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Work in Progress: Engaging First-year Engineering Students through Makerspace Project-based Pedagogy

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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

First-Year Programs Division (FYP) - WIPS 4: Projects

Tagged Division

First-Year Programs Division (FYP)

Page Count

9

DOI

10.18260/1-2--44230

Permanent URL

https://strategy.asee.org/44230

Download Count

134

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Paper Authors

biography

Gisele Ragusa University of Southern California

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Dr. Gisele Ragusa is a Professor of Engineering Education at the University of Southern California. She conducts research on college transitions and retention of underrepresented engineering students, engineering ethics, PreK-12 STEM education, and also research about engineering global preparedness.

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biography

Erik A. Johnson University of Southern California

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Dr. Erik A. Johnson is a Professor of Civil & Environmental Engineering at the University of Southern California and has served since 2017 as the Vice Dean for Academic Programs in the USC Viterbi School of Engineering. Dr. Johnson earned B.S. (1988, with highest university honors), M.S. (1993) and Ph.D. (1997) Degrees in Aeronautical and Astronautical Engineering at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, and a Certificate in Biblical Studies (1991) from Trinity Evangelical Divinity School. Prior to joining USC, he was a visiting research assistant professor at the University of Notre Dame from 1997 to 1999. He served 2007-17 as the Associate Chair of the USC Sonny Astani Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering (and Interim Chair in 2011), as well as Interim Director of USC Viterbi's Information Technology Program for 2018-19 and 2022-23.

Dr. Johnson was the recipient of a 2001 U.S. National Science Foundation "Early Faculty Career Development (CAREER) Award," the Junior Research Prize and Medal from the International Association for Structural Safety and Reliability (2005), and an Outstanding Recent Alumnus Award (2003) and a Distinguished Alumni Award (2016) from the University of Illinois. He is a senior member of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA), and a member of both the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE) and the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME). Dr. Johnson has served as the Chair of the ASCE EMI Technical Committee on Structural Health Monitoring and Control, the Chair of the ASCE EMI Probabilistic Methods Committee, and as an Associate Editor of the ASCE Journal of Engineering Mechanics; he currently serves on the Board of Directors of the American Automatic Control Council and on the Advisory Board of the journal Structural Control and Health Monitoring.

Dr. Johnson's research interests include "smart" structures, control of structural vibration, controllable damping devices, monitoring structural health, random vibration, and computationally-efficient simulation algorithms for dynamical systems, as well as the future of engineering education.

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Abstract

As the United States continues to evolve from an industrial economy to a global economy, a significantly higher level of education for larger proportions of society has become a necessity; for each individual and for the collective benefit of all. This trend has multiple direct implications for higher education and is particularly important for engineering workforce development. Demand for employment-relevant, technologically focused university programs is ever increasing, raising questions as to whether the U.S. postsecondary education system can continue to effectively respond. Higher education researchers have noted increasing difficulties in students as they transition from K-12 experiences to colleges and universities, and especially for transitions taking place in research universities in engineering and in other STEM fields. This transitional phenomenon has become pronouncedly more challenging as a consequence of the COVID-19 pandemic, where the majority of high school students attended their last year or two of high school remotely. Researchers who study college transitions posit that students often become lost when they are required to exhibit independence and navigate college during their first year without the watchful, anticipatory guidance of their parents and high school teachers. Their grades often plummet, which is particularly pronounced when students encounter the rigor of STEM curricular content. To address this dilemma, engineering schools have developed first-year programs to support students in navigating through and succeeding in their first year in college. Many of these programs contain remediation experiences, tutoring programs, and summer bridge skill oriented programs. These programs’ successes have been quite variable and are typically modest when brought to scale. Furthermore, there is sparse research that indicates such programs’ longitudinal impact on students’ career preparedness. In contrast to the remedial or discrete skill bolstering first year efforts prescribed by many colleges and universities, our research reports on a comprehensive first year engineering program in which students enroll in a Freshman Academy in which they engage in project-based pedagogy utilizing a makerspace experience. The goal of the program is to provide the students with a hands-on engineering experience from the first week they enroll in college with an intent to provide the students with “real life” engineering experiences that align with their other technical courses so they can be fully engaged in working with peers and connect course content with that which will occur once they enter the engineering professions. The students in the described Freshman Academy program are grouped across the engineering disciplines and work in cross-disciplinary teams on a semester-long team project that addresses a student selected National Academy of Engineering’s Grand Challenge (NAE) or United Nations (UN) Sustainable Communities Goal. Through this process, the student teams develop a prototype to address a problem associated with a NAE or UN global challenge. The teams engage in societally relevant engineering design processes and complete a four component team project consisting of (1) a multimedia project pitch, (2) a project report, (3) a team presentation, and (4) a physical prototype to address their selected challenge using design principles through work within a makerspace. For this engineering education research, we address the following questions: (1) What is the relationship between the students’ previous design and technical experiences to their success in makerspace project-based learning? (2) What role do team dynamics play in the success of their team projects? and (3) In what ways do students’ team dynamics change as they near completion of their team projects. To measure the impact of the Freshman Academy team experience in the makerspace, we utilize a set of multidimensional rubrics to assess the four team project components. We also collect students’ background and experiential information during the semester. Furthermore, we collect information about the students’ description of their team dynamics, strengths and challenges.

This is considered “work in progress” engineering education research. Accordingly, formative results of the research indicate the following. The participating students have a variety of precursing experiences as they enter their undergraduate engineering programs. They are able to successfully navigate the team experience and complete a pitch, report, presentation, and prototype to address a contemporary global engineering problem. The projects demonstrate design thinking/iteration, societally relevant innovation, ethics, and understanding of the value of teamwork and collaboration. The strengths of the teams assist students in successful project completion. Additional results of the research are forthcoming as the semester culminates, and will be reported on in the full paper which will accompany this abstract.

Ragusa, G., & Johnson, E. A. (2023, June), Work in Progress: Engaging First-year Engineering Students through Makerspace Project-based Pedagogy Paper presented at 2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Baltimore , Maryland. 10.18260/1-2--44230

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