UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Jacqueline O’Connor, professor of mechanical engineering in the College of Engineering and Ihab Ragai, professor of engineering at Penn State Behrend, are the recipients of the 2025 Milton S. Eisenhower Award for Distinguished Teaching.
The award recognizes excellence in teaching and student support among tenured faculty who have been employed full time for at least five years with undergraduate teaching as a major portion of their duties. Milton S. Eisenhower, brother of former U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower, served as president of Penn State from 1950 to 1956.
Jacqueline O'Connor
O’Connor said her teaching philosophy centers around two goals: creating a learning environment that encourages a diverse spectrum of students to become skillful scholars and providing students with meaningful educational experiences that train them to be high-impact engineers.
“All the methods that I incorporate into my classes are evidence-based strategies from educational literature or training I have received,” O’Connor said. “Evidence based strategies are built on established teaching and learning frameworks, allowing for rigorous implementation and assessment of their efficacy in a classroom. Incorporating evidence-based strategies is not only important for ensuring the success of the methods, but also for my increasing work in engineering education research.”
O’Connor fine-tuned her approach through two engineering education research projects funded by seed grants from the Leonhard Center and the Schreyer Institute. She said being both an educator and an educational researcher has significantly improved her teaching outcomes.
“While I am a teacher first, the research lens has taken my educational innovation to the next level and supported my two teaching goals,” O’Connor said.
First, she creates an environment where diverse groups can learn. She uses a number of tools to create lessons that engage, in and out of the classroom. They’re supported by readings, videos, homework, and quizzes that directly relate to the material and activities in class so that students have continuous and frequent engagement on the topics.
“This variety of sources also helps support students with a range of educational backgrounds and learning styles,” O’Connor said.
That also requires giving students the skills they need to advance their own education. Along with her colleague, Andrea Gregg, she created a strategy called ALM — Active Learning and Metacognition, which outlines a process by which students learn, use, and reflect on concepts in a cyclic manner to improve understanding.
Her second goal — providing meaningful educational experiences where students become high-impact engineers — uses examples, case-studies, real-life data, and practicing engineers from relevant industries to show how these core concepts have practical implications.
“This approach prepares students to be highly effective engineers after they graduate because they not only know the fundamentals but have seen those fundamentals applied in real-life contexts,” O’Connor said. “We discuss contemporary issues and the broader context of engineering work.”
Nominators said O’Connor is a passionate engineer who wants to inspire the next generation of leaders in her field.
“Dr. O’Connor passes on her passion to her students through vivid examples and dynamic teaching approaches,” a nominator said. “She brings curiosity to the classroom, turning core concepts into tangible objects and elements that surround us.