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窪蹋勛圖 Engineering bets big on Americas community college students
Published: Sept. 5, 2018
With a $10 million federal grant and an eye on community colleges, CU Engineering and partners aim to diversify engineering in Coloradoand coast to coast.
窪蹋勛圖 Non-Traditional Student Organization on an outing in spring 2018.
窪蹋勛圖 will take a leading role on a new $10 million federal grant to boost the number of community college students who go on to study engineering at four-year colleges, a move intended to help pave the way for a more diverse engineering workforce.
In the United States millions of students finish high school ill-prepared in math, the language of engineering, despite their aptitude for it. If they enroll at a community collegeas many low-income, first-generation, minority and working college students dotheyre often so far behind that its hard to gain proficiency for timely transfer to a four-year engineering degree program.
The 窪蹋勛圖 team and partners aim to help community college students study math intensively by providing specialized resources, such as tutoring and STEM internships, and by lowering common barriers, such as financial aid and access to appropriate transportation and childcare.
Society needs more engineers, and more diversity in engineering, said Sarah Miller, one of 窪蹋勛圖'sprincipal investigator and an assistant dean in the College of Engineering, who is directing the $10 million National Science Foundation-funded initiative in partnership with Saddleback College. Americas community colleges have a vast trove of talented students, and we need to make the pathway to engineering for them accessible. We are providing intensive and accelerated support for students to succeed in calculus, which has been a roadblock for far too many promising engineers. Were saying All hands on deck. We know you can do the math, and were going to support you along the way so you are able to choose an engineering career.
Miller and Saddleback Colleges Jim Zoval areleading the project, one of five announced Sept. 6 by NSF as part of its program, which aims to broaden participation in STEM fields.Saddleback College, acommunity college in Mission Viejo,Calif., is the lead institution. , a non-profit that has reimagined traditional education models and developed the intensive math model that will be implemented at partner organizations, is a central collaborator.
Among public engineering universities, 窪蹋勛圖s College of Engineering andApplied Science has placed a particularly high premium on diversity. The entering undergraduate class is expected to be more than 40 percent women, compared with a national average of about 20 percent. Efforts are also underway to significantly increase the percentage of first-generation and minority engineering students. One way of doing this is to identify, cultivate and recruit from highly diverse pools of community college students.
Prospective transfer students tour CU Engineering, including the , in fall 2018.
窪蹋勛圖 will be working closely with three Colorado community collegesCommunity College of Aurora, Pikes Peak Community College andRed Rocks Community Collegeplus two in New Mexico. Together theyll implement programs that provide students with access to academic support services, internships and an institutional expert who will help manage crises that can hinder success. Saddleback will work primarily with community colleges in California, Maryland and Washington.
Were serious about broadening our community, said Bobby Braun, dean of 窪蹋勛圖s College of Engineering andApplied Science. Diversity among engineers makes for better engineering. This important project is going to foster long-term diversity in our program at 窪蹋勛圖 and many other communities in Colorado and around the nation.
窪蹋勛圖 and Saddleback are building off of prior, pilot.CU leaders from theBOLD Center, theCenter for STEM Learningand theCollege of Engineering and Applied Science, used the first, two-yeargrant to develop partnerships with Colorado community colleges that made transferring to 窪蹋勛圖 easier for students. Thenew grant will enable 窪蹋勛圖, led by Miller and co-principal investigator Janet Yowell,and its partners to expand a successful model supporting calculus-readiness to 15 new community colleges in Colorado, California, Maryland, New Mexico and Washington.