his future career.Prof. James C. Iatridis, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai James C. Iatridis, Ph.D. is Professor and Vice Chair for Research in the Department of Orthopaedics at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai (ISMMS). His research applies strong biomechanical principles to the development of novel treatments for painful intervertebral disc degeneration. He earned his Ph.D. from Columbia University in Mechanical Engineering and was Professor of Mechanical and Biomedical Engineering at the University of Vermont before joining ISMMS in 2010.Prof. Jennifer Weiser, The Cooper Union Dr. Jennifer Weiser is an Assistant Professor of Chemical Engineering. She received her B.S. in Chemical Engineering
and Life Sciences,” North American Colleges and Teachers of Agriculture (NACTA) journal, vol. 58, no.4, pp. 341-348, 2014.[15] K. Shelton, “A quality scorecard for the administration of online education programs: A Delphi study,” Journal of Asynchronous Learning Networks, vol. 14, no. 4, pp. 36-62, 2010.[16] M. D. Merrill, L. Drake, M. J. Lacy, and J. Pratt, “Reclaiming instructional design,” Educational Technology, vol. 36, no. 5, pp. 5-7, 1996.[17] H. Kanuka, “Instructional Design and eLearning: A Discussion of Pedagogical Content
, 2021 Reflecting on 10 years of centralized engineering student diversity initiatives (Experience)0. AbstractThe IDEA Engineering Student Center at the University of California San Diego’s Jacobs Schoolof Engineering was established in 2010 to focus on engineering student diversity and inclusioninitiatives following a series of racially charged incidents affecting our campus’ Black students.From its inception, the IDEA Center aimed to focus on 1) outreach, 2) recruitment and yield, 3)academic success and enrichment, and 4) retention and graduation for underrepresented minority(URM) students. Through the lens of nonprofit organizational lifecycles, the IDEA Centertransitioned from Idea to Start-up to Growth
their living and/or testing environment in selecting both the proximity and motion sensors. This unit introduced the requirement of calibration, which could be accomplished with linear regressions. Students performed regression analyses to calibrate the sensor data into meaningful distance measurements.Module 3: AC and DC motors. Although AC and DC motors were discussed, the experiments were restricted to DC motors due to costs associated with the sensor kits and safety precautions. Students configured and controlled all 3 motor types DC, Stepper, and Servo motors to perform a variety of no-load tasks. The main purpose was to gain the confidence in programming the various motor types to do tasks. Subsequently, the students selected
Transforms, American Society for Engineering Education, AC 2011-451.2. Shakib, J., Muqri, M., Leveraging the Power of Java in the Enterprise, American Society for Engineering Education, AC 2010-1701.3. Hambley, Alan R., Electrical Engineering Principles and Applications, Prentice Hall, 2011.4. Blinowska, K., Durka, P., The application of wavelet transforms and matching pursuit to the time- varying EEG signals, in Intelligent Engineering Systems Through Artificial Neural Networks, Editors, Dagli & Fernandez, volume 4, pp. 535-540, ASME Press, New York, l994.5. Murach, J., Urban, M., Python Programming, Mike Murach & assciates, Inc, 2016.6. Lee Wei-Ming., - Python Machine Learning – Willey, 2019.7. Hambley, Alan R
inengineering education must replace problem sets with question sets.” Failure – or refusal – to sotransform risked engineering educators and their alumni “acced[ing] to the longevity of feignedinnocence” all too familiar in their ancestral line.The myth of objective, neutral “rigor” in engineering education [23] is linked to the myth of themasculine, white engineer who built America [24]. Both have contributed to engineering’sexclusivity and tendency to marginalize those who challenge the myths. As Shaun Harperwarned, an education that avoids engaging with social context and, for example, conversationsabout race, risks graduating “accidental racists” [25, 26]. Amy Slaton has examined how specific“conceptions of engineering talent and rigor” have
functions,such as moving components and rotating instrument knobs. Figure 1: VISIR web interface with the breadboard, digital multimeter, and oscilloscopeThe Emona TIMS netCIRCUITlabs, used for the first time this summer term, offers onlineaccess to multiple students, simultaneously, for controlling and measuring real electronicscircuits. The system is accessible via a web browser and covers a range of experiments suchas AC amplifiers, feedback circuits, and differential amplifiers. The lab equipment comprisesa control unit and several switchable boards for different experiments (see Fig. 2 andYouTube video). Figure 2: netCIRCUTISlabs control unit with experimentation board and exemplary user interfaceFor the implementation of
, E. Fernandez-Macias, and M. Bisello, Teleworkability and the COVID-19 crisis: a new digital divide? European Commission, 2020.[8] O. B. Azubuike, O. Adegboye, and H. Quadri, "Who gets to learn in a pandemic? Exploring the digital divide in remote learning during the COVID-19 pandemic in Nigeria," International Journal of Educational Research Open, p. 100022, 2020.[9] G. Watts, "COVID-19 and the digital divide in the UK," The Lancet Digital Health, vol. 2, no. 8, pp. e395-e396, 2020.[10] T. Hussain, "Education and COVID-19 in Nigeria: Tackling the digital divide," SOAS Blog (retrieved from https://www. soas. ac. uk/blogs/study/covid-19-nigeria-digital- divide/), 2020.[11] J. Hall, C. Roman, C
protégé and mentor perspectives: a strategy to increase physician workforce diversity," Journal of the National Medical Association, vol. 110, pp. 399-406, 2018.[29] S. U. Guptan, Mentoring 2.0: A Practitioner’s Guide to Changing Lives: SAGE Publishing India, 2018.[30] C. Penny and D. Bolton, "Evaluating the outcomes of an eMentoring program," Journal of Educational Technology Systems, vol. 39, pp. 17-30, 2010.[31] O. Madison-Colmore, "E-Mentoring: A Mentoring Model for African American College Students at a Predominantly White Institution," Peer Facilitator Quarterly, vol. 18, pp. 49-51, 2003.[32] M. Valentin‐Welch, "Evaluation of a National E‐Mentoring Program for Ethnically Diverse Student
interestin continued education and jobs in the field of study [1] [2]. The majority of these interactionstypically take place in the classroom, but also happen during office hours and extracurricular ac-tivities.Office hours provide a valuable opportunity for students to ask questions, obtain help for theirspecific situation, get mentoring, and engage with course content with an expert. This activeinteraction with a faculty member can provide valuable learning for students, and previous studieshave found that office hours can improve student course performance. A study by Guerrero andRod found that for each office hour attended students saw a 0.77% increase in their grade evencorrecting for overall GPA, gender, race, and family income [3]. A study
of 0.000 was found betweenstudents who had taken a CS course in HS and those who had not. Thus, students who took a CScourse in high school typically reported that they had stronger programming skills. This result isalso illustrated in Fig. 3. In the below chart, the red bars represent students who reported taking aCS course in high school while the grey bars represent students who did not report taking a high Figure 2: High School Computer Science Course Experience by Genderschool CS course. The distribution of the red bars is farther to the right (corresponding to a higheraverage reported skill level) than the gray bars indicating that students who took computer sciencein high school reported having better programming
has plans to actively continue the development of practical teaching tools that bring industry applications to the classroom.Dr. Farid Breidi, Purdue University, West Lafayette Dr. Farid Breidi is an Assistant Professor in the School of Engineering Technology at Purdue University. Farid received his B.E. in Mechanical Engineering degree from the American University of Beirut in 2010, his M.S. in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 2012, and his Ph.D. in Agricultural and Biological Engineering from Purdue University in 2016. The primary focus of Farid’s research is modeling and design of fluid power and mechanical systems. He is interested in integrating machine learning and data
seven Information Technology textbooks, over 100 peer reviewed journal articles and conference papers, and she gave numerous presen- tations at national and international professional events in USA, Canada, England, France, Italy, Portugal, Spain, Germany and Romania. She is the founder director of the Auburn University Educational and Assistive Technology Laboratory (LEAT), Co-PI of NSF EEC ”RFE Design and Development: Framing Engineering as Community Activism for Values-Driven Engineeringan”, Co-PI of NSF CISE ”EAGER: An Accessible Coding Curriculum for Engaging Underserved Students with Special Needs in Afterschool Programs”, institutional partner of AccessComputing (http://www.washington.edu/accesscomputing/), Ac
integration in south texas technical colleges,” in American Society for Engineering Education, American Society for Engineering Education, 2010. [5] R. Radharamanan and H. E. Jenkins, “Laboratory learning modules on cad/cam and robotics in engineering education,” International Journal of Innovative Computing, Information and Control, vol. 4, no. 2, pp. 433–443, 2008. [6] R. Jerz and G. Fischer, “Experiences in designing a design for manufacturing (dfm) course,” age, vol. 10, p. 1, 2005. [7] “Home.” [8] B. R. Belland, Instructional scaffolding in STEM education: Strategies and efficacy evidence. Springer Nature, 2017. [9] B. J. Reiser, “Scaffolding complex learning: The mechanisms of structuring and problematizing student
sus- tainability assessment of renewable and non-renewable energy resources with emphasis on analysis and optimization of transportation processes in multiproduct pipeline systems. She also serves as a teaching assistant at Rowan University Chemical Engineering Department courses in Thermodynamics, Separation Processes, and Process Dynamics and Controls. She is the graduate student mentor of the junior/senior engineering clinic for the industrial project funded by the EPA (Environmental Protection Agency) and the ExxonMobil Lubricant Oil Blending Facility Paulsboro NJ. Swapna is an active member of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers (AIChE) as well as a member of the American Chemical Society (ACS
Redshirts 2013 (UW) (STARS) Program Washington State University WA STate Academic Redshirts 2013 (WSU) (STARS) Program Boise State University (BSU) SAGE Scholars Program 2017 University of California, San Academic Community for 2017 Diego (UCSD) Engineering Success (ACES) Program University of Illinois, Urbana- Academic Redshirt in Science and 2017 Champaign (UIUC) Engineering (ARISE) Scholars ProgramThe Redshirt model
the Information Age.” Paper presented at the Pew Symposium in Learning and Technology, Charleston, SC, 2002.[14] N. J. Evans, D. S. Forney, F. M. Guido, L. D. Patton, & K. A. Renn, Student development in college: Theory, research, and practice (2nd Ed.). San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass, 2010.[15] O. Stankey, O. “Theory Review Part III: Schlossberg’s transition theory.” Northwest Association of College & University Housing Officers, 2018. Retrieved from http://nwacuho.org/2018/03/theory-review-part-iii-schlossbergs-transition-theory/[16] S. Brown-Schmidt & D. Heller, “Perspective-taking during conversation.” Oxford handbook of psycholinguistics, 551-574, 2018.[17] L. Bensalah, S
FIU students participating in the Florida-Georgia Louis Stokes Alliance for Minority Participation (FGLSAMP). She is a past adviser of the Women in Computer Science (WICS) student club. From 2008 to 2010, Ms. Solis was a programmer analyst at the Department of the Attorney General in Hawaii, a member of the team revamping the State Juvenile Justice Information System. Her research and instructional Interests include software development, computer ethics and student success and development. American c Society for Engineering Education, 2021 Impact of Social and Programmatic Experiences on Students’ Interest in Pursuing a Graduate Degree in a
Disparity in STEM Disciplines: A Study of Faculty Attrition and Turnover Intentions,” Research in Higher Education, vol. 49, no. 7, pp. 607–624, Nov. 2008, doi: 10.1007/s11162-008-9097-4.[29] K. Buch, Y. Huet, A. Rorrer, and L. Roberson, “Removing the Barriers to Full Professor: A Mentoring Program for Associate Professors,” Change: The Magazine of Higher Learning, vol. 43, no. 6, pp. 38–45, Oct. 2011, doi: 10.1080/00091383.2011.618081.[30] C. Grant, J. Decuir-Gunby, and B. Smith, “Advance Peer Mentoring Summits For Underrepresented Minority Women Engineering Faculty,” in 117th ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Louisville, KY, Jun. 2010, p. 15.129.1-15.129.20, Accessed: Jun. 29, 2016. [Online]. Available: https
Development (Morgan and Claypool, 2010), and editor of Sociotechnical Communication in Engineering (Routledge, 2014). In 2016, Dr. Leydens won the Exemplar in Engineering Ethics Education Award from the National Academy of Engineering, along with CSM colleagues Juan C. Lucena and Kathryn Johnson, for a cross-disciplinary suite of courses that enact macroethics by making social justice visible in engineering education. In 2017, he and two co-authors won the Best Paper Award in the Minorities in Engineering Division at the Amer- ican Society for Engineering Education annual conference. Dr. Leydens’ recent research, with co-author Juan C. Lucena, focused on rendering visible the social justice dimensions inherent in three
Paper ID #33572”You Could Take ’Social’ Out of Engineering and Be Just Fine”: AnExploration of Engineering Students’ Beliefs About the Social Aspects ofEngineering WorkMr. Robert P. Loweth, University of Michigan Robert P. Loweth is a PhD candidate in the Department of Mechanical Engineering at the University of Michigan. His research explores how engineers engage and include diverse perspectives in their engineer- ing work. His findings have informed the development of tools and pedagogy that support engineering students in investigating and reflecting on the broader societal contexts and impacts of engineering ac
-technology nexus: ALTC priority project #627 ," Australian Learning &Teaching Council, Australia, 2008.[14] Steelcase Education, "Active learning center: Grant proposal guide," Steelcase Education,2015.[15] L. B. Nilson, Teaching at its Best: A Research-Based Resource for College Educators. ThirdEdition. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass, 2010.[16] C. Guarino and B. Stacy, "Review of gathering feedback for teaching: Combining high-quality observations with student surveys and achievement gains," National Educational PolicyCenter, Boulder, CO, 2012.[17] A. H. Cash et al, "Rater calibration when observational assessment occurs at large scale:Degree of calibration and characteristics of raters associated with calibration," Early ChildhoodResearch
., and Ph.D. degrees in Electronics and Telecommunications Engineering from Kocaeli University, Turkey, in 2001, 2004, and 2010, respectively. From 2005 to 2006, he worked as a Global Network Product Support Engineer at Nortel Networks, Turkey. In 2006, he joined the Energy Institute of TUBITAK-MAM (Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey – The Marmara Research Center), where he worked as a senior researcher. Before joining ODU, he worked as a Research Assistant Professor at Virginia Tech’s Advanced Research Institute. His research interests include smart grid, demand response, smart metering systems (AMR, AMI, AMM), home and building energy management system, co-simulation, wireless communication
, and elected university senate member. He has served as principle investigator on projects in biomimetic micro air vehicles and hydrogen fuel cell propulsion systems. In these research projects (and others) he advised several PhD and MSc postgraduate students to completion. Dr. Ward is also experienced in directing undergraduate student teams competing in the SAE Aero Design and Shell Eco-marathon competitions.He has authored a text book called Aerospace Propulsion Systems (Wiley, 2010) and over 50 journal and conference papers. Prior to 2006, Dr. Ward worked as an aerospace engineer with the US Air Force for 18 years, which included a special 4.5 year assignment to the United Kingdom Ministry of Defence in London