6398 Views (as of 05/2023)
  1. Sherri Turner
  2. https://www.cehd.umn.edu/edpsych/people/turne047/
  3. Associate Professor
  4. Presenter’s NSFRESOURCECENTERS
  5. University of Minnesota
  1. Mark Bellcourt
  2. https://www.cehd.umn.edu/undergraduate/bellcourt/
  3. Student Services Adviser
  4. Presenter’s NSFRESOURCECENTERS
  5. University of Minnesota
  1. Nicole Colston
  2. Assistant Research Professor
  3. Presenter’s NSFRESOURCECENTERS
  4. Oklahoma State University
  1. Sue Jacobs
  2. Professor
  3. Presenter’s NSFRESOURCECENTERS
  4. Oklahoma State University
  1. Sarah Johnson
  2. Visiting Assistant Professor
  3. Presenter’s NSFRESOURCECENTERS
  4. Oklahoma State University
  1. Gale Mason-Chagil
  2. Researcher and Evaluator
  3. Presenter’s NSFRESOURCECENTERS
  4. Cultural Inquiry Consulting
  1. James Smay
  2. Professor
  3. Presenter’s NSFRESOURCECENTERS
  4. Oklahoma State University

Towards Increasing Native American Engineering Faculty

NSF Awards: 1743329, 1743572

2019 (see original presentation & discussion)

Undergraduate, Graduate, Adult learners

This video describes a collaborative study by University of Minnesota and Oklahoma State University. In this study we develop a deeper understanding of the factors influencing Native Americans or Alaskan Natives (hereafter referred to as Native Americans) to pursue engineering and to enter and persist as engineering faculty. Only 0.4% of engineers are Native American (NACME, 2014), and even fewer engineering faculty (0.2%) are Native American (Yoder, 2012, 2014). Engineering faculty are important in order to attract and retain students in engineering because they provide positive socio-cultural experiences, role modeling, mentorship, and inclusive learning environments that reduce isolation. However, very little is known to this point about the factors that promote Native Americans’ entry into engineering, the engineering professorate or their persistence as engineering faculty members.

Our study involved in-depth ethnographic interviews, either individual interviews, or small group focus groups, and an online survey. All participants identified as Native American and were enrolled in or had graduated from an undergraduate or graduate engineering program, or were engineering faculty members.

In this video we describe findings from our study, including the barriers and supports to individuals who identify as Native American and who are engineering students or engineering faculty. The study was funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF EAGER EEC1743329/1443572).

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Discussion from the 2019 STEM for All Video Showcase (43 posts)
  • Icon for: Sue Jacobs

    Sue Jacobs

    Co-Presenter
    Professor
    May 12, 2019 | 05:26 p.m.

    Welcome to our video, “Towards Increasing Native American Engineering Faculty.” It is a brief snapshot of questions we focus on in a collaborative study by Oklahoma State University and the University of Minnesota. We have completed data collection and are currently analyzing project data. In this video we describe some findings including barriers and supports for individuals who identify as Native American who are engineering students or engineering faculty. The study was funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF EAGER EEC1743329/1443572).

    We hope you watch it, and comment and make suggestions on the questions we ask. To begin:

    · What do you think is the most important strategy to help Native American students consider engineering or the engineering faculty?

    · If you are a faculty member in engineering or another STEM area, what led you to become and persist as a faculty member? What do you like most?

    · Why do you think it is important for Native Americans to become engineers and engineering faculty members?

    We especially look forward to your comments and questions, and also your vote. Our teams also hope to watch others’ videos, network and learn about your projects.

    Sherri Turner, Ph.D., Associate Professor and PI, University of Minnesota

    Sue C. Jacobs, Ph.D., Professor and P.I., Oklahoma State University

     
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    Gale Mason-Chagil
  • Icon for: Mark Bellcourt

    Mark Bellcourt

    Co-Presenter
    Student Services Adviser
    May 13, 2019 | 09:20 a.m.

    Boozhoo!  As an Ojibwe person and more than 30 years of working with Indigenous peoples in higher education, I have become to understand that too often we are asked to check our culture at the door despite the fact that our ancestors have many millennia of scientific and engineering experience and knowledge.  However, in recent years western science has become more open to acknowledging that inclusive science is often better science.  I think Native students often do not connect with the western scientific curriculum that does not have relevance for them as a people or communities. Our ancestors respected mother earth, not exploited it.  Also, they helped nature to evolve naturally rather than forcing irreversible changes to accommodate our very short existence.   

     
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    Sherri Turner
    Gale Mason-Chagil
    Sue Jacobs
  • Icon for: Gale Mason-Chagil

    Gale Mason-Chagil

    Co-Presenter
    Researcher and Evaluator
    May 13, 2019 | 12:17 p.m.

    Good morning Mark,

    You highlight the different perspectives of Indigenous peopl's and western scientific curriculum very well.  I am heartened to hear that scientific fields are more open to other ways of knowing and learning, although as you said there is a long way to go.

    Do you have some examples about what a more openness to inclusive science looks like from your experience?  There are so many facets, I am curious which you have seen in your work. Thank you!

     
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    Sue Jacobs
    Sherri Turner
  • Icon for: Mark Bellcourt

    Mark Bellcourt

    Co-Presenter
    Student Services Adviser
    May 13, 2019 | 02:18 p.m.

    For example:  Although it was widely accepted that river manoomin (wild rice) is smaller gains, there is no research measuring the differences.  The problem is that manoomin ripens over time and it was difficult to accurately count and measure the grains.  A graduate student who wanted to research this question, first talked to an elder.  She explained her dilemma and asked for advice.  He told her about how when he was a child, his parents taught him how to tie or bundle manoomin stalks.  Bundling the stalks gave them stability, thus better maintaining grain over time. 

    Using her western knowledge of research methods and stories from the elder, she designed her project.    Using randomly selected locations in each of the beds, she tied together stalks of manoomin as described by the elder.  She also tied red tobacco ties to each of the bundles.  The elder told her that the sacred tobacco ties would signal others that these plants were special and they would avoid disturbing the plants.  The red tobacco ties also helped her find her samples more easily when harvesting time came around. 

    Because the manoomin was bundled and marked with red tobacco ties, she was able obtain scientifically consistent and reliable samples.  Her research methods stood up to the scrutiny of environmental journal editors.

     
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    Sue Jacobs
    Sherri Turner
  • Icon for: Gale Mason-Chagil

    Gale Mason-Chagil

    Co-Presenter
    Researcher and Evaluator
    May 14, 2019 | 10:02 a.m.

    Thank you for sharing, what a great example of inclusive research.  It honors and incorporates elder's knowledge in meaningful ways.  Thank you, Mark! 

     
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    Sue Jacobs
    Sherri Turner
  • Jun Fu

    Graduate Student
    May 13, 2019 | 10:17 a.m.

    Awesome research! It will be very interesting to unfold the various factors, strategies, and resources to promote Native American students towards future career in academia. 

     
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    Sherri Turner
    Sue Jacobs
  • Icon for: Sherri Turner

    Sherri Turner

    Lead Presenter
    Associate Professor
    May 13, 2019 | 10:38 a.m.

    Thanks for the great insight, Jun Fu. I am interested as well in thinking about how to understand these processes better.

     
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    Sue Jacobs
    Sherri Turner
  • Icon for: Sue Jacobs

    Sue Jacobs

    Co-Presenter
    Professor
    May 13, 2019 | 10:43 a.m.

    Mark, Excellent post. Inclusive science;respecting nature and indigenous values are increasingly critical for our planet and world. Rather than asking culture to be checked at the door as is done too often, I believe we need to find better ways of faciitating young people finding ways to bring their culture to science and engineering and possibly inspire them to help others do the same.

    The training grant at the University of Arizona deserves looking at in this regard; I just viewed.

    Sue’s Activity   See Related: Engineering Research / Evaluation Broadening Participation TORRAN ANDERSON University of Arizona    
    Indigenous Food, Energy, and Water Security and Sovereignty (Indige-FEWSS)

    NSF Awards: 1735173

     

     
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    Michelle Quirke
    Sherri Turner
  • Icon for: Irene Ngun

    Irene Ngun

    Associate Program Officer
    May 13, 2019 | 02:17 p.m.

    This is such an important study. There is some higher ed/pedagogy research that suggest that teaching approaches that integrate arts and humanities into STEM courses lead to positive educational outcomes (higher level of engagement, critical thinking, and communication skills) as well as higher retention and graduate rates. Perhaps if engineering learning is more contextualized and students can see themselves in the process of learning, they'd be more inclined to consider engineering/academic engineering as a career pathway. I also wonder if there are other disciplines in the STEM fields that we can learn from. Certainly no one field is doing a great job but I wonder if there is an opportunity to collaborate with other disciplines to find promising practices to broaden participation. 

     
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    Sue Jacobs
    Sherri Turner
  • Icon for: Sherri Turner

    Sherri Turner

    Lead Presenter
    Associate Professor
    May 13, 2019 | 04:40 p.m.

    I agree -- collaborating and contextualization across disciplines is key to making systemic changes. BTW - I really like your video.

     

     
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    Sue Jacobs
    Irene Ngun
    Sherri Turner
  • Icon for: Irene Ngun

    Irene Ngun

    Associate Program Officer
    May 13, 2019 | 04:46 p.m.

    Thank you, Sherri!

     
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    Sue Jacobs
    Sherri Turner
  • Icon for: Michelle Quirke

    Michelle Quirke

    Project Manager
    May 13, 2019 | 04:20 p.m.

    Excellent video to spark discussion around Native Representation in STEM! I would be interested to read articles or see more presentations on what the project has discovered and how they are moving the STEM education discussion into broader arenas. 

     
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    Sue Jacobs
    Sherri Turner
  • Icon for: Sherri Turner

    Sherri Turner

    Lead Presenter
    Associate Professor
    May 13, 2019 | 04:34 p.m.

    Thank you, Michelle. Please feel free to visit our webpage at https://innovation.umn.edu/native-american-engi... for additional information on presentations. We will be posting articles and other products as they are published on this site as well.

     
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    Michelle Quirke
    Sue Jacobs
    Sherri Turner
  • Rachel Kim

    Graduate Student
    May 14, 2019 | 03:34 p.m.

    This is a great video! As an international student, I would love to share my ideas on this question below. 

    What do you think is the most important strategy to help Native American students consider engineering or the engineering faculty?

    I think the crucial things for helping Native American students is to listen to their stories first and try to deeply understand them. There will be so many things that we do not see as non Native American students. I think trying to meet a lot of them to listen to each of her/his story will be helpful to understand who they are and what they need deeply. Also, making solutions together with them will be beneficial to them. Instead of being passive students, they can be also active solutions-makers together with researchers. 

     

    Thank you for reading my ideas. 

    Rachel Younglong Kim

     
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    Sherri Turner
    Sue Jacobs
  • Icon for: Mark Bellcourt

    Mark Bellcourt

    Co-Presenter
    Student Services Adviser
    May 14, 2019 | 03:50 p.m.

    Rachel:  I agree with you!  We need to listen to them and they allow them to find their own connections to STEM.  Indigenous people are very "place based" and when we allow them to make sense of STEM in relation to their communities, it will motivate them to pursue their education.

     
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    Sherri Turner
    Sue Jacobs
  • Icon for: Sherri Turner

    Sherri Turner

    Lead Presenter
    Associate Professor
    May 16, 2019 | 10:59 p.m.

    Rachel, I love this. It is so important to get our students engaged in shaping their own pathways, and I have found that students tend to know a lot more than we do many times when trying to solve issues such as helping them to consider engineering or the engineering faculty. Thank you so much for sharing your insights!!!!!

     
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    Sherri Turner
  • Icon for: Sue Jacobs

    Sue Jacobs

    Co-Presenter
    Professor
    May 14, 2019 | 03:57 p.m.

    Rachel, I also agree with you! Listening to iand learning from indigenous people is very important to advance STEM as well as to broaden participation in STEM.

     
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    Sherri Turner
  • Icon for: Nicole Colston

    Nicole Colston

    Co-Presenter
    Assistant Research Professor
    May 14, 2019 | 04:01 p.m.

    A next step for me after completing this exploratory project will be to better explore the role and nature of mentorship for Native American students.  What role do faculty play? How do near peer opportunities influence pre-college and college students attitudes? We need more nuanced portraits for how STEM interests and identity develop over time.

    I am so thankful for the NSF support and for the opportunity to be part of this research team!

     
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    Sherri Turner
    Sue Jacobs
  • Icon for: Kelli Paul

    Kelli Paul

    Researcher
    May 16, 2019 | 12:26 p.m.

    How do you hope to explore the role of faculty and near peer opportunities on influencing STEM interests and identity? Have you seen evidence of this influence as part of this project?

     
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    Sue Jacobs
  • Icon for: Nicole Colston

    Nicole Colston

    Co-Presenter
    Assistant Research Professor
    May 16, 2019 | 02:27 p.m.

    As mentioned many times in this discussion thread, place and tribal affiliation matter.  Here at OSU, we have started a research alliance and collaboration with the OK-LSAMP program which serves Native American students (30% of students) in STEM degrees in Oklahoma.  Our hope is to connect these students in pre-college mentoring in schools and science fairs, as well as start a PhD Camp program.

    A mentor was often cited in interviews with current faculty members, as well as early experiences with teaching, tutoring, and presenting. Great question!

     
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    Sherri Turner
    Michelle Quirke
  • Icon for: Michelle Quirke

    Michelle Quirke

    Project Manager
    May 16, 2019 | 02:42 p.m.

    I've worked with OK-LSAMP as a senior alliance. They have provided lots of useful material and guidance. 

     
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    Sue Jacobs
    Sherri Turner
  • Icon for: Jay Labov

    Jay Labov

    Facilitator
    Senior Advisor for Educaition and Communication (Retired
    May 14, 2019 | 11:15 p.m.

    Thank you very much for preparing and submitting this video. It describes some crucially important work. Your results will be very important in helping the engineering community specifically, and the larger STEM community think about (and, where necessary, rethink) what they are doing to educate students.

    The first thing that struck me after viewing the video was nicely captured in Mark Bellcourt's first sentence in his first post about leaving their culture at the door. We are always trying to figure out the best way to attract students to existing courses and programs and getting them motivated to become interested in what is being offered rather than seriously considering how courses, programs, and majors might be redesigned to place what is being learned in the context of what students see as being important to their own lives and communities. The learning research emphasizes that motivation and relevance are critical factors in promoting learning and retention. There are ways to make programs more community-focused and contextual while providing the kinds of concepts and competencies that professionals in a field consider as essential for success in that field. 

    Undergraduate research experiences may be one way to emphasize this connection. And there is ample evidence to show that such experiences can begin in the first year of college, if not sooner. As another example I would point to a project that is featured in a 2015 publication by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine on Integrating Discovery-Based Research into the Undergraduate Curriculum: Report of a Convocation. I was the staff director for that event. The project, the The Rock Art Stability Index, is described beginning on page 46. It is a collaboration between Mesa Community College and the National Park Service. It helps students learn techniques for preserving unique Native American cultural and creative records by classifying their
    condition on a numerical scale with a replicable system. While this isn't an engineering course, it illustrates how courses can be restructured to teach the important concepts of a discipline (in this case, Anthropology) while focusing on issues that are important to the students in the course. My opinion is that higher education at large needs to rethink how it can better work with students rather than typically asking them to figure out how to adapt to higher education's current protocols. 

    The report to which Irene Ngun refers was published by the National Academies in 2018: 

    The Integration of the Humanities and Arts with Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine in Higher Education: Branches from the Same Tree. 2018. https://www.nap.edu/catalog/24988. She and I both severed as staff for the study.

     
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    Sherri Turner
    Michelle Quirke
    Sue Jacobs
  • Icon for: Mark Bellcourt

    Mark Bellcourt

    Co-Presenter
    Student Services Adviser
    May 15, 2019 | 09:02 a.m.

    Miigwech Jay for your comments.  Too often mainstream higher education focuses on theory and concepts that have no real relevance to most people.  I really get frustrated by courses that are used to "weed" people out of STEM.  They tend to disproportionately impact first generation and other underrepresented groups.  I used to host a American Indian high school science summer program where we would teach geometry through "wiganoetry."  Learn about concepts through building a wigwam.

     
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    Sherri Turner
    Gale Mason-Chagil
    Sue Jacobs
  • Icon for: Sherri Turner

    Sherri Turner

    Lead Presenter
    Associate Professor
    May 14, 2019 | 11:52 p.m.

    Your comments are incredibly insightful, and we really need to work on building curriculum and extra-curricular activities around students' interests, values, and cultural beliefs and ways of being. Thank you for sharing these resources.

     
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    Sherri Turner
  • Icon for: Erin Kraal

    Erin Kraal

    Higher Ed Faculty
    May 15, 2019 | 08:38 a.m.

    Thanks for sharing this project.  Mark - I was struck by your comment about 'place-based' and how important that is.  Given how transient the US population is (in general - we move a lot!) and often separated from landscape and place communities are, does the study have any insights for incorporating this aspect into our educational programs/outreach in a more systematic way?

     
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    Sherri Turner
    Sue Jacobs
  • Icon for: Mark Bellcourt

    Mark Bellcourt

    Co-Presenter
    Student Services Adviser
    May 15, 2019 | 08:52 a.m.

    Erin, you are absolutely correct that we live in such a transient world.  That's one of the biggest barriers for tribal people.  Families are often skeptical of higher education - they fear their child will leave their communities and forget about their land, culture, and history.  That was one of the reasons that tribal colleges begin to emerge back in the 1990's - it gave people an option for higher education without having to leave their communities.

     
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    Erin Kraal
    Sue Jacobs
  • Icon for: Ivory Toldson

    Ivory Toldson

    Facilitator
    President and CEO
    May 15, 2019 | 12:21 p.m.

    Hello All! My name is Ivory Toldson, professor at Howard University, president of Quality Education for Minorities, and one of the facilitators for the STEM for All Video Showcase. The conversation is off to a great start and I will be chiming in with my own input this afternoon and over the next few days. I'm excited about what we can achieve for the next generation of STEM learners!

     
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  • Icon for: Nicole Colston

    Nicole Colston

    Co-Presenter
    Assistant Research Professor
    May 15, 2019 | 03:17 p.m.

    We will be at the 2019 ASEE Conference presenting the student findings.  Check us out:

    https://www.asee.org/public/conferences/140/registration/view_session?session_id=11261

     
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    Sherri Turner
    Sue Jacobs
  • Icon for: Torran Anderson

    Torran Anderson

    Community Engagement Coordinator
    May 15, 2019 | 06:26 p.m.

    Great to learn about your project! As part of the Indigenous Food, Energy, Water Security and Sovereignty (Indige-FEWSS) Project we've been collaborating with tribal colleges on Navajo Nation. In April, we visited Navajo Technical University's Fabrication Lab and saw how they are increasing indigenous student interest in engineering through access to top of the line equipment and hands on projects. If you're interested here's a link to their work:

    http://digitaltech.navajotech.edu/

     

    The projects the tribal college students were doing and their access to state of the art technology was impressive!

     
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  • Icon for: Nicole Colston

    Nicole Colston

    Co-Presenter
    Assistant Research Professor
    May 16, 2019 | 02:28 p.m.

    So cool!

     
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    Sue Jacobs
  • Icon for: Sue Jacobs

    Sue Jacobs

    Co-Presenter
    Professor
    May 15, 2019 | 06:31 p.m.

    Thank you so much,Torran. We will definitely check out the link!

     

     
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    Sue Jacobs
  • Icon for: Sue Jacobs

    Sue Jacobs

    Co-Presenter
    Professor
    May 15, 2019 | 06:38 p.m.

    Mark and Erin, your comments about place-based could also be community-based, tribe/nation-based, family-based. In interviews with Native American Faculty, many ended up as faculty where they are currently becaue they or family wanted to be closer to home, family, etc. Some talked about being lucky because they never had to leave their place.

     
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    Erin Kraal
  • Icon for: Judith Dilts

    Judith Dilts

    Facilitator
    Professor Emerita of Biology and Retired Associate Dean, College of Science and Mathematics
    May 16, 2019 | 12:52 a.m.

    Thanks for this good work. Your study will provide a framework for other STEM disciplines. You mention the need for mentors to support students who wish to become a faculty member or who might not realize the options such a career might allow, etc. I wondered if you have any mentor training programs and/or have identified a cadre of folks who might serve a mentors?

     
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    Sue Jacobs
  • Icon for: Nicole Colston

    Nicole Colston

    Co-Presenter
    Assistant Research Professor
    May 16, 2019 | 02:34 p.m.

    Here at OSU, we have several scholars programs for undergraduates that might provide some answers to our questions about the role and nature of mentorship.  We are partnering with the OK-LSAMP program to look at the broader question of STEM identity development and career awareness, as 30% of their students are Native American.  There will be mentorship opportunities with some of the programs we aim to incorporate like PhD Camp (faculty to student) and science fair (near-peer).

     

    It is clear mentorship is important, I would be interested in any thoughts or references that might help tease out the why, how, and who questions. Thanks for the great question!

     

     
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  • Icon for: Ivory Toldson

    Ivory Toldson

    Facilitator
    President and CEO
    May 16, 2019 | 12:52 p.m.

    Thank you for sharing! I found your video to be both interesting and informative.

    Knowing that the cultures within this population can vary significantly depending upon the tribal culture, I am curious to know what efforts were made to create a unifying environment for these students? What challenges have you faced developing relationships with this population (e.g. establishing trust)? 

     
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    Sue Jacobs
  • Icon for: Nicole Colston

    Nicole Colston

    Co-Presenter
    Assistant Research Professor
    May 16, 2019 | 02:47 p.m.

    This was an exploratory research study, so we did not implement programs or outreach per se. However, one successful strategy for developing relationships was to recruit at regional and national AISES meetings.  We adopted 'Family Engineering' activities to engage visitors in hands on play and to start conversations about the connections between culture and engineering. 

    As you can imagine, the small number of Native American engineering faculty created a challenge to recruitment too! The small n's make it hard to 'generalize'.  Rather than generalizing, it seems that research in NAAN and STEM needs to be contextual by accounting for differences due to tribal affiliation or geography or even academic environment.

    Good questions!

     
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    Ivory Toldson
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  • Icon for: Sue Jacobs

    Sue Jacobs

    Co-Presenter
    Professor
    May 16, 2019 | 03:20 p.m.

    Ivory, great question. As Nicole indicated, this was an exploratory NSF EAGEER project. We focused primarily on AISES Regions 4 and 5, going to the National Conference, two Region 4 conferences and one Region 5 conference. We primarily did individual structured qualitative interviews with faculty and individual structured interviews or focus groups with students. We also collected quantiative data. 

    At Oklahoma State, we continue to strengthen our networks and relationships with differenct STEM and Native American Indian/Indigenous research and training in the area. 

     

     
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    Ivory Toldson
  • Icon for: Sherri Turner

    Sherri Turner

    Lead Presenter
    Associate Professor
    May 17, 2019 | 12:00 a.m.

    Dr. Toldson, thank you for your questions and insights. I have worked with Native American students for 25 years -- and others on our team (e.g., Dr. Bellcourt, for example) have been working with Native American students their entire careers. Your comments about establishing trust with individuals and families are so important. Establishing trust helps to ensure the integrity of the project, and helps to ensure that there are positive outcomes for the people we seek to serve. My insight on this is that establishing trusting relationships with the Native American community at large is incredibly important. Since we are interconnected, what our elders, leaders, tribal members, and extended families and friends believe and need are so important, and are often considered even more strongly than what we as individuals want. I think that is the beauty of Native American cultures. That being said, one of my concerns in helping Native Americans, as a group, consider and enter into engineering and into the engineering faculty is sharing relevant information that shows how engineering can be used in a way that respects our ways of being, supports our values and beliefs, and also promotes our students' successful matriculation, graduation, and professional engagement in engineering. Our partner in the EAGER grant, the American Indian Science and Engineering Society (AISES), does an excellent job of this, and they have engendered the trust of families and communities across the nation.

     
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    Sherri Turner
  • Icon for: Suzanna Rose

    Suzanna Rose

    Higher Ed Administrator
    May 19, 2019 | 04:32 p.m.

    Thank you for doing this important work and for building the trusting relationships that it requires. I agree with other comments that too often the content and structure of the STEM disciplines do not engage the "non-normative" STEM student, "normative" meaning White male student. We find similarly that the climate of STEM departments are not as engaging for women or men of color. As Irene and Jay mentioned, integrative undergraduate education as presented in the National Academies report may be one solution. In the meantime, in our ADVANCE IT grant, we are trying to address faculty attitudes through our Bystander Leadership program that is aimed at reducing gender and racial bias and increasing inclusion among faculty. We hope this will benefit the students by making the faculty more aware of their implicit biases and more sensitive to their impact on students. Have you done any work with faculty more generally to better enable them to be effective mentors for the Native American students - or do you primarily work with faculty that have already made the connections with them?  

     
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    Sherri Turner
  • Icon for: Sherri Turner

    Sherri Turner

    Lead Presenter
    Associate Professor
    May 19, 2019 | 04:58 p.m.

    Suzanna, It sounds like you are doing incredible work. I am really interested in your Bystander Leadership program, and want to learn more about it. Currently, we have been exploring those factors that encourage Native American participation in engineering and in the engineering faculty through our BPE Eager Project. In my department, however, and in other areas in which we are working, we are looking for models and methods to enable effective mentorship for Native Americans and other underrepresented students as well. Thanks for sharing these resources with us.

     
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    Sherri Turner
  • Icon for: R. Bruce Mattingly

    R. Bruce Mattingly

    Higher Ed Administrator
    May 20, 2019 | 01:54 p.m.

    Congratulations on a very worthwhile project. Many of us are looking for ways to increase participation in STEM fields from under-represented groups, and I am sure that we will have much to learn from your work.

     
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    Sue Jacobs
  • Icon for: Sue Jacobs

    Sue Jacobs

    Co-Presenter
    Professor
    May 20, 2019 | 02:12 p.m.

    Thank you, Dr. Mattingly. It is clear from this showcase that we all can learn from one another!

     

  • Icon for: Sue Jacobs

    Sue Jacobs

    Co-Presenter
    Professor
    May 20, 2019 | 07:34 p.m.

    Thanks to everyone who visited and commented on our video and project. Good exchange of ideas and networking. Now back to staying safe in the current Oklahoma weather!

     

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