Training beyond the classroom: Case Study of the Impact of a Undergraduate Teaching Assistantship program
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Author/Creator ORCID
Date
2023-01-03
Type of Work
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Citation of Original Publication
J. Gurganus, M. R. Blorstad and M. M. Headley, "Training beyond the classroom: Case Study of the Impact of a Undergraduate Teaching Assistantship program," 2022 IEEE IFEES World Engineering Education Forum - Global Engineering Deans Council (WEEF-GEDC), Cape Town, South Africa, 2022, pp. 1-5, doi: 10.1109/WEEF-GEDC54384.2022.9996214.
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Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
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Abstract
In an effort to continue to help provide various
and thriving experiences to engineering undergraduates and
help increase retention, a mid-size university uses a high impact
practice of using peer teachers in the classroom. It is a standard
practice to use graduate teaching assistants in most areas of
higher education, especially in engineering classes, discussions,
labs or just to hold office hours and grade. However, an
increasing number of universities have adopted and leveraged
undergraduate teaching assistants as it demonstrates to
effectively improve students’ grades, retention, student selfefficacy, and provide some financial relief to academic
institutions [1]. The impact of using peer teachers is especially
evident in the first and second years in engineering. Students
who participate in the role are third year or above demonstrate
expertise, leadership, and an interest in teaching as part of their
development. At a mid-size minority serving institution, an
undergraduate teaching assistant (termed as teaching fellow)
was developed informally in 2005 in the mechanical and
chemical engineering department and expanded in 2017 to the
entire College of Engineering and Informational Technology. In
this case study, alumni and current teaching fellows were
interviewed to assess the impact of their experiences and how it
influenced their educational experience in their major and
current career. Several themes were discovered to include
increased professional and personal skill sets, self-efficacy in
engineering, motivation to participate in the program, impact
on career, creation of community and improvements needed to
the program. A few teaching fellows decided to continue to be a
p12 teacher.