NSF INCLUDES DDLP: Increasing Minority Presence within Academia through Continuous Training (IMPACT)

September 15th, 2017 - August 31st, 2019 | PROJECT

Underrepresented minorities (URMs) are less than 10% of engineering faculty, despite comprising nearly a third of the nation's population. A common explanation for their disproportionate representation, at the engineering faculty level, is related to a lack of access to effective mentorship from other faculty. This NSF INCLUDES Design and Development Launch Pilot project will expand a new mentoring and advocacy-networking paradigm to bring together two stakeholder groups: (1) underrepresented minorities (URMs) who are engineering faculty and (2) well-regarded (primarily non-URM) emeriti/retired engineering faculty. A previously-funded NSF project found that this mentor-mentee pairing was viewed favorable by both parties and beneficial, particularly by the URM engineering faculty. Because of these results, the investigators proposed to scale, test, and evaluate the approach on a broader scale by creating national infrastructural network partners to help increase capacity to serve a greater number of URM engineering faculty and to introduce tele-mentoring and training models to serve URM faculty who work in remote geographical locations with very little access to mentors.

The project will use a multi-phased phenomenological, mixed method research design to gain greater understanding of the ways in which the URM faculty and emeriti faculty experience the opportunities afforded by the project. Further, the investigators plan to collect data to examine how project participants perceive and experience conventional, direct communications (e.g., telephone calls, e-mail, and in-person meetings)through the mentoring process versus the use of Embodied Conversational Agents (ECAs), anthropomorphic interface agents that engage a user in real-time dialogue by using verbal-nonverbal channels to emulate the in-person experience. This project has the potential to broaden participation in the engineering professoriate and opens up new possibilities for supporting URM engineering faculty.

Project Website(s)

(no project website provided)

Team Members

Comas Haynes, Principal Investigator, Georgia Tech
Valerie Conley, Co-Principal Investigator
Sylvia Mendez, Co-Principal Investigator
Kinnis Gosha, Co-Principal Investigator
Rosario Gerhardt, Co-Principal Investigator

Funders

Funding Source: NSF
Funding Program: NSF INCLUDES
Award Number: 1744500
Funding Amount: $299,856.00

Tags

Access and Inclusion: Ethnic | Racial
Audience: Educators | Teachers | Evaluators | Learning Researchers | Scientists
Discipline: Education and learning science | Engineering
Resource Type: Project Descriptions
Environment Type: Higher Education Programs | Media and Technology | Professional Development | Conferences | Networks | Professional Development and Workshops | Resource Centers and Networks