CS LSAMP scholars attended conference

Four of Cincinnati State’s 13 LSAMP scholars attended the Ohio LSAMP Alliance Conference in Columbus on Feb. 17-19, along with Academic Advisor Carole Wolmerdorf, Ralph Whaley (EET Program Chair), Kim McMillan (EIT Assoc Dean), and Curtis Maples (Adjunct, EET Board Member and Engineering Manager and Recruiter at XXX).

https://ohiolsamp.org/2022-ohio-lsamp-conference

This is from the program website: https://ohiolsamp.org/overview

The Ohio LSAMP Alliance was established in September 2013. Presently, the alliance includes 6 four-year institutions (Central State University, the University of Cincinnati, Cleveland State University, Miami University, The Ohio State University, and Wright State University) and 4 community colleges (Cincinnati State Technical and Community College, Columbus State Community College, Cuyahoga Community College, and Sinclair Community College). In addition, the Alliance works collaboratively with community partners, an Industry Advisory Board, and other NSF-supported programs. The Ohio LSAMP Alliance is housed in the Office of Diversity and Inclusion (ODI) at The Ohio State University.

There is an identified need in Ohio for programs to improve retention of underrepresented college students, primarily from the first to the second year of college. The Ohio LSAMP Alliance works collaboratively with industry and community partners to institutionalize effective recruitment and retention programs. In addition, each institution will provide programming that includes advisement and counseling, residential summer bridge and early arrival programs, undergraduate research internships with stipends, faculty and peer mentoring, and tutoring or supplemental instruction.

Objectives

  • Foster a partnership among alliance institutions, working with industry and community partners, which results in programming that is collaborative, effective, and sustainable
  • Heighten the awareness of opportunities in STEM disciplines and increase the recruitment of underrepresented minority students to STEM majors at partner institutions
  • Provide early and sustained programs to facilitate the critical transition from high school to college at each partner institution
  • Increase the retention of first- and second-year underrepresented minority students in STEM disciplines
  • Improve the disciplinary socialization of underrepresented minority students in STEM disciplines, particularly by providing undergraduate research opportunities through the baccalaureate
  • Provide pathways for smooth transitions from community colleges to four-year institutions