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Work in Progress: Self-Starter Faculty Learning Community to Implement Entrepreneurially-Minded Learning (EML) Micromoment Activities

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Conference

2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition

Location

Baltimore , Maryland

Publication Date

June 25, 2023

Start Date

June 25, 2023

End Date

June 28, 2023

Conference Session

Faculty Development Division (FDD) Technical Session 6

Tagged Division

Faculty Development Division (FDD)

Page Count

8

DOI

10.18260/1-2--44133

Permanent URL

https://peer.asee.org/44133

Download Count

101

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Paper Authors

biography

Erick S. Vasquez University of Dayton

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Erick S. Vasquez is an Associate Professor in the Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering at the University of Dayton. He received his B.Eng. in Chemical Engineering at UCA in El Salvador. He obtained his M.S. from Clemson University and his Ph.D. from Mississippi State University, both in Chemical Engineering. His laboratory research involves nanotechnology in chemical and biological processes. His educational research interests are community-based learning, open-ended laboratory experiments, teamwork, collaborative and active learning, and Transport Phenomena computational modeling.

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Megan Morin ASHLIN Management Group

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Megan Morin (she/her) graduated from the University of Dayton with a bachelor's degree in Middle Childhood Education and completed her Master's and Ph.D. at NC State in Engineering and Technology Education. Megan’s research interests in faculty development, pedagogies, assessment, and teaching developed because of her previous work with NC State Education and Workforce Programs and as a North Carolina middle school teacher. Dr. Morin will start as the Associate Director for Engineering Faculty Advancement in June 2023.

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Vinayak Vijayan University of Dayton Orcid 16x16 orcid.org/0000-0002-4657-6318

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Vinayak Vijayan is a Lecturer in the Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Department at the University of Dayton. He received his bachelor's in Mechanical Engineering from University of Dayton in 2015, his MS in Mechanical Engineering from University of Michigan in 2017, and his PhD in Mechanical Engineering from University of Dayton in 2022. His interests include biomechanics and engineering education.

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Timothy Reissman University of Dayton

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Dr. Timothy Reissman is an Assistant Professor within the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering at the University of Dayton. He teaches primarily courses related to experimentation, mechatronics, and dynamic systems and controls.

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Abstract

This is a work in progress (WIP) paper. Engineering education has called upon a need for student-centered learning approaches to help broaden skills and transform students into lifelong learners. One way to help support faculty using these approaches is through a Faculty Learning Community (FLC) program, which could be a practical approach to supporting professional development opportunities toward teaching and learning. The activities are typically faculty led including a process of learning, reflection, and support by colleagues. One way in which it can be effective for faculty to acclimate is by doing small implementations through micromoments. Micromoments are rapid and easy active learning implementations that encourage students’ learning. These activities can help support faculty who often struggle with competing demands and lack of time, limiting improvement in teaching aspects. This work-in-progress paper shows the authors’ reflections and suggestions to engage faculty in promoting micromoment activities in lecture-based teaching.

At the University of Dayton - an R2 university, the lead engineering faculty started a FLC to support the integration of entrepreneurially minded learning (EML) using the KEEN Framework. EML promotes curiosity, connections, and creating value strategies, known as the 3C’s. The FLC consisted of four bi-weekly one-hour meetings inviting lecturers, faculty-of-practice, and tenured/tenure-track faculty. The FLC meetings’ primary purpose was to keep faculty engaged in active sessions related to EML micromoments. The first session consisted of a brief introduction to micromoments to emphasize the need to develop students’ entrepreneurial mindset, followed by sessions exclusively devoted to one of the 3C's. The lead faculty provided a list of EML micromoment implementations and examples for each of the 3C's to the faculty participants at the beginning of the sessions. During the follow-up meetings, each faculty member was encouraged to discuss and review potential interventions they did or could do in the classroom. Furthermore, the lead faculty utilized the University of Dayton learning management system (LMS) to develop a website with additional resources and information available to all the faculty participants.

While the FLC approach and the list of EML micromoment activities seemed attractive to many faculty members, several challenges emerged. Examples include time conflicts with other activities, lack of additional stipends, and a rapid modification to their planned lectures. Despite these constraints, a small faculty cohort (n = 7) met, when possible, throughout the semester during three different sessions to share their micromoment implementations, suggestions, and students’ response to the micromoments. All the participants suggested and encouraged future professional development sessions related to these implementations. This paper provides more detailed recommendations for future EML micromoment learning activities for faculty members and potential FLC groups with limited funding [The authors prefer a lightning talk for this work-in-progress paper].

Vasquez, E. S., & Morin, M., & Vijayan, V., & Reissman, T. (2023, June), Work in Progress: Self-Starter Faculty Learning Community to Implement Entrepreneurially-Minded Learning (EML) Micromoment Activities Paper presented at 2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Baltimore , Maryland. 10.18260/1-2--44133

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