Engineering Education Professor Receives Funding from GEAR UP Initiative

March 3, 2023

Dr. Marissa Tsugawa, a research professor in the Department of Engineering Education at Utah State University, recently received a $75,000 grant from the nonprofit Gaining Early Awareness and Readiness for Undergraduate Programs, or GEAR UP.

GEAR UP is a highly competitive grant program that empowers local partnerships between K-12 schools, institutions of higher education, state agencies and community organizations. The program seeks to achieve three goals: increasing the postsecondary expectations and readiness of students, improving high school graduation and postsecondary enrollment rates. and raising the knowledge of postsecondary options, preparation and financing for families and students.

Dr. Marissa Tsugawa is an engineering education researcher and professor studying neurodiversity and engineering identity.

Dr. Marissa Tsugawa is an engineering education researcher and professor studying neurodiversity and engineering identity.

Over the next three semesters, Tsugawa will collaborate with and train high school STEM teachers to develop their own engineering activities for science, technology, engineering and mathematics courses that involve design and problem solving for students.

“This work will prepare STEM teachers to teach engineering in secondary education, which can prepare k-12 students for college,” they said. “Starting these lessons at a younger age will make these students more comfortable about an undergraduate education and increase their confidence.”

One of the projects Dr. Tsugawa is working on with graduate student Leslie Brown is on house insulation. Students in high schools across Utah will learn about heat transfer through a project designed to show how heat moves around a building and what materials will better insulate a home.

Tsugawa is collaborating with STEM teachers at Logan High School and two American Preparatory Academy high schools in the Salt Lake City area to integrate engineering activities in their classrooms. APA is a charter school dedicated to providing better opportunities for their students.

A summer workshop is also in development to teach high school teachers how to develop their own activities in the classroom.

“I am excited to work on these lesson plans with teachers and encourage student participation,” said Tsugawa. “Hopefully this means we will see more engineers in the future!”

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Writer: Sydney Dahle, sydney.dahle@usu.edu, 435-797-7512

Contact: Dr. Marissa Tsugawa, marissa.tsugawa@usu.edu, 435-797-1248