Sandra Cruz’s Award-Winning PhD Research Highlights

Scholarly, useful research is the name of the game in Europe!

These are the standards for research published in the European Journal of Engineering Education (EJEE), and they serve as a good guide for researchers in general.

This post sheds light on what makes a conference paper stand out. It shares the story of soon-to-be-Dr Sandra Ieri Cruz Moreno, who won the top research award from the European Society for Engineering Education (SEFI) in 2025.

SEFI’s special interest group on Engineering Education Research featured the work Sandra and I have done last week, in an online workshop, and the information is worth sharing more broadly — so here it is!

Workshop overview

Last week, Sandra (my PhD supervisee) and I presented this workshop as part of the SEFI@work learning series. We reported on one strand of Sandra’s PhD thesis research.

During the workshop, Sandra engaged the audience with questions about their own research to help transfer the successful part of our experience to the researchers who attended.

The workshop was great practice for Sandra’s viva voce (called a ‘dissertation defense’ in the USA), scheduled for March 10.

Unfortunately, vivas are closed-door events in Ireland. That means our colleagues can’t attend, so this online workshop was the main way to let our SEFI community know about the amazing work Sandra has done.

Research award

At the annual SEFI conference in Tampere, Finland, this past September, our paper Evolving gender dynamics in teamwork experiences among female engineering students in PBL settings was recognized with the sole “Best Research Paper” award.

I reported on the overall SEFI conference and my surprise and elation at winning this award in a September blogpost.

I accepted the award on Sandra’s behalf at SEFI 2025.

Now, the organizers of the online workshop asked us to share some secrets to our success. That was tricky!

SEFI advertised widely, and over 80 people registered to attend.

We hadn’t set out to win an award, just to make a scholarly summary of part of Sandra’s thesis study!

Although it felt intimidating to explain how to win, we went in with the confidence that the paper had been nominated in all three categories it was eligible for last year, and each category has a separate panel of judges.

We were beyond delighted — and completely surprised — to win.

It helped reassure us that the thesis research was ready to wrap up and report.

Workshop content

You can watch a video of the workshop, to hear in Sandra’s own words what is most interesting and valuable about her work and her research process:

And you’re able to download Sandra’s slides, to jump straight into the content, by clicking here:

One slide from Sandra’s presentation.

Sandra’s achievements

I couldn’t be prouder of Sandra and all she has accomplished in four short years. Since starting her doctoral studies in January 2022, she has delivered two babies into the world and developed an award-winning research study and a fully written thesis.

Sandra’s special contributions include introducing sociological techniques and perspectives into engineering education research. She has broadened the focus of our discourse on the usefulness and applicability of phenomenology as a research method, and she has shed valuable new light regarding the experiences of female students in our engineering courses at Technological University Dublin.

The findings of her PhD research hold applicability well beyond TU Dublin, however. They show us how the social dynamics of teamwork evolve over time — how students develop meaningful friendships that help them personally and professionally.

Sandra used the “Gender at Work” framework to better understand students’ experiences with Problem-Based Learning and other collaborative learning approaches. Using this framework, she found that the 22 women I’d interviewed (longitudinally over a period of four years):

  • had experienced uneven access to engineering content before entering university, 
  • lacked female engineers in their families who could serve as role models,
  • experienced some biased team dynamics that influenced what jobs got assigned to whom by the team, and that the need to prove themselves on teams grew less but nonetheless persisted across their four-year matriculation, and 
  • received increased recognition for their credibility over time, which helped them challenge stereotypes and shift team dynamics in a favorable direction.


Sandra’s SEFI 2025 paper complemented papers we’ve published and presented at earlier conferences, including:

You can learn more about Sandra’s work in a blog SEFI posted in 2023:

Soon, you’ll be able to read Sandra’s final thesis and learn about the impressive contributions she has made to the literature and to the engineering education research community.

I am honored to call Sardar Cruz Moreno a friend and colleague. I look forward to calling her “Dr” and to watching her flourish in the coming years!

Transcontinental Collaboration: Voices of Fulbright Alumni

I’d like to share recent social media posts by my colleagues/past students/friends — their perspectives on transcontinental collaboration are unique and valuable! Thanks to Mia Dukuly, Violet Maufuwe, Tarrah Beebee, and Shinya Takehara for taking the time to reflect, document, and publicly share your experiences.

Tanzania

The first three of these — Mia, Violet, and Tarrah — participated as students in a Fulbright-Hays Group Project Abroad that I led to Tanzania in 2005.

We spent five weeks in Dar es Salaam, studying alongside Tanzanian architecture students and teachers. Several of the students forged lifelong friendships (and some even marriages) with other members of our 63-person study group (25 students and teachers from the USA, 38 students and teachers from Tanzania).

I didn’t establish this blog (IrelandByChance.com) until 2012 (seven years after that trip, when I went on my own Fulbright fellowship to Ireland). Nevertheless, several of my past posts have mentioned aspects of that 2005 study abroad program:

Mia and Tara are two USA-based Fulbright alumnae who keep returning to East Africa — and sharing their adventures with others.

Here’s a taste of what Mia and her architect friend Violet Mafuwe have gotten up to recently:

A post shared by Mia Dukuly this past autumn.

Violet was one of the Tanzanian students participating in the 2005 study abroad program, and the only female among dozens of males.

The sisterly bond between these architects, Mia and Violet, is truly heartwarming.

Tarrah, Mia, and Violet are all actively engaged in social missions, continually reaching out and helping others, particularly vulnerable people in East Africa.

Tarrah Beebe‘s recent blog post about work in Tanzania is well worth a read: https://rafikireturns2026.blogspot.com/2026/02/asante-same-couple-days-in-same-tanzania.html

In this screenshot, Tara describes how she connects her teaching, architectural design, and outreach activities.

In fact, it was Tarrah’s February 3rd blog post that inspired me to share the treasure trove below. Tara is an architect living in Los Angeles.

Tarrah mentioned me at the top of the blog, and it means a lot to me that I helped enable and inspire her to stay involved in Tanzania. She’s been helping build an educational complex for many years.

In this screenshot, Tara provides information on the educational facility.

Japan

Like me, Tarrah also visited Japan. You can read all about her Japanese adventures here: https://tarrahinjapan.blogspot.com/

Which brings me to the other recent post I’d like to share. Shinya Takehara isn’t a Fulbright fellow (yet!), but I feel I wouldn’t have met him without the entry I got into engineering education research as a Fulbright Fellow in Ireland.

Shinya‘s recent LinkedIn post summarizes the visit Sarah Junaid and I made to Japan in January 2026 (https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/building-international-dialogue-engineering-ethics-from-takehara-517vc/?trackingId=Ky2esIgHcl0VweGzp4rMTA%3D%3D). Because I don’t have a link for people outside LinkedIn to access the content, I’ll share screenshots of Shinya’s description below.

I am deeply indebted to each of these wonderful people — Shinya, Tarrah, Mia, and Violet — for making my life brighter and more meaningful, and for always reaching out to help others and spread the ethics of care.

I also thank Shinya, Tarrah, and Mia for giving me permission to share their posts here. Sending that request brought more good news, as Mia has recently secured a new job and will be relocating with her family to Germany soon. She reports good progress with her Architecture Registration Examination — a grueling multi-part test that takes most of us years to complete. I am so excited to learn of her progress!

Join SEFI@work: What Makes Research Papers Stand Out?

Sandra Cruz Moreno and I will be featured in a SEFI@work online workshop on Wednesday, 11 February 2026 13:00 PM – 14:00 PM CET.

The title is: What makes research papers stand out? Insights from SEFI 2025’s Best Research Paper

Sandra and I are hard at work preparing meaningful content about Sandra’s award-winning SEFI paper, which reports one part of her overall PhD thesis/dissertation work.

You can read Sandra’s paper, which SEFI awarded ‘Best Research Paper’ for 2025, here: Evolving gender dynamics in teamwork experiences among female engineering students in PBL settings

Visit this SEFI webpage to register: https://www.sefi.be/2026/01/14/sefiwork-what-makes-research-papers-stand-out-insights-from-sefi-2025s-best-research-paper/

SEFI’s advert for the upcoming event.

I am delighted to discover that about 80 people have registered so far, representing a wide diversity of organizations:

Many thanks to the SEFI Education Research Methods special interest group co-chairs, Dr. Tinne De Laet and Dr. Esther Ventura-Medina, for the invitation to deliver this session, which they will moderate. Thanks also to the SEFI Office, especially Alex Gliga and Klara Ferdova, for their support in organizing and hosting this event.

This photo of Sandra and Shannon in Portugal captures the tone of our upcoming presentation.

My Fulbright Mission (a la Ben Franklin)

Truth Becons posted Ben Franklin's words to live by.

Truth Becons posted Ben Franklin’s words to live by.  All sorts of doing and writing for me….

Christmas Fotos

2013 calendar cover

Dave and I put the final touches on our secret Santa project today.

Dave’s weekend was much more exciting than mine… I’ve been chained to my laptop writing all weekend. He went to two fun-looking holiday parties and so did Lucy and Matt.

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Presidential Acclaim

USDA Photo by Bob Nichols of Dr. William R. Harvey, President of Hampton University.

My university president made news today in an article in the Huffington Post.

Earlier today I received a letter from him, congratulating me for the article in Planning for Higher Education.  I realize that it’s fairly standard text, but it’s nice to be remembered… particularly after a long day of manuscript writing!

The paper I’m writing now won’t be published until 2014!?!  That’s par for the course in the land of academe.