04848nam 2200601I 450 991081034490332120240612215427.01-78743-405-21-78769-953-6(CKB)4100000007332373(MiAaPQ)EBC5625407(UtOrBLW)9781787434059(EXLCZ)99410000000733237320190118d2019 uy 0engurun|||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierCulturally responsive strategies for reforming STEM higher education turning the TIDES on inequity /edited by Kelly M. Mack, Kate Winter, and Melissa SotoFirst edition.United Kingdom :Emerald Publishing,2019.1 online resource (300 pages)Includes index.1-78769-954-4 1-78743-406-0 Includes bibliographical references and index.Prelims -- That none shall perish -- Theoretical underpinnings of TIDES: Priorities, processes, and promise -- Cybernetic girls can be pinky: strategies to recruit and retain Latinas into STEM in the context of faculty-to-student empowerment -- Changing faculty culture to promote diversity, equity, and inclusion in STEM Education -- In search of hidden but accessible truths: coding for all at Queens College -- Fostering an environment for all students to succeed in computer science: integrating culturally responsive pedagogies with curricula redesign -- Culturally responsive strategies for addressing recruitment and retention of women in STEM: online modules for building STEM majors' computational skills -- Culturally responsive computational science through research experience in core-curriculum courses -- A journey of discovery -- Equity through access to computer science learning at a small liberal arts college -- Challenging us to change -- The rising TIDE of Wright State University: context, connections, and consequences -- Music as the icebreaker for learning to code -- Interventions addressing recruitment and retention of underrepresented minority groups in undergraduate STEM disciplines -- Strengthening computer and mathematical sciences engagement and learning -- Measurement and assessment -- Index.By the end of this decade, the U.S. economy will annually create hundreds of thousands of new jobs requiring a bachelor's degree in STEM fields, particularly computer science. This increasing need for computer scientists, coupled with an inconsistent agenda for managing dramatic shifts in the demographic landscape of higher education, compromises our competitiveness in scientific discovery and innovation. As higher education seeks to address this issue, the need for more culturally responsive approaches to undergraduate STEM teaching also increases. This book uses the power of reflection, storytelling, and data to holistically demonstrate the effectiveness of a novel professional development intervention for STEM faculty - Teaching to Increase Diversity and Equity in STEM, or TIDES - that significantly increased faculty self-efficacy in implementing culturally responsive pedagogies. In it, the editors combine the authentic voices of authors from multiple institutional contexts and individual worldviews to assimilate and synthesize broad theoretical concepts into practice in usable ways, while also offering concrete applicable examples of strategies and solutions that serve as an important comprehensive reference for all undergraduate educators and administrators. This practical guide provides a durable platform for building capacity in understanding of the cultural complexities and institutional realities of recruiting and retaining diverse students in STEM, particularly the computer sciences.ScienceStudy and teachingTechnologyStudy and teachingEngineeringStudy and teachingMathematicsStudy and teachingEducation, HigherCross-cultural studiesMulticultural educationEducationMulticultural EducationbisacshScienceStudy and teaching.TechnologyStudy and teaching.EngineeringStudy and teaching.MathematicsStudy and teaching.Education, HigherMulticultural education.EducationMulticultural Education.507.1Mack Kelly M.Winter KateSoto Melissaactive 2019,UtOrBLWUtOrBLWBOOK9910810344903321Culturally responsive strategies for reforming STEM higher education4098436UNINA