- Conference Session
- FPD1 -- Implementing a First-Year Engineering Course
- Collection
- 2006 Annual Conference & Exposition
- Authors
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Jenny Lo, Virginia Tech; Vinod Lohani, Virginia Tech; Odis Griffin, Virginia Tech
- Tagged Divisions
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First-Year Programs
, andprogramming courses to a format that emphasizes early design and realization, collaborativelearning, and highly interactive classroom environments3,4,5,6. Beginning in fall 2002, College ofEngineering (COE) required all engineering freshmen to own laptop computers, which wereimmediately incorporated into the classroom environment. After considerable discussion in2004, an improved ENGE1024 syllabus was designed to include general problem solving,engineering ethics, visualization of 3-D objects and also visualization of information, earlydesign (including realization), graphing and simple analysis of graphs, and introduction toobject-oriented programming (OOP) approaches for problem solving. This new course wasoffered for the first time in fall 2004.7
- Conference Session
- FPD8 -- Systems, Nanotechnology & Programming
- Collection
- 2006 Annual Conference & Exposition
- Authors
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Helen Burn, University of Michigan; James Holloway, University of Michigan
- Tagged Divisions
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First-Year Programs
broken into lab/discussion sections of 25 students each. A faculty memberoversees each lecture section and supervises 3 graduate student instructors who each lead 3lab/discussion sections. There are generally 3 lecture sections each term, but these are often runlargely independently of each other, other than a shared set of course objectives. The curriculum(syllabus, assignments, exams) is homogeneous within each lecture section and its coupled labsections. While there is variation from lecture section to lecture section, course assignmentsgenerally include 8 to 12 projects whose solution requires the implementation of an algorithm ineither C++ or MATLAB, along with 6 to 8 hours of exams.Faculty in the college of engineering worked carefully on