April 5th Seminar: Enhancing Learning and Inclusivity in Electrical Engineering

April 5th Engineering Education Research Seminar
April 5th Engineering Education Research Seminar

How can we educate students to be the most effective engineers when they graduate? What does it take to attract a broader range of students to engineering? Join us on April 5th at 9:30 a.m. as Dr. Susan Lord from the University of San Diego shares insight into these questions.

Susan M. Lord is Professor and Chair of Integrated Engineering at the University of San Diego. She received a BS from Cornell University in Materials Science and Electrical Engineering (EE) and an MS and PhD in EE from Stanford University. She is passionate about changing the culture of engineering to be more welcoming and has integrated sociotechnical modules into her engineering courses. Dr. Lord is a Fellow of the IEEE and ASEE and received the 2018 IEEE Undergraduate Teaching Award. She has won best paper awards from the Journal of Engineering Education, IEEE Transactions on Education, and Education Sciences. She is a coauthor of The Borderlands of Education: Latinas in Engineering and facilitates the National Effective Teaching Institute (NETI).

Abstract
How can we educate students to be the most effective engineers when they graduate? What does it take to attract a broader range of students to electrical and computer engineering? What curricular efforts could support both of these goals? These are important questions for the discipline. In this talk, I'll begin with a study that explores a large, multi-institutional, longitudinal dataset of engineering undergraduates. I'll describe who is currently attracted to engineering and will highlight how the field of electrical engineering fares compared to other engineering disciplines. Then, I'll describe a promising approach to change the demographics of the electrical engineering student body and to increase the learning that happens in the undergraduate curriculum. The approach entails reframing electrical engineering from a purely technical discipline to one which is socio-technical, and I'll present modules we've developed for Circuits that accomplish this.

Friday, April 5
9:30 - 10:30 am CT in Kiewit Hall A251 or via ZOOM