Recent Events

September 9, 2021

RCR: Integrity in Research and Publications

This talk will focus on three core topics associated with responsible conduct of research: research misconduct, detrimental research practices, and authorship and peer review.
September 2, 2021

Understanding research - and researchers: Launching Season 5 of the Engineering Education Research Briefs podcast

Textbooks often depict the research enterprise as occurring in a linear fashion. But when we actually conduct research, we find something very different happens. There are fits and starts and lots of soul searching. We have to find our way through an uncharted landscape. But all people see is the end product, when the research is explained in a tidy paper. What is it like to undergo the research journey?
August 26, 2021

Taking Stock: Appreciating the State of the School of Engineering Education

In this annual address on the State of the School, it is customary for us to reflect on where we have come, where we are now, and where we are going. This extraordinary pandemic year – more accurately spanning 18 months and counting – has brought us challenge, change, uncertainty and adversity that reveal much to us about who we are.
April 15, 2021

When Do Students Find Their Graduation Major in Engineering?

An engineering workforce is essential for society to meet our current and future challenges. By understanding how students find their graduation majors in engineering, we can improve in-major retention and graduation rates so that students find their engineering graduation discipline quickly without having multiple major changes during their undergraduate studies.
April 8, 2021

Conocimiento in Engineering Education: Latinxs Reclaiming and Affirming Epistemologies of the South

The lived realities and systemic barriers Latinx engineering students often face have been silenced and replaced by stories of inadequacy and deficits. The current national discourse on anti-racism requires that we shift our attention to conversations that challenge those deficit perspectives. This type of engineering and research gatekeeping erases different ways of knowing, doing and being – a process de Sousa Santos describes as epistemological injustice.
< Previous 10 | Viewing 21 to 30 of 426 | Next 10 >