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Browsing by Author "Frank, Mary Ann"
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Item From Design Inception through Project Completion: Constructing a Secure Homestead in Swaziland, Africa(American Society for Engineering Education, 2016-06) Huffman, Beth; Reker, Kelsey Lee; Frank, Mary Ann; Department of Engineering Technology, School of Engineering and TechnologyThis paper documents the year-long scholastic and experiential journey of a multi-disciplinary, student design team from schematic design through construction administration. The student team worked in tandem with an Architectural Technology professor designing and building a sustainable and secure homestead, or one-room home, in Swaziland, Africa. This experience gave students exposure to the design process from project programming through construction completion, and this paper will focus on describing and documenting both the student and professor experiences for the project’s entirety. The student’s perspective will focus on personal involvement and perceived academic outcomes from the project exposure, while the professor’s perspective will focus on the learning outcomes from the student team involved in the process, as well as extrapolating how this experience could be applied elsewhere.Item Student Success in Themed-Learning Communities(American Society for Engineering Education, 2021) Frank, Mary Ann; Morrow, Brenda; Interior Design Technology, School of Engineering & TechnologyIn a Themed-Learning Community students enroll with a cohort group of peers in a series of courses designed for their major area of study. Typically, these are freshmen students in their first semester of post-secondary education. They are new to their university, their campus, and their field of study. In theory, by enrolling with other students who are also beginning their college careers they benefit from comradery, a shared set of experiences in multiple classes, and a team of faculty members who work together to facilitate the themed-learning experience. At the conclusion of the freshman year, the hypothesis is that higher student retention will be realized by the cohort of Themed-Learning Community students as compared to other freshman-year students in the same program of study. The Themed-Learning Community program studied in this paper seeks to realize the benefits and minimize potential disadvantages of participation by its freshmen students. It analyzes results of numbers of students who continue in the field of study based on their participation in a Themed-Learning Community compared to students in traditional course enrollment who complete the same series of courses outside of the Themed-Learning Community framework. Both objective assessment instruments as well as student and faculty perception will be analyzed in addition to final retention results. After an initial offering of three successive years with freshmen classes in Themed-Learning Communities, the program’s faculty members seek to identify improvements to the program as well as to determine its level of success in student learning and improved student retention after the freshman year.Item With a Little Help from our Friends: Teaching Collectives as Lifelines in Troublesome Times(Indiana University, 2021-04) Jettpace, Lynn; Miller, Leslie; Frank, Mary Ann; Clemons, Michelle; Goldfarb, Nancy; English, School of Liberal ArtsEmergencies have a way of changing the orientation of faculty from academic projects to surviving the unknown and coping with change. Many faculty members, because they frequently work independently, often lack support structures through which they can engage in mutual aid during times of crisis. The authors recently discovered that having a community of colleagues with whom to share ideas has made them more resilient to changing circumstances. While the Civility Community of Practice at IUPUI has been meeting since 2014 as an interdisciplinary research collective, it transitioned to a weekly online teaching and support seminar in response to the university’s unexpected move to online course delivery on account of the pandemic. This reflective essay will examine the transformative possibilities of a teaching collective in the face of crisis. From the onset of the crisis, each of the authors had personal and teaching challenges that the group’s Zoom meetings resolved. The weekly meetings involved sharing teaching tips but also basic survival strategies, tips they never imagined discussing with professional colleagues. In addition to discussing the elements that make a successful learning community, this essay will include reflections by each of the five community members about how the Zoom meetings helped them adapt to and navigate their personal and professional lives during the pandemic. In these individual reflections, the authors will discuss how moving their courses online challenged their teaching practices, motivated their experimentation with Zoom, and transformed their online classroom to impact the student learning experience.Item With a Little Help from our Friends: Teaching Collectives as Lifelines in Troublesome Times(IUPUI, 2021) Clemons, Michelle Lynn; Frank, Mary Ann; Jettpace, Lynn; Miller, Leslie; Kelley School of Business - IndianapolisFaculty members often lack support structures in which they can support each other in crisis. The authors recently discovered that sharing ideas with a community of colleagues has made them more resilient. The Civility Community of Practice (CoP) at IUPUI transitioned to a weekly online teaching and support seminar in response to the university’s unexpected move to online course delivery on account of the pandemic.Item With a Little Help from our Friends: Teaching Collectives as Lifelines in Troublesome Times(Indiana University, 2021-04-09) Jettpace, Lynn; Miller, Leslie; Frank, Mary Ann; Clemons, Michelle Lynn; Goldfarb, Nancy; Kelley School of Business - IndianapolisEmergencies have a way of changing the orientation of faculty from academic projects to surviving the unknown and coping with change. Many faculty members, because they frequently work independently, often lack support structures through which they can engage in mutual aid during times of crisis. The authors recently discovered that having a community of colleagues with whom to share ideas has made them more resilient to changing circumstances. While the Civility Community of Practice at IUPUI has been meeting since 2014 as an interdisciplinary research collective, it transitioned to a weekly online teaching and support seminar in response to the university’s unexpected move to online course delivery on account of the pandemic. This reflective essay will examine the transformative possibilities of a teaching collective in the face of crisis. From the onset of the crisis, each of the authors had personal and teaching challenges that the group’s Zoom meetings resolved. The weekly meetings involved sharing teaching tips but also basic survival strategies, tips they never imagined discussing with professional colleagues. In addition to discussing the elements that make a successful learning community, this essay will include reflections by each of the five community members about how the Zoom meetings helped them adapt to and navigate their personal and professional lives during the pandemic. In these individual reflections, the authors will discuss how moving their courses online challenged their teaching practices, motivated their experimentation with Zoom, and transformed their online classroom to impact the student learning experience.