Claire L. Felbinger Award for Diversity and Inclusion

2023 Claire L. Felbinger Award for Diversity and Inclusion recipient Jenna P. Carpenter.

About the Award

The Claire L. Felbinger Award for Diversity and Inclusion is presented to recognize educational units, individuals, associations, and firms for extraordinary success in achieving diversity in the technological segments of our society.

Claire L. Felbinger

As a Public Member on our Board of Directors from 1998 to 2004, Claire L. Felbinger was a driving force for inclusion and led the first committee to formally bring the issue of diversity to the attention of the Board.

She was a tireless advocate for efforts to promote diversity and set in motion the work that is still being done today. Under her leadership, the Public Member Committee launched initiatives to consider and publish ABET Expert diversity statistics, issue a formal policy on diversity, and create the President’s Award for Diversity in 2005.

Dr. Felbinger passed away suddenly in her home on May 28, 2008. To honor her legacy, the award that she helped create now bears her name.

2023 Winner

Jenna P. Carpenter

Jenna CarpenterFor national leadership in diversity and inclusion supporting the success of women and other marginalized students, faculty and administrators in STEM through the application of research-based strategies, initiatives and programs.

 Dr. Jenna P. Carpenter is founding dean and professor of engineering at Campbell University and immediate past president of the American Society for Engineering Education (ASEE). Her research focuses on innovative STEM curricula and success of women in STEM.  

Carpenter was co-recipient of the 2022 National Academy of Engineering Bernard M. Gordon Prize for Innovation in Engineering and Engineering Technology Education, as a co-founder of the Grand Challenges Scholars Program. She has received the ASEE Sharon Keillor Award for Women in Engineering Education, the Women in Engineering ProActive Network (WEPAN) Founders Award and WEPAN Distinguished Service Award. Carpenter has been an ABET program evaluator for over a decade. She is also past first vice-president of the Mathematical Association of America and past president of WEPAN. Dreambox Learning named her one of ten “Women in STEM Who Rock” for her TEDx talk, “Engineering: Where are the girls and why aren’t they here.”

Award Benefits

  • Recognition at the ABET Awards Celebration in the fall.
  • $10,000 cash prize
  • Recipient and their work will be featured on the award page, recognized in a press release, ABET news announcement and ABET social media pages.

The Nomination Kit

The Claire L. Felbinger Award for Diversity and Inclusion, like all other ABET Awards, is given to a nominee selected by his or her peers. To learn more about the process and criteria involved, or to nominate one of your peers, review our nomination kit. The deadline for nominations is April 20, and only complete nominations with references will be accepted.

DOWNLOAD NOMINATION KIT

Past Recipients

2022

Gilda Barabino

For outstanding action-oriented contributions advancing diversity and inclusion in technical education and healthcare through bioengineering solutions, as well as public policy leadership to transform the engineering profession. Learn more.

2021

Sheryl A. Sorby

For transformative and proactive leadership in improving retention and inclusion of diverse, minoritized groups by researching and creating interventions to enhance spatial skills in engineering students. Learn more.

2020

Ambareen Siraj

For leadership in establishing the Women in CyberSecurity annual conference and the Women in CyberSecurity Initiative, which have increased the participation of women in cybersecurity significantly. Learn more.

2019

Yvette E. Pearson

For advancing engineering to ensure equitable opportunities for systemically marginalized groups, especially women, racial and ethnic minorities, and people with disabilities, through education and advocacy. Learn more.

2018

Ignatios Vakalis

For outstanding vision, commitment, and progress in the recruitment, retention, and empowerment of women in computer science and software engineering. Learn more.

2017

Emily Allen

A dedicated educator who works to enhance the success of students from underserved minority communities and a thought leader who shifts the paradigm of engineering education to build a diverse and inclusive workforce. Learn more.

Karen Thole

For tireless, long-term advocacy of diversity, for leadership throughout her career mentoring and promoting underrepresented colleagues and students and for founding the Engineering Ambassadors Network with its outreach emphasis. Learn more.

2016

The Anita Borg Institute

In recognition of the Anita Borg Institute’s outstanding commitment and contributions to increasing the representation of women technologists in the global workforce and its worldwide impact on enhancing technology. Learn more.

Renetta Garrison Tull

For visionary leadership as founding director of the PROMISE: Maryland’s Alliance for Graduate Education and the Professoriate and her commitment to achieving greater diversity and inclusion in technical fields. Learn more.

The University of Wisconsin-Platteville Women in Engineering, Math and Science Program

In recognition of WEMS’ exceptional and enduring commitment to developing programs for the recruitment, retention and professional success of women in the STEM fields. Learn more.

2015

Lynnette D. Madsen

For her role in establishing best practices to engage members of underrepresented groups, initiating recognition for mentors, and supporting minority graduate students and career-life balance. Learn more.

North Carolina State College of Engineering, Women and Minority Engineering Programs

For their success in the development and implementation of programs that focus on the recruitment, retention, and graduation of women and minorities in engineering. Learn more.

2014

Cornell Diversity Programs in Engineering

In recognition of sustained success in deploying integrated programs for faculty, pre-college, undergraduate, and graduate students to increase the diversity and success of populations underrepresented in engineering. Learn more.

Purdue Women in Engineering Program

In recognition of their long-standing commitment to supporting women in their engineering pursuits and of their collaborations with alumnae and nonprofit partners to engage diverse pre-college student populations in STEM. Learn more.

Eugene M. DeLoatch

In recognition of a pioneer and champion of diversity whose lifetime of service and leadership in engineering education has created opportunities for generations of underrepresented and underserved students to earn degrees from ABET-accredited engineering, engineering technology, and STEM programs.

2013

National Engineers Week Foundation

For successful creation, implementation, and growth of annual events and programs focused on inclusion of underrepresented populations into the field of engineering, including Introduce a Girl to Engineering Day, reaching 1 million K-12 girls annually; the Global Marathon For, By and About Women in Engineering and Technology, a “virtual town square” connecting women via live Internet chats, webcasts, and local events; and Future City Competition, reaching over 33,000 middle school students (46% of all participants are girls) in 36 regions across the country. Learn more.

2012

National Action Council for Minorities in Education, Inc. (NACME)

In recognition of implementing initiatives and programs to dramatically increase the number of underrepresented minority students prepared to engage and excel in engineering education; being the nation’s largest private provider of scholarships for underrepresented minority students in engineering; and collaborating with educational partners to launch a national network of urban-centered, open enrollment, high school engineering academies to provide all students with a strong science and math education to assure college readiness for engineering study. Learn more.

2010

The Center for the Enhancement of Engineering Diversity in the College of Engineering at Virginia Tech

For their successful development and on-going operation of programs to provide encouragement and support for diversity in engineering through pre-college programs, recruiting efforts for prospective students, and programs to support current underrepresented engineering students. Learn more.

The Michigan College and University Partnership

For a collaborative effort between four Michigan community colleges — Ojibwa, Delta, Grand Rapids, and Wayne County Community Colleges — and Michigan Technological University for successful efforts to significantly increase the transfer of underrepresented ethnic minority, first generation and economically disadvantaged students into Michigan Tech’s four-year baccalaureate program. Learn more.

2009

The Bourns College of Engineering at the University of California, Riverside

In recognition of extraordinarily successful initiatives for recruiting undergraduate and graduate students from diverse and disadvantaged backgrounds, retaining them through the bachelor’s degree, and advancing them to graduate studies and careers in engineering. Learn more.

The College of Engineering at Florida A&M University and Florida State University

In recognition of the creation of a unique engineering program formed from the partnership between a Research-1 and a historically black university that has succeeded by being among the top five engineering programs in bachelor’s degrees awarded to black students as well as among the top ten in graduate degrees, and for successfully serving more than 40,000 diverse middle and high school students through outreach programs.

The College of Engineering and Computer Science at California State University, Fullerton

For its leadership and accomplishments in attaining significant achievements in diversity facilitated through innovative programs such as the Center for Academic Success in the College of Engineering and Computer Science (CASECS) and Engineering and Computer Science (ECS) Scholars. Learn more.

2008

The College of Engineering and the Office of Diversity Initiatives at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, Daytona Beach

For the successful, broad, and ongoing spectrum of initiatives, including K-12 Outreach, Bridge Programs, Curriculum Enhancement, Faculty Development, and Work-Life Balance, to attract women to science, math, and engineering, to retain them through graduation, and to support them as they embark on their professional careers. Learn more.

The School of Engineering and Applied Science at The George Washington University

For its commitment and achievement in hiring female faculty and in recruiting, retaining, and graduating a significant number of women in undergraduate and graduate engineering programs while providing the graduates with leadership skills and opportunities as they enter engineering practice. Learn more.

The CyberCity Technology Summer Program at James Madison University

For the development and operation of a successful hands-on, project-based university campus summer program for underrepresented high school students and their teachers that increases awareness of information technology skills and careers and enhances the students’ aspirations for a college education. Learn more.

The Multicultural Engineering Program at Northern Arizona University and Its Director Fonda Swimmer

For their long-term and collaborative efforts to aid African-American, Hispanic, Native American, female, disabled, and first generation students in engineering, computer science, and construction management in enhancing their academic performance and reaching their full potential.

2007

The California State University-Los Angeles College of Engineering, Computer Science, and Technology

For previous and ongoing promotion of MESA (Math-Engineering-Science Achievement), including sharing procedures and techniques with a broader audience in promotion of math, engineering, and science among underrepresented groups.

The Oklahoma State University-Okmulgee Information Technologies Division

For success in promoting and including American Indians in the engineering and science disciplines and promotion beyond the campus borders.

Lee Snapp

For working with the nation’s tribal colleges and universities (TCUs) to create the first comprehensive program for developing, implementing, and sustaining engineering studies ever designed by and four TCUs, seeking funding for the plan’s implementation, and engaging major engineering organizations such as ABET and the National Academy of Engineering to further its success.

2006

The College of Engineering and Computing at Florida International University

For success in educating and enriching the K-16 population of FIU and its surrounding Miami Dade County through bridge programs, dual enrollment, scholarships, undergraduate research experience, and an annual open house event, Engineering Gala, that is attended by more than 1,000 local middle and high school students; and for graduating more Hispanic engineers and computer scientists than any other college in the United States (excluding Puerto Rico). Learn more.

The Ivan G. Seidenberg School of Computer Science and Information Systems at Pace University

For providing a supportive atmosphere for its diverse student body and actively encouraging young women to enter the field of computing by hosting the annual Women in Computing Symposium and the Trendsetters Conference on Nontraditional Careers. Learn more.

The College of Engineering at The University of Texas at El Paso

For its commitment to providing engineering and science education to a predominantly Hispanic, economically disadvantaged region by extending outreach to precollege students, parents, and teachers in El Paso and in Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua, Mexico, steadily increasing the enrollment of engineering students from the area and attracting more underrepresented or economically disadvantaged students to technical disciplines. Learn more.

2005

The University of Maryland, Baltimore County

For its distinction in producing more minority faculty than any other institution in the United States, which is critical to the growth of minority representation in the breadth of colleges and universities throughout the country. Learn more.

The College of Engineering
at The University of Texas at San Antonio

For its impressive record in attracting and graduating minority students. During the 2002-2003 academic year, the college conferred 160 bachelor’s degrees in engineering, and nearly half of them, 76, went to minority students. Fifty-eight of those degrees, or 36 percent of the overall total, were awarded to Hispanic students. The UTSA College of Engineering was recognized for this accomplishment. Learn more.

Tulane University and Xavier University of Louisiana

For developing a cooperative program between Tulane University and Xavier University of Louisiana, a Historically Black University, whereby students from Xavier take classes at Tulane in their senior year in preparation for entering the industrial hygiene master’s program at Tulane the following year. Learn more about Tulane and Xavier.