STEP 2011: Institutional Culture, Institutional Change & Institutionalization
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Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics Talent Expansion Program (STEP) 2011 Grantees Meeting, Washington, D.C., March 17-18, 2011
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Item Open Access Meeting Packet/Handouts for STEP 2011 Grantees Meeting(National Science Foundation, 2011-03-17) Udovic, DanielContents include Microsoft office and PDF versions of the handouts that were included in the meeting packet for the 2011 STEP Grantees Meeting. These include the meeting agenda, descriptions of the breakout sessions, the poster session organizer, poster abstracts, and lists of presenters and of participants.Item Open Access Lessons Learned: Best Practices and Strategies for Supporting Students’ Success in Science and Engineering(National Science Foundation, 2011-03-18) Hrabowski, Freeman IIIIn the light of increasingly competitive global markets and rapid technological and demographic changes at home, it is imperative that America produce many more well prepared scientists and engineers from all backgrounds. Freeman Hrabowski has served as the Principal Investigator on his university’s National Science Foundation ADVANCE grant, and he chaired the National Academies Committee that recently produced the report, “Expanding Underrepresented Minority Participation: America’s Science and Technology Talent at the Crossroads.” For decades a champion of expanding STEM participation by students from all backgrounds, Hrabowski will address best practices and lessons learned in STEM education, particularly as they relate to the transformation of institutional cultures.Item Open Access Meeting Information for STEP 2011 Grantees Meeting(National Science Foundation, 2011-03-17) Udovic, DanielPresentation includes meeting agenda and structure, acknowledgment of participants and Advisory Board, description of breakout sessions, panels and workshops and preview of new website.Item Restricted Becoming Institutional Change Agents in STEM(National Science Foundation, 2011-03-17) Dowd, Alicia C.In releasing its 2010 report Preparing the Next Generation of STEM Innovators, the National Science Board emphasized the need to make STEM fields more inclusive of underrepresented students and called for a “renewed aspiration towards equity and excellence in U.S. STEM education.” The Board recommended greater investment in professional development for STEM educators to assist them in identifying talented students from diverse backgrounds, creating “supportive learning ecosystem(s),” and offering curricula based on inquiry-based learning and real-world problem-solving. This presentation describes an emerging science of agency and “praxis” in STEM focused on understanding the kinds of professional development STEM educators need to become “institutional agents” on behalf of underrepresented racial-ethnic groups in STEM. Based on case study research supported by the National Science Foundation, the Center for Urban Education at the University of Southern California has characterized the role of “institutional agents” in STEM and is now evaluating the factors that enable STEM educators to act as the agents of equity and excellence called for in the Board’s report.