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The math excellence workshop

Abstract

This paper describes the first two years of the Clemson University College of Engineering's Math Excellence Workshop, a program administered by Westinghouse Electric Corporation, Savannah River Site, and funded by the Department of Energy. The objective of the program is to prepare minority students for technical/scientific study, with the goal of increasing minority retention in the College of Engineering, Twenty-three African American students, all of whom had been accepted into the College of Engineering Fall 1990 freshman class, took part in the first year of the program. The contract paid for room, board, tuition, fees, books, and supplies for the students to live on campus and take a precalculus math course. In addition, the students attended a special honors workshop designed to prepare them to study technical material effectively. Twenty of the 23 students earned As or Bs in the precalculus class. All participants indicated that they felt confident of their ability to succeed academically at Clemson. At the end of the session, twenty of the students were still planning to major in engineering. The program was repeated the following summer with 24 students from the 1991 freshman class. Twelve of the students earned A's or B's in the precalculus  More>>
Authors:
Lasser, Susan J.S.; Snelsire, Robert W [1] 
  1. College of Engineering, Clemson University, Clemson, SC (United States)
Publication Date:
Jul 01, 1992
Product Type:
Conference
Reference Number:
RN05075086; TVI: 3626
Resource Relation:
Conference: Symposium on waste management '92, Tucson, AZ (United States), 1-5 Mar 1992; Other Information: 1 tab; PBD: 1992; Related Information: In: Waste management '92: working towards a cleaner environment: Waste processing, transportation, storage and disposal, technical programs and public education. Volumes 1 and 2, Technology and programs for radioactive waste management and environmental restoration: Proceedings, by Post, Roy G. [Arizona Univ., Tucson, AZ (United States)] (ed.), 1926 pages.
Subject:
12 MANAGEMENT OF RADIOACTIVE WASTES, AND NON-RADIOACTIVE WASTES FROM NUCLEAR FACILITIES; EDUCATIONAL FACILITIES; ENGINEERING; MATHEMATICS; MINORITY GROUPS; NUCLEAR INDUSTRY; TRAINING; US DOE
OSTI ID:
20615580
Research Organizations:
American Nuclear Society, Fuel Cycle and Waste Management Division (United States); American Society of Mechanical Engineers, New York, NY (United States); USDOE, Washington, DC (United States); Arizona Univ., College of Engineering and Mines, Tucson, AZ (United States); International Atomic Energy Agency, Vienna (Austria)
Country of Origin:
IAEA
Language:
English
Other Identifying Numbers:
TRN: XA05C0510058719
Submitting Site:
INIS
Size:
page(s) 813-815
Announcement Date:
Feb 09, 2008

Citation Formats

Lasser, Susan J.S., and Snelsire, Robert W. The math excellence workshop. IAEA: N. p., 1992. Web.
Lasser, Susan J.S., & Snelsire, Robert W. The math excellence workshop. IAEA.
Lasser, Susan J.S., and Snelsire, Robert W. 1992. "The math excellence workshop." IAEA.
@misc{etde_20615580,
title = {The math excellence workshop}
author = {Lasser, Susan J.S., and Snelsire, Robert W}
abstractNote = {This paper describes the first two years of the Clemson University College of Engineering's Math Excellence Workshop, a program administered by Westinghouse Electric Corporation, Savannah River Site, and funded by the Department of Energy. The objective of the program is to prepare minority students for technical/scientific study, with the goal of increasing minority retention in the College of Engineering, Twenty-three African American students, all of whom had been accepted into the College of Engineering Fall 1990 freshman class, took part in the first year of the program. The contract paid for room, board, tuition, fees, books, and supplies for the students to live on campus and take a precalculus math course. In addition, the students attended a special honors workshop designed to prepare them to study technical material effectively. Twenty of the 23 students earned As or Bs in the precalculus class. All participants indicated that they felt confident of their ability to succeed academically at Clemson. At the end of the session, twenty of the students were still planning to major in engineering. The program was repeated the following summer with 24 students from the 1991 freshman class. Twelve of the students earned A's or B's in the precalculus class. (author)}
place = {IAEA}
year = {1992}
month = {Jul}
}