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Pre-engineering Collaboration as a Tool to Facilitate Decolonization of Native American Students

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Conference

2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access

Location

Virtual On line

Publication Date

June 22, 2020

Start Date

June 22, 2020

End Date

June 26, 2021

Conference Session

Minorities in Engineering Division Technical Session 2

Tagged Division

Minorities in Engineering

Tagged Topic

Diversity

Page Count

9

DOI

10.18260/1-2--35071

Permanent URL

https://strategy.asee.org/35071

Download Count

392

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Paper Authors

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Robert V. Pieri North Dakota State University

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Dr. Robert Pieri is Professor of Mechanical Engineering at North Dakota State University (NDSU) in
Fargo, ND. He has many conference publications on engineering education and design. His primary
interest areas include: Engineering Education, CADD, Design, Fracture Mechanics, Materials Science and
Alternative Energy Options. Prior to joining NDSU, he worked for Allied-Signal Corporation and in the
aircraft supply industry. Prior to his industrial experience he taught for 10 years at the US Air Force
Academy. Prior to his time at USAFA, Bob was a Research & Development Engineer with the US Air
Force, studying problems of pollution in the earth’s atmosphere. One of his dissertations involves the
environment and policy decisions that could affect it. Dr. Pieri has degrees from the University of
Massachusetts at Amherst, Thayer School at Dartmouth College and Carnegie – Mellon University in
Pittsburg, Pennsylvania. For the academic year 2003- 2004, Bob was on the faculty at Turtle Mountain
Community College in Belcourt,N.D. where he taught Math and Engineering classes. This is the basis for
his current interest in Native Americans into Engineering. Bob, originally from the northeast area of the
USA, has been a resident of Fargo, ND since 1996.

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Austin James Allard Turtle Mountain Community College

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Austin Allard is a Pre-Engineering Instructor at Turtle Mountain Community College. He earned a doctorate degree in Civil Engineering from Texas A&M University. His work deals with using manufactured drones to map ecological areas. He is dedicated to using engineering solutions to investigate environmental issues close to home.

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Teri Ann Allery

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Ann Vallie Nueta Hidatsa Sahnish College

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Bradley Bowen Virginia Tech Orcid 16x16 orcid.org/0000-0003-3987-308X

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Bradley Bowen is an assistant professor at Virginia Tech in the School of Education’s Integrative STEM Education program. He has a B.S. in Civil Engineering from Virginia Tech and a Master's of Civil Engineering and an Ed.D. in Technology Education both from N.C. State University. Using his work experience in both engineering and education, he specializes in designing Integrative STEM activities for K-12 students and implementing professional development programs for K-12 educators.

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Karl Haefner

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Cankdeska Cikana Community College
Karl Haefner, Collaborative Team Member
University of Phoenix, M.A.e.d., Secondary Education, 2008
Grand Valley State University, B.S. Geology, 2004
Saginaw Valley State University, B.S. Mechanical Engineering, 1988

Mr. Haefner is an engineering instructor at Cankdeska Cikana Community College, where he is actively working to build the Pre-Engineering Department. He assisted with writing the AMI accreditation report to the HLC, wrote several successful grants, and managed CCCC’s Advanced Manufacturing Curriculum and Pre-Engineering Educational Consortium. In addition the Advanced Manufacturing initiative at CCCC has hired two undergraduates to run the 3-D/Scanner Laboratory. The aforementioned gives the students hands on training in a STEM related field.

Mr. Haefner has 13 years’ experience teaching college STEM courses. He has taught construction management at Westwood College in Chicago; mathematics at Mid-Michigan Community College and Cornerstone University in Grand Rapids, MI. Mr. Haefner has taught algebra, engineering statics, several HVAC courses, several CMT classes, as well as AutoCAD and Advanced Manufacturing using SolidWorks. Mr. Haefner also has over 15 years; experience in the fields of civil, geo-technical and environmental engineering at companies including: Testing Service Corporation in Carol Stream, IL; Singh & Associates in Chicago, IL, Weaver, Boos and Gordon in Chicago, IL; STS Ltd. In Grand Rapids, MI.

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Lori Nelson Nueta Hidatsa Sahnish College

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Lori Nelson began her professional experience as an Industrial Engineer working in the capacity of systems engineering for a major U.S. aerospace manufacturing firm. This role provided functional consulting for supply chain ensuring appropriate data design of master data, IT architecture and solution design for all ERP solutions across the organization.

She holds a Masters of Arts in Teaching Mathematics from Minot State University, a Bachelor of Science degree in Industrial Engineering and Management from North Dakota State University, and post-masters certificate in Experiential Education through Equine Assisted Learning from Prescott College.

Currently she serves as the Land Grant Director and also as PI of the Pre-Engineering Education Collaboration (PEEC) Grant at Nueta Hidatsa Sahnish College in New Town, ND. In addition, she teaches Mathematics and Equine Studies courses.

Her and her husband, Chris, live and raise Angus beef cattle, near Towner, ND. In her spare time, she enjoys riding horses and providing community outreach through relational horsemanship through the Nueta Hidatsa Sahnish College Horse Nation program. Currently she serves on the board of directors for an engineering firm that specializes in transportation engineering and materials testing.

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Danny Luecke

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Michael Maloy Parker Cankdeska Cikana Community College

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Abstract

Pre-engineering Collaboration as a Tool to Facilitate Decolonization of Native American Students

The intent of this paper is to describe how a collaborative engineering education program operating on a number of tribally controlled colleges and universities, TCU’s, across a particular geographic region of the United States may, through thoughtful application of best educational practices including a community-based approach, be seen as a tool that moves decolonization within Native American communities and education systems forward. Put in terms of a research question: “How effective can the funded program be when considered as a method to move decolonization forward in Native American engineering education and could it increase enrollment?” This collaborative education effort which is been going on for the past 10 years and is soon to graduate its 10th student with a Baccalaureate of Science in either Civil, Mechanical, Electrical or Agricultural Engineering, is using this milestone as an opportunity to do some introspection on the program, its achievements, the processes that were used and some long-term outcomes. In recent history great consideration has been given by indigenous peoples to the recognition of colonial influences on their current lives. Much discussion has taken place among Native Americans regarding efforts to mitigate or reverse these influences on their reservations and lives. This paper will offer a working definition of decolonization as it might be applied to educational activities and specifically engineering education involving Native Americans. The paper will present information about the effectiveness and costs of considering and supporting the “total student” and how it may be augmented to accomplish decolonization. The steps and procedures utilized to affect this transformation will be presented and discussed, along with basic numerics to indicate effectiveness. Relevancy of this activity to other situations in other underrepresented or under-resourced communities will be discussed.

Pieri, R. V., & Allard, A. J., & Allery, T. A., & Vallie, A., & Bowen, B., & Haefner, K., & Nelson, L., & Luecke, D., & Parker, M. M. (2020, June), Pre-engineering Collaboration as a Tool to Facilitate Decolonization of Native American Students Paper presented at 2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access, Virtual On line . 10.18260/1-2--35071

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