academies will address the outlined recommendations as the Alliance is scaled up.
Love, J. O., & Duggan, C. J., & Isaacs, J. A., & Parker, J. M., & Norris, K. M. (2023, February), stEm Peer Academy: Building a Community of Practice Paper presented at 2023 Collaborative Network for Computing and Engineering Diversity (CoNECD), New Orleans , Louisiana. 10.18260/1-2--44807
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