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  1. This work falls under the evidence-based practice type of paper. Online undergraduate engineering education is rapidly increasing in use. The online format not only provides greater flexibility and ease of access for students, but also has lower costs for universities when compared to face-to-face courses. Even with these generally positive attributes, online courses face challenges with respect to student attrition. Numerous studies have shown that the dropout rate in online courses is higher than that for in-person courses, and topics related to online student persistence remain of interest. Data describing student interactions with their Learning Management System (LMS) provide an important lens through which online student engagement and corresponding persistence decisions can be studied, but many engineering education researchers may lack experience in working with LMS interaction data. The purpose of this paper is to provide a concrete example for other engineering education researchers of how LMS interaction data from online undergraduate engineering courses can be prepared for analysis. The work presented here is part of a larger National Science Foundation-funded study dedicated to developing a theoretical model for online undergraduate engineering student persistence based on student LMS interaction activities and patterns. Our sample dataset includes six courses, two from electrical engineering and four from engineering management, offered during the fall 2018 semester at a large, public southwestern university. The LMS interaction data provides details about students’ navigations to and submissions of different course elements including quizzes, assignments, discussion forums, wiki pages, attachments, modules, the syllabus, the gradebook, and course announcements. Relatedly, the features created from the data in this study can be classified into three categories: 1) learning page views, which capture student interactions with course content, 2) procedural page views, which capture student navigation to course management activities, and 3) social page views, which capture learner-to-learner and learner-to-instructor interactions. The full paper will provide the rationale and details involved in choices related to data cleaning, manipulation, and feature creation. A complete list of features will also be included. These features will ultimately be combined with associative classification to discover relationships between student-LMS interactions and persistence decisions. 
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  2. This poster will report on the research design and methodology planned for a recently funded National Science Foundation-sponsored project focused on advancing knowledge about the factors that influence the decisions of undergraduate engineering student to complete (rather than drop out of) online courses. Through the application of both social science and learner analytics-based research methods, the research will explore how students’ perceptions about the characteristics of their online undergraduate engineering courses and engagement with their course learning management system (LMS) influence their persistence. To support these studies, we draw on the undergraduate engineering student population at a large, public university in the southwestern United States that has been an early adopter of comprehensive online undergraduate engineering education. The findings from this work will be both important and timely, as the field of engineering education shows signs of embracing the online presence critical to increasing access and participation in engineering. 
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  3. This poster will report on the research design and methodology planned for a recently funded National Science Foundation-sponsored project focused on advancing knowledge about the factors that influence the decisions of undergraduate engineering student to complete (rather than drop out of) online courses. Through the application of both social science and learner analytics-based research methods, the research will explore how students’ perceptions about the characteristics of their online undergraduate engineering courses and engagement with their course learning management system (LMS) influence their persistence. To support these studies, we draw on the undergraduate engineering student population at a large, public university in the southwestern United States that has been an early adopter of comprehensive online undergraduate engineering education. The findings from this work will be both important and timely, as the field of engineering education shows signs of embracing the online presence critical to increasing access and participation in engineering. 
    more » « less