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Displaying results 1171 - 1200 of 1215 in total
Conference Session
How We Tackled the Pandemic
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Ashley J. Earle, York College of Pennsylvania; Alison R. Kennicutt, York College of Pennsylvania
Tagged Divisions
Mechanical Engineering
of students who ranked at least one scenario as making learning “almost impossible” or“highly challenging” was higher in the 2021 cohort.Student comments supported the idea that in the summer, they felt as if they were missing out ona key piece of their engineering education – “As an engineering major, I feel that this is noreplacement for hands-on learning in a classroom… Our major is simply more difficult to dovirtually, and because of this I think it should be planned for differently. We rely too much on inperson instruction to keep being virtual.” Students learning from home also experienced a shiftin learning environment. On campus, they are surrounded by peers who are in similar academicmindsets. For students who moved to their family
Conference Session
Construction Engineering Division Technical Session 5
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Luciana Debs, Purdue University Programs; Bhavya Rathna Kota, Purdue University at West Lafayette (PPI)
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Architectural Engineering, Construction Engineering
] recommendation to not perform statistical adjustments in the resultswhen a small number of planned comparisons are performed. The items included in the secondhypothesis were: • Women are not fit to be in a jobsite • There is gender discrimination in the construction field • Men are more capable than women in the construction domain • Women in construction are a better fit for office jobs rather than being on the field • I feel recruiters for construction companies prefer hiring males over females for jobsite- related positionsResultsWe have obtained 68 responses to our survey, with 67 respondents being in a constructionrelated major and one being in a construction related minor. Considering the total major studentsin the
Conference Session
Best in 5 Minutes: Demonstrating Interactive Teaching Activities
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Sotonye Ikiriko, Morgan State University; Ayodeji B. Wemida; Steve Efe, Morgan State University; Mehdi Shokouhian, Morgan State University; Oludare Adegbola Owolabi P.E., Morgan State University; Jumoke 'Kemi' Ladeji-Osias, Morgan State University
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
mechanics. His major areas of research interest centers on pavement engineering, sustainable infrastructure development, soil mechanics, physical and numerical modeling of soil structures, computational geo-mechanics, con- stitutive modeling, pavement design, characterization and prediction of behavior of pavement materials, linear and non-linear finite element applications in geotechnical engineering, geo-structural systems anal- ysis, structural mechanics, sustainable infrastructure development, and material model development. He had been actively involved in planning, designing, supervising, and constructing many civil engineering projects, such as roads, storm drain systems, a $70 million water supply scheme which is
Conference Session
Innovative and Impactful Engineering Leadership Pedagogy
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Brett Tallman P.E., Montana State University, Bozeman; Werner Zorman, Harvey Mudd College
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Leadership Development
Conference Session
Special Topics: Conscious Considerations
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Courtney Janaye Wright, University of Kentucky; Lucy Elizabeth Hargis, University of Kentucky; Ellen L. Usher, University of Kentucky; Joseph H. Hammer, University of Kentucky; Sarah A. Wilson, University of Kentucky; Melanie E. Miller, University of Kentucky
Tagged Divisions
Culture & Social Justice in Education, Equity
. Hartley, "Increasing Resilience: Strategies for Reducing Dropout Rates for College Students with Psychiatric Disabilities," American Journal of Psychiatric Rehabilitation, vol. 13, no. 4, pp. 295-315, 2010, doi: 10.1080/15487768.2010.523372.[12] D. E. Montaño and D. Kasprzyk, "Theory of reasoned action, theory of planned behavior, and the integrated behavioral model," in Health behavior: Theory, research, and practice, 5th ed. San Francisco, CA, US: Jossey-Bass, 2015, pp. 95-124.[13] D. L. Morgan, "Pragmatism as a Paradigm for Social Research," Qualitative Inquiry, vol. 20, no. 8, pp. 1045-1053, 2014/10/01 2014, doi: 10.1177/1077800413513733.[14] V. Yefimov, "On Pragmatic Institutional Economics," 12/03 2003
Conference Session
Medley of Undergraduate Programming and Pedagogies
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Kimia Moozeh, University of Toronto; Lisa Romkey, University of Toronto; Nikita Dawe, University of Toronto; Rubaina Khan, University of Toronto
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Educational Research and Methods
designed” andthus, perhaps overcoming the design fixation.3. Deep Structure: Approach to DesignBuilding on the relationship between breadth, depth and design, instructors mentioned thatdesign prepares students “for some of the practical realities of being an engineer” and providesan opportunity to “use a knowledge of math and science technical knowledge to create some newproduct” while experiencing “open-ended questions”. Design was also mentioned to be a vehicleto enhance other skills such as teamwork, communication skills, persistence and planning a largeproject in stages. Instructors who teach design were explicitly asked to comment on the role ofdesign in engineering science vs. in other, more traditional engineering programs. No
Conference Session
Engineering Education During the COVID-19 Pandemic
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Matthew Aldeman, Illinois State University; Theodore J. Branoff, Illinois State University
Tagged Divisions
Educational Research and Methods
Conference Session
Computing and Information Technology Division Technical Session 3
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Alberto Cureg Cruz, California State University, Bakersfield; Antonio-Angel L. Medel, California State University Bakersfield; Anthony Chistoper Bianchi, California State University, Bakersfield; Vincent Wong On, California State University, Bakersfield; Melissa Danforth, California State University, Bakersfield
Tagged Divisions
Computing and Information Technology
instructorscaffolds with dialogue as needed. As a tertiary benefit, students become familiar with the pair-programming paradigm used in industry. The worksheet problems are a single arc where studentsconstruct a solution/algorithm (computational thinking [20]), rather than work backward from anexisting solution. The pairs are randomly assigned each day. Pairs are chosen carefully by theinstructor to avoid towers of knowledge [41] and ensure zone of proximal development [42]–[44]. The worksheets are graded and worth 25% of an overall grade. Adjusting the plan for theday based on JiTT was a time intensive process that significantly increased prep time for theinstructor by one to two hours before each lecture, in addition to the large one-time cost
Conference Session
Design Methodologies 2
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Malena Agyemang, Clemson University; Cameron J. Turner, Clemson University
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education
, clearance, means of transport Operation Noise, wear, marketing area, destination Maintenance Servicing intervals, inspection, exchange, repair Recycling Reuse, reprocessing, waste disposal, storage Costs Maximum manufacturing cost, tooling cost, investment and depreciation Schedules End date of development, project planning and controlThe scenario-based questions provided by Pahl and Beitz encourage the designer to consider theusage scenario of the design solution being developed in each stage of the design
Conference Session
Studies of Shifting In-person Courses to Online and Students' Online Behavior
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Bradley J. Sottile, Pennsylvania State University; Laura E. Cruz, Pennsylvania State University; Yi-An Lo Burleson, Pennsylvania State University; Kris McLain, Pennsylvania State University
Tagged Divisions
Educational Research and Methods
strategies. It is questionable, too, whether or not the adaption of such proactive strategies wouldcontinue to be effective under the conditions of the global COVID-19 pandemic, as they had notpreviously been assessed on students undergoing the unprecedented conditions of collectivetrauma. The relatively small subfield of trauma-informed pedagogy has risen to the fore over thepast year, and research in this area suggests that students who have experienced (or who may becurrently experiencing) trauma(s) will likely struggle not only with time management, but morebroadly with related executive-functions such as planning and problem-solving [10], [11]. It iscertainly possible that we are only learning about the long-term effects of the
Conference Session
Developing Teamwork, Student Attitudes, and Hardware Solutions for Laboratory Courses: Experimentation and Laboratory-oriented Studies Division
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Erin A. Henslee, Wake Forest University; Kyle Luthy; William N. Crowe; Lindsey J. Gray, Wake Forest University
Tagged Divisions
Experimentation and Laboratory-Oriented Studies
aspects of the course, providing a framework for any future instructor.AcknowledgmentsThe authors would like to thank Wake Forest University’s Center for Advancement of Teaching(CAT) for financially supporting the summer course development as well as CAT’s Dr. KristiVerbeke and Dr. Anita McCauley for overseeing the course development activities and providingclassroom observations respectively.Survey QuestionsModule Reflection SurveyQuestion 1. How well did your team follow through on your original plan of action? Whatchanged and why?Question 2. For each team member (including yourself) justify the score you assigned. Listcontributions, comment on effort and attentiveness, or describe anything else you feel helpsscoring.Question 3. Reflect
Conference Session
Design Methodologies 2
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
James Righter, The Citadel; Joshua D. Summers, Clemson University
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education
within each top tier or phase. However, the original survey was intended forteams of four to six members. Given a team of ten members, the time to complete each surveybecomes prohibitive. Initial responses establish that the required survey time is approximatelynine to ten minutes, or one minute per team member evaluated. This aligns with other peer-evaluation studies on capstone design teams [57]. The survey questions are included as Table 3. Table 3: Case Study Survey Instrument To what degree do you rely on John for: 5-Frequently if not always, 4-Fairly often, 3-Once in a while, 2-Sometimes, 1-Never Planning: identifying main tasks, setting goals, developing ① ② ③ ④ ⑤ performance
Conference Session
Understanding Students' Authentic and Reflective Experiences of Ethics Education
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Stephanie Claussen, San Francisco State University; Shiloh James Howland, Brigham Young University; Swetha Nittala, Purdue University, West Lafayette; Brent K. Jesiek, Purdue University, West Lafayette; Carla B. Zoltowski, Purdue University, West Lafayette
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Ethics
at a different pointin time. We surmise that research on engineering ethics and social responsibility may neverresult in a single unifying theory due to the complexity of the questions being asked and of theparticipants being studied.ConclusionThis paper uses single-case analysis to understand one student’s experiences and perspectives,including when those perspectives (and the student’s corresponding description of them) follow apath that is difficult to characterize. In future work, we plan to expand this analysis to includeadditional cases. While we are not aiming for generalizable results (which the case study methodis not intended to provide), we hope that adding additional cases to our findings will allow us tocompare across cases and
Conference Session
Engineering Management Division Technical Session 2
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Minha R. Ha, York University; Aleksander Czekanski , CEEA-ACEG
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Management
design rationale building, would preventdesign defects, redundancies, and lost work due to overridden decisions. A reward structureshould be thoughtfully planned, to encourage effective contribution to the design work, and alignactor interests such that a shared success would be rewarded.Each set of learning objectives may be further studied in the framework of threshold concepts[8], [9]: Which learning objects are difficult to achieve, yet critical for holistic thinking,interaction roles, and interest alignment? In what sequence should they be learned, and how cansuch skills be recognized and rewarded in the formal curriculum?Table 4. Proposed Learning Objectives for Engineering Management and Design Education Value-Creation Knowledge
Conference Session
Pre-College Engineering Education Division Technical Session 13
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Jungsun Kim, Indiana University Bloomington; Soo Hyeon Kim, Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis
Tagged Divisions
Pre-College Engineering Education
proximal development [17].This study is also influenced by the work on the collaborative nature of the engineering designprocess. The Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS) [18] proposed three steps to theengineering design process (define, develop solutions, optimize) that promote learners’understanding of fundamental concepts and skills in engineering. This model was designed forfour different age groups: kindergarten to second grade, third to fifth grade, sixth to eighth grade,and nineth to twelfth grade. For elementary-aged children, the Engineering is Elementary (EiE)design process model further suggests five steps in the engineering process: ask, imagine, plan,create, and improve [19]. This model is popular because of its potential and
Conference Session
Impact of COVID-19 on Design Education 2
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Sheng Lun (Christine) Cao, University of Calgary; Laleh Behjat P.Eng., University of Calgary
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education
in creating student cohorts. These algorithms are relativelycomputationally inexpensive, and easily translate to student cohort creation with somemodifications.Data and ToolsOfficial student enrollment data are released to the research team by the University Registrar.The datasets have been fully anonymized by the Registrar, with the uniquely identifiable studentID removed, and replaced with an ID increasing sequentially from one. Other attributes of thereleased datasets include: • Enrolled academic program of the student • Primary academic plan of the student • Projected academic year • Term ID • Class number • Subject of the enrolled class • Catalog number of the enrolled class • Class section • Class start time
Conference Session
Medley of Undergraduate Programming and Pedagogies
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Anastasia Marie Rynearson, Campbell University; Jacqueline Gartner Ph.D., Campbell University; Michele Miller, Campbell University
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Educational Research and Methods
successful (or unsuccessful) students. This paper presents a rubric-buildingmethod incorporating a novel use of personas, adding to the literature in both domains andproviding an example case study to help bridge the theory-to-practice gap.References[1] C. J. Finelli, S. R. Daly and K. M. Richardson, "Bridging the Research-to-Practice Gap: Designing an Institutional Change Plan Using Local Evidence," Journal of Engineering Education, vol. 103, no. 2, pp. 331-361, 2014.[2] R. M. Felder and R. G. Hadgraft, "Educational Practice and Educational Research in Engineering: Partners, Antagonists, or Ships Passing in the Night?," Journal of Engineering Education, vol. 102, no. 3, pp. 339-345, 2013.[3] M. Borrego, S. Cutler, M. Prince, C
Conference Session
Entrepreneurship & Engineering Innovation Division Technical Session 7
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Andrea T. Kwaczala, Western New England University; Robert Gettens, Western New England University; Denine A Northrup, Western New England University
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Entrepreneurship & Engineering Innovation
phase.Conclusions: In future work, the researchers aim to develop tools to assess technical skill development. Ifthere was a way to demonstrate growth or improvement in skill development during the undergraduateexperience, it would serve two purposes. First, it could serve as a method to evaluate the technical workthat occurs in the design classroom, more fairly and with clear transparency to the students. Second, itwould allow students to see how their skills have developed over the course of their education. In general,differences among gender, 1st-generation and students with low- and high- engineering self-efficacy allsuggest that a variety of these activities should be planned intentionally to promote exposure to anddevelopment of technical skillsets
Conference Session
Governance, Diplomacy, and International Comparisons in Engineering Education
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Yi Cao, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University; Xiaoye Ma, Tsinghua University; Jennifer M. Case, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University; Brent K. Jesiek, Purdue University at West Lafayette ; David B. Knight, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University; William C. Oakes, Purdue University at West Lafayette; Marie C. Paretti, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University; Xiaofeng Tang, Tsinghua University; Zheping Xie, Tsinghua University; Haiyan Zhao
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Liberal Education/Engineering & Society
. Knight is an Associate Professor in the Department of Engineering Education and Special As- sistant to the Dean for Strategic Plan Implementation at Virginia Tech. He is also Director of Research of the Academy for Global Engineering at Virginia Tech and is affiliate faculty with the Higher Education Program. His research tends to be at the macro-scale, focused on a systems-level perspective of how engineering education can become more effective, efficient, and inclusive, tends to leverage large-scale institutional, state, or national data sets, and considers the intersection between policy and organizational contexts. He has B.S., M.S., and M.U.E.P. degrees from the University of Virginia and a Ph.D. in Higher
Conference Session
Computers in Education 2 - Programming 2
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Xueyi Bao, Notre Dame University; Jun Han, University of Notre Dame; Chaoli Wang, University of Notre Dame
Tagged Divisions
Computers in Education
techniques applied tothe same volumetric data set in two side-by-side display panels, allowing students to make an easy comparison byadjusting parameters such as cutting planes, lighting, and viewing. The two display panels also react synchronicallyto interactions when parameters are changed. This is more helpful for students to understand the respective strengthsand weaknesses of these rendering techniques rather than solely relying on instructors in explaining the differences.P4: Modular and web-friendly. We design VolumeVisual with possible future expansion in mind. Therefore, we fol-low a modular design, making it easy to include other additions not yet planned. WebGL is used for easy deployment,which is based on the widely-adopted Internet
Conference Session
Pre-College Engineering Education Division Technical Session 7
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Samuel Douglas Bast; Trinity Borland, Wartburg College; Murad Musa Mahmoud, Wartburg College; Cristian Gerardo Allen, Wartburg College; Kurt Henry Becker, Utah State University - Engineering Education
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Pre-College Engineering Education
influential. The data from both sources suggested astrong connection with interests, career plans, and family influences for females.For females, in both the quantitative and qualitative data, the perceptions of other peopleincluding parents, friends, and teachers could be strong factors influencing their interest.Qualitatively speaking, regarding the males, teachers’ and parents’ perceptions did not make thetop 10. Instead, money and the ability to get good grades in STEM topics could be strongerinfluences.However, the qualitative data differs from the quantitative data when it comes to parents andfamily being strong influencers. The quantitative data showed that parents were not a very stronginfluence on interest, however in the open-ended
Conference Session
Women in Engineering Division Technical Session 7
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Victoria Beth Sellers, University of Florida; Idalis Villanueva, University of Florida
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Women in Engineering
, further contributing to hostile working environments and isolation [20].Self-efficacy and its four sources Self-efficacy refers to an individual’s beliefs in their capabilities to plan and take actionto achieve a particular outcome [21]. There are four major sources of self-efficacy [21]: (1)mastery experiences, (2) vicarious experiences, (3) social persuasions, and (4) physical andemotional states. Mastery experiences are the interpreted result of an individual’s pastperformances, such as how a woman evaluates her self-efficacy in a course based upon the gradesreceived for that class.Vicarious experiences are where individuals observe others performingtasks, such as a woman undergraduate student observing a fellow woman undergraduate
Conference Session
TELPhE Division Technical Session 2: The Broadening Face of Engineering Education
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Katherine Robert, University of Denver
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Technological and Engineering Literacy/Philosophy of Engineering
onlineimages that were plentiful were Hidden Figures themed coloring pages for children and multiple lesson plans forteachers including a NASA Hidden Figures Toolkit with resources for K-12 teachers to teach a variety ofmathematics and science lessons. I also came across a Katherine Johnson Barbie doll Mattel created as first in a lineof dolls celebrating inspiring women as historical pioneers. I found artistic interpretations [71], [72] of the threemain characters in posters and artworks that similarly showed the figures wearing the clothes from the film and eachcharacter’s body type, hair style, and posture evident. However, I noticed that often the facial features wereabstracted and sometimes the faces were blank and devoid of features in these
Conference Session
Minorities in Engineering Division Technical Session 5
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Kristen Moore, University at Buffalo, The State University of New York; Monica Farmer Cox, The Ohio State University
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Minorities in Engineering
completely unacceptable. I’ve already spoken to the chair about it, and I think we should figure out a way to prevent this kind of thing from happening again.” ● Accomplice behavior: Taffy directly confronts Melissa immediately in the conversation: “Melissa, did you talk to Jordan about this? I mean, this is really her work anyway.” When Melissa demurs, Taffy contacts Jordan to talk about it, and they develop a plan together that prioritizes Jordan’s concerns.We suggest dialogue as a first step to developing enduring accomplice relationships becausedirect dialogue with BIPOC is perhaps the only way to begin to understand the situationalcomplexities and priorities of colleagues. Where advocates develop institutional savvy
Conference Session
Student Division Technical Session 1
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Mercy Folashade Fash, North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University ; Andrea Nana Ofori-Boadu, North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University; Rabiatu Bonku, North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University ; Wanya Alford, North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University ; Alesia Coralie Ferguson, North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University ; Angela M. White, North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University
Tagged Divisions
Student
general has beenso helpful because it's enabled me to lay out my work as if I was in class and it links everything.One amazing thing is using Google Sheets, Google Docs and I can share it with my professors,with my classmates, I can share my calendar with my girlfriend if she wants to figure out whenI'm free. So, just scheduling and being organized is such an important part of my personality andmy academic success. So, that definitely helps my functioning and performance.” Self-disciplineplayed a critical role in maintaining good STEM performance. An RP stated, “I think that itreally taught me self-discipline and being able to plan…That definitely helped me stay on top ofit and not really slip behind that much.” RPs indicated that they had become
Conference Session
Changing How We Pursue Change
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Emily Knaphus-Soran, University of Washington; Daiki Hiramori, University of Washington; Elizabeth Litzler, University of Washington
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Culture & Social Justice in Education, Equity
(navigational capital).While the community cultural wealth Sylvia possessed and the additional capital developedthrough her experience with identity-based organizations supported her successful completion ofa computer science bachelor’s degree, she indicated that she was not planning to pursue agraduate degree because she had an obligation to take care of her aging parents in the wake ofher sister’s death. So my parents are elderly. My, well, I don't know if they think they're elderly, but like they're changing now. And my older brothers, they're like 10 and 12 years older than I, so they're kind of like living their own lives. And like I said, one of them has his own family. And so I feel like there's like a responsibility for
Conference Session
Assessing Hard-to-Measure Constructs in Engineering Education: Assessment Design and Validation Studies
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Donna Jaison, Texas A&M University; Hillary E. Merzdorf, Purdue University, West Lafayette; Blake Williford, Sketch Recognition Lab; Lance Leon Allen White, Texas A&M University; Karan Watson P.E., Texas A&M University; Kerrie A. Douglas, Purdue University, West Lafayette; Tracy Anne Hammond, Texas A&M University
Tagged Divisions
Educational Research and Methods
contextualizedwithin larger projects or challenges, such as engineering design, so that students may have practiceon the communication aspects of drawing which may improve self-efficacy.Continuing research on this DSEI will include modifying individual items based on further expertfeedback. We also plan to survey wider, more diverse populations of learners beyond engineeringand art classes, to look for differences in self-efficacy. Expanding the target educational level topostsecondary and professional learners would provide additional validity evidence for the use ofthis DSEI across many learning settings. Future directions may expand the DSEI more generally toany researchers interested in measuring drawing self-efficacy, whether using digital drawing
Conference Session
Remote Physical Laboratories: Experimentation and Laboratory-oriented Studies
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Oludare Adegbola Owolabi P.E., Morgan State University; Jumoke 'Kemi' Ladeji-Osias, Morgan State University; Mehdi Shokouhian, Morgan State University; Oludayo Samuel Alamu, Morgan State University; Seong W. Lee, Morgan State University; Gbekeloluwa B. Oguntimein P.E., Morgan State University; Adedayo Ariyibi, Morgan State University; Hye Jeong Lee, Morgan State University; Krishna Bista, Morgan State University; Mulugeta T. Dugda, Morgan State University; Sotonye Ikiriko, Morgan State University; Celeste Chavis P.E., Morgan State University
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Experimentation and Laboratory-Oriented Studies
, structural mechanics, sustainable infrastructure development, and material model development. He had been actively involved in planning, designing, supervising, and constructing many civil engineering projects, such as roads, storm drain systems, a $70 million water supply scheme which is comprised of treatment works, hydraulic mains, access roads, and auxiliary civil works. He had developed and opti- mized many highway design schemes and models. For example, his portfolio includes a cost-effective pavement design procedure based on a mechanistic approach, in contrast to popular empirical procedures. In addition, he had been equally engaged in the study of capacity loss and maintenance implications of local and state
Conference Session
Empathy and Human-centered Design 2
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Xiao Ge, Stanford University; Daigo Misaki, Kogakuin University; Nanami Furue, Tokyo University of Science; Chunchen Xu
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education
Center forDesign Research in Mechanical Engineering at Stanford.Dr. Nanami Furue, Tokyo University of Science Nanami Furue received her Ph.D. degree from the Graduate School of Commerce and Management, Hitotsubashi University. She has been working as an Assistant Professor of the School of Management, Tokyo University of Science and teaches Product Planning and Design Thinking. She has conducted several research projects in the field of marketing, innovation and design. Her major research interest is comparison of idea generation and selection of new product development among different countries and occupations.Chunchen Xu American c Society for Engineering
Conference Session
Design Pedagogy 2
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Hadi Ali, Arizona State University, Polytechnic campus; Andrew David Maynard, Arizona State University
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education
., perception, planning, reasoning, learning and control) Computer vision • Developing algorithms to understand the physical world Deng et al. through captured visual information (2009) Systems thinking • Develop the ability to think beyond simple systems to Schneider & consider boundaries and interaction between complex systems Berenbach, (2013) Design thinking • Develop the ability to go through iterations of the design Dorst (2011