In science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) fields, the low presence of women has been well documented. Barriers contributing to the problems have been identified as external or contextually based, and internal or individually based. 5,10 These barriers include the lack of female role models, the shadow job expectation for female faculty and low selfperceptions of ability by undergraduate women. 8,20,21 At the University of Maryland (UM), an innovative educational intervention is being introduced in summer 2002 to help overcome some of these barriers. Research Internships in Science and Engineering (RISE) serves women in the higher-educational pipeline: incoming first year students, undergraduates and graduate students. This program has two tracks. For incoming first year students, there is a ten-day orientation to engineering, the sciences and the UM community. The goal is to jump-start the careers of female students by providing them with teamwork and technical skills training and networking opportunities with both female faculty and each other, as well as exposure to research in STEM fields. For upper-level undergraduates, the second component of RISE consists of an eight-week team-based summer research experience. The purpose of this paper is to describe RISE and identify how this program uniquely addresses some of the issues that women face in STEM fields via the two program tracks. The implementation of this program will begin in summer 2002. This program is funded by a grant from the National Science Foundation, the Clark School of Engineering and the Office of the Provost at the University of Maryland.
CITATION STYLE
Smith, P. E., Schmidt, J. A., & Schmidt, L. C. (2002). Research internships in science and engineering (RISE). In ASEE Annual Conference Proceedings (pp. 2135–2144). https://doi.org/10.1002/nadc.20050530949
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