alsooffered in the Master of Industrial Technology program of the College of Technology. All ofthese courses have a laboratory component integrated with the lectures. The laboratory activitiesin these courses emphasize industrial sensors, actuators and data acquisition to investigate thebehavior of the measurement and control systems. National Instrument’s NI-ELVIS station withLabVIEW software is used in these laboratory activities. Students do mini-projects using thePC-based laboratory workstations that integrate NI-ELVIS shown in Figure 1. These projectsenable the students to analyze, design, build and test complete instrumentation and processcontrol systems. Through this approach, students obtain exposure to many real problemsassociated with
a MS in Technology at ASU Polytechnic campus. His project work involves embedded knowledge structures in advanced multidisciplinary technologies; specifically photo-lithography. Page 11.866.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2006 Lean education – has its time arrived?AbstractThe curriculum for almost any university-level technology program is overloaded. Thecommitment to keep up to date with industry developments and at the same time cover allthe necessary principles of science and engineering means that more and more is beinginserted and little is ever taken out. As a response, the paper
bring numerous gaps in their knowledge, particularly in physics and mathematics. Theinitial contact with this new reality in their lives is crucial to future success, revealing a greatimportance for personal and professional development and creating tight bonds with positiveinfluence on dropout rates. These challenges led to the decision to implement a new socio-pedagogical project called GOIS (from Damião de Góis, a prominent Portuguese andEuropean renaissance man). It introduced important innovations and new strategiesinvolving computer-student interaction during teaching-learning processes. Problem-solvingskills are fundamental tools for the future engineer; so, the goal is to improve those tools andcoach the student in a rational way. A
research interests include wear phenomenon in orthopeadic implants, ethical development in engineering undergraduates, and pedagogical innovations in environmental education. Currently, Trevor serves on the ERM Division Board of Directors and on the Kettering University Center for Excellence in Teaching and Learning Advisory Board.Terri Lynch-Caris, Kettering University Dr. Terri Lynch-Caris, Ph.D., P.E., is an Assistant Professor of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering at Kettering University. She serves as the Co-PI for the NSF project titled “Development of a Course in Environmentally Conscious Design and Manufacturing for Undergraduates” and will team-teach the course once developed. Her
2006-1406: DEVELOPMENT OF AN INTEGRATED CONSTRUCTIONMANAGEMENT AND CIVIL ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY CURRICULUMBruce Gehrig, University of North Carolina-Charlotte DR. G. Bruce Gehrig is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Engineering Technology, University of North Carolina at Charlotte. He graduated from Brigham Young University in 1984 and worked for over 15 years as a licensed professional civil engineer in both the public, private and international sectors. He received his PhD in Civil Engineering from Colorado State University in 2002 and has taught courses in construction methods, cost estimating, project management, hydraulics, and highway design.David Cottrell, University of North
assess their understanding of real time DSP.The rest of the paper is organized as follows. Section II discusses the hardwareaspect of this educational setup. In section III, we explain the software andinterfacing aspects of this project. Section IV outlines some of the functionsavailable to students, while section V provides concluding remarks. 2. HARDWARE OVERVIEW2.1 The TI DSK6713 boardThe TI DSK6713 board [8-12] is based on the TMS3206713 processor, which is afloating-point DSP chip operating at 225 MHz. The board also includes the 32-bitstereo codec TLV320AIC23 (AIC23) to access and produce input and outputanalog signals. Sampling rates can be varied between 8 and 96 kHz. The boardhas 16MB of SDRAM and 256kB of flash
NOVA, 1989/2004, 60 minutes; and Page 11.706.5 • A Tale of Two Rivers, Great Projects: The Building of America Series, Production of Great Projects Film Company, Inc. in association with South Carolina ETV and the National Academy of Engineering, Distributed by PBS Home Video, 2002, 60 minutes.Student Questions Regarding Hurricane KatrinaAs part of another assignment, each student was asked to pose three questions that warrantdiscussion in this course, which created an aggregate of 29 questions. Each student wasencouraged to consider both engineering and non-engineering issues that are of personal interest.These 29 questions
understanding of the essential fundamentals and convince them ofthe inadequacies of their stubborn misconceptions and poor procedural habits. Page 11.687.5While Wyatt’s prescription of small student-executed original research projects for the broadrange of important engineering fundamentals would definitely help open student’s minds,comprehensive implementation without a massive overhaul of the current system is unlikely.But the idea of a supervised exploration of the unknown in her paper is suggestive. And anengineering education adaptation of Jeremy Silman’s approach to teaching chess3 I believe willprovide a more efficient and workable system, without
Electronics and Computer Engineering Technology department. He has served as the Associate Chair in charge of electronics-related academic programs. He organized two technical sessions for ASME’s IMECE (formerly known as the Winter Annual Meeting): one on fluidic sensors and the other one on respiratory mechanics. For several years he was the secretary and newsletter editor of the Fluid Control Panel (a technical panel of the Dynamics Systems and Control Division of ASME). He has also served as a reviewer for several ASME journals. He participated in an interdisciplinary, project whose goal was to design and build a cart that would autonomously paint the stripes in a
, including software installation, configuration, and integration, which cannot be accomplished using resources directly available from ASU.• The laptop policy addresses the Division’s unique computing demands and provides access to the latest industry standard software at no cost to the student. Appendix A lists the current software requirements for Division courses.• A laptop policy permits faculty and instructors to make more immediate decisions on software selection for their courses, both software products and versions of those products. Students in group projects are also not constrained to software already installed on the campus builds.• The laptop policy increases the opportunity and impact of student mentoring
2006-2238: A COMPARISON OF ON-LINE AND TRADITIONAL TESTINGMETHODSSteve York, Virginia Tech Dr. Steven C York is an assistant professor in the department of Engineering Education at Virginia Tech. He received his BS degree in chemistry from Radford University in 1984 and his PhD in chemical engineering from Virginia Tech in 1999. Dr York has taught courses in engineering problem solving and design, chemical engineering and chemistry. Dr York has also designed and implemented a number of design-build projects and engineering laboratory experiences for first-year engineering students at VA Tech. Dr York is a member of ASEE and the American Chemical Society. Address: Engineering
Ohio State University, M.S. and Ph.D. in Engineering from the University of Arkansas. He holds a Professional Engineer certification and worked as an Engineer and Engineering Manager in industry for 20 years before teaching. His interests include project management, robotics /automation and air pollution dispersion modeling. Page 11.1420.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2006 Utilizing Collaboration for a Real World Engineering EducationAbstractIt is becoming increasingly difficult for educational institutions to offer quality engineeringprograms. The costs associated with laboratory and related
think abouttheir children’s post-secondary education. The parents are given step-by-step instructions to helptheir child make informed decisions about his or her education. The parents also participate inVirginia View, a workshop providing the parents with numerous materials ranging from websitesto find information about colleges to salaries for different types of professional jobs. In keepingwith this theme, an accomplished and inspirational speaker speaks to the parents about breakingdown barriers for students of color and highlighting success strategies parents can implement toincrease their child’s opportunity to obtain a higher education degree.During the parent’s workshops, the PCI students are engaged in an interactive design project
process; this is equivalent to assessingan individual on a team or group project. A secondary issue is how or even if, students can takeownership of this design process? How do they come to know it or should they just takeresponsibility for the management of the process? More studies need to be done in this area butclearly the technology has changed their experience and is raising important pedagogicalquestions of authorship as well as ownership.Supporting DataSurveyA three-page blind survey was given to the Construction Design students at the conclusion oftheir first ten-week design development project for a large residence. Although the survey wasnot designed specifically for this paper, it does show characteristics of this new
to get out of thetraditional “teaching mode” as it was for the students to get out of the “passive learning” mode.Nevertheless, the students’ final projects and presentations suggest that the learning experiencesucceeded and students developed a realistic understanding of what it takes to be an entrepreneur.Further, the experience resulted in a plan of improvements to the method, three of them key. First,given the natural ambiguity of PBL to develop entrepreneurial skills, it is imperative that structuralaspects of the course are as unambiguous as possible. Second, the grading and support structure ofthe course need to reward student self-sufficiency. Third, in-class activities must be structured sothat teams are forced to be fully prepared
, ability to develop new methods, resources, ideas, establish assemble, integrate, unique, structures, parts; create teams or new rearrange, modify systems, models, approaches, write protocols approaches. (creative or contingencies thinking) 6 Evaluation Review options or plans in Review, justify, assess, present a The student has the terms of efficacy, return on case for, defend, report on, ability to assess investment or cost- investigate, direct, appraise, argue, effectiveness of whole effectiveness, profitability, project-manage concepts in relation to
teach this body ofknowledge. It concludes that civil engineering faculty must be scholars, effective teachers,practitioners, and role models. While true, there are a number of complex issues that arise suchas whether it is possible for one person to possess all of these attributes, whether such a modelbest serves the projected trends in civil engineering education, and whether these needs areapplicable to and can be enforced for non-traditional, non-university civil engineering programs.As a new committee (BOK-2) has formed to write the second edition of this document, theASCE Committee on Faculty Development is revising the “who should teach” chapter for thiseffort. This paper discusses some key issues that are relevant to the civil
problem solution, identify the error, and re-solve the problem correctly.2. The Breakdown of Critical Thinking in Mechanics EducationIn this section we examine evidence from situations in mechanics education in which studentsfail to employ critical thinking, and in which pedagogical materials fail to engage students incritical thinking. We believe that these examples are representative of typical situationsencountered by students and instructors at many institutions, and that they provide a clear andaccurate assessment of some fundamental issues that must be addressed.Anecdotes from Student Questions. In the last two years or so, several of our former studentshave visited us to ask questions pertaining to their current course projects. Strikingly
education. The primary goals of SyE3(the pilot) were: • SyE3 seeks to raise the technology entrepreneurship literacy of engineering faculty and their students and demonstrate the importance of this literacy to economic prosperity (job and wealth creation). This includes knowledge of the entrepreneurship process and identification of relevant linkages between engineering and entrepreneurship. • SyE3 seeks to improve the art and craft of teaching entrepreneurship in engineering schools. This includes the use of case studies, simulations, and real world projects as alternative pedagogies. • Motivation to understand and engage in the entrepreneurship process. With a recognition that engineers foster
2006-2603: MIND LINKS 2006: RESOURCES TO MOTIVATE MINORITIES TOSTUDY AND STAY IN ENGINEERINGMaria Petrie, Florida Atlantic University Page 11.931.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2006 MIND Links 2006: Resources to Motivate Minorities to Study and Stay In EngineeringAbstractMIND is the acronym for the American Society for Engineering Education (ASEE) MINoritiesin Engineering Division. The MIND Links project gathers useful web links and information onresources that would allow minority students and minority faculty to find and take full advantageof the myriad of programs and information designed to promote their participation in
penetration in the workplace of our graduates. In a biennialsurvey of recent engineering graduates from Penn State reported below, we have found distinctlymodest levels of importance in the respondents’ work assigned to “Importance of Working on anInternational Project.” Although this importance rating has been creeping up since the firstsurvey of 1993 graduates, it is still below a 3 on a 5 point scale. Conversely, the respondentsrated study abroad experiences highly (3.5 to 4.5) even if they did not have one, and most didnot. So those surveyed have very positive attitudes towards engagement with the rest of theworld, but they are not yet rating its significance to their work very highly. Both these findingswould seem to challenge the view that our
assistant professor at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. She has several years of industrial work experience with General Electric and has been the principal or co-principal investigator on NSF grants and industry funded projects, has published 3 book chapters, and over 50 peer reviewed journal and conference proceedings papers. She is a member of ASEE, ASME, IIE, SWE, and Alpha Pi Mu and currently serves as the Design Economics area editor for The Engineering Economist.Timothy Simpson, Pennsylvania State University Tim Simpson is an Associate Professor of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering at Penn State University. He received a B.S. degree in Mechanical Engineering from Cornell
students create drawings of different thread types and forms, but have notemphasized the effect of thread forms as related to torque or part travel. In problem-based learning (PBL) students are presented with an interesting, relevant problem “upfront”, so that they can acquire knowledge in the context in which it will be used and bemore likely to retain what they learned (Albanese and Mitchell, 1993; Boud and Folletti,1991)1,3. PBL comes in many forms including research, case studies, guided design,design projects, and the McMaster Medical School model of PBL. The problem-basedactivities used in this study are not intended to be semester long projects to be researched
-disciplinary course is held in a large lecture hall with a class size normally exceeding100 students. The course focuses on introducing students to the profession through topic lectures,videos and a capstone project (normally something mechanical in nature). After analysis of thetopics and via discussions with chemical engineering students who have taken this class, it wasclear that certain important pieces of information, including things specific to chemicalengineering students, were never being discussed or even conveyed. Hence, the next logical stepwas to generate a separate class, Introduction to Chemical Engineering, which was to be requiredof all entering chemical engineering freshman. Note that this course, labeled ChE 1010, iscurrently not a
2006-813: INTRODUCTION TO SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY CAREERS ANDLEADERSHIP WORKSHOPS FOR WOMEN AND GIRLSMargaret Ratcliff, Purdue University-Columbus/SE Indiana Margaret Ratcliff is an Assistant Professor in Mechanical Engineering Technology at Purdue University College of Technology in Columbus, Indiana and has been there since January 2005. Before joining Purdue University at Columbus, she spent 11 years in industry working mostly as a Product Design Engineer, Senior Project Engineer, and Structural Analyst. She earned a M.S. degree in Mechanical Engineering from Texas A&M University and a B.S. in Mechanical Engineering from Tulane University.JoDell Steuver, Purdue University JoDell K
. Page 11.587.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2006 Enhancing Mathematics Instruction with Engineering DesignAbstractThis article addresses the results of an action research project in a fifth grade elementary schoolclassroom conducted as part of an M.A. Program in Elementary Education with a specializationin Mathematics, Science and Technology (MST) where engineering design is used tointerconnect learning in mathematics and design.The students, working in teams of two, were challenged to design and construct a chair for astuffed animal they have been shown and the chair had to meet a variety of geometricspecifications. They were enthusiastic about constructing the chair.In order to assess student knowledge improvement
: Internet Security (formerly CIS 499) · CIS 481: Computer Forensics · GBA 685: MSBA Project-Adv Computer ForensicsThe college Mt. San Antonio also offers a network security certificate program with 3 courses:CISS 21: Network Vulnerabilities and CountermeasuresCISS 23: Network Analysis and Network Intrusion Detection SystemCISS 25: Network Security and FirewallsBase on the curriculum of the other colleges and departments listed here (and also the curriculamentioned in the ASEE papers), a good information assurance curriculum (or major, focus,option) consists of the following six courses. Note the core courses on OS, Network, andProgramming are also what the authors of reference 1 mentioned in the first paragraph
expect to spend at least 42 hours on the job. Regardless of whether Ireceive released time for a sanctioned activity or not, I should use Work Measurementtechniques to estimate the time commitment associated with the activity. This is especiallyimportant for project type activities because inappropriate allocation of time to perform(scheduling) can often lead to procrastination and ultimately inability to deliver by deadlines.Budgeting Work TimeFigure 2 presents a load budget for my Fall 2005 schedule. Assume that I was assigned threesections of the same course. The course is fully developed in that it requires no preparation otherthan familiarization before each class meeting. There were 25 students assigned to each section.The classes met in
immediately in competitiveenvironments with system engineering, information technology, and soft (communication,leadership and team) skills in addition to traditional engineering fundamentals 2,3. Such skills areparticularly relevant for Industrial Engineers who often serve as a facilitator of technical andbusiness interactions4,5.A number of efforts to increase these skills have been undertaken, the most common being thecapstone senior design projects. Curriculum designers are increasingly more aware ofdeveloping courses that combine skills from several prior courses to practice such skills.Especially innovative approaches introduce students to systems thinking early and continuouslythrough their program, stressing both engineering and business
11.675.3and reinforcement across classes. To fulfill the competencies required of engineering graduates,the design spine promotes an increased emphasis on topics relating to professional practice,communication skills, teaming, project management and economics of design, skills that aredeveloped progressively and reinforced throughout.Table 1. The Mechanical Engineering undergraduate curriculum at Stevens Institute ofTechnology.While the Design Spine has been successful in closely integrating aspects of engineering designto the core fundamentals of the engineering curriculum, a similar integration of CAE softwareacross and thorough the curriculum has to date been lacking. Currently, in-depth coverage of theuse of CAE software tools in the context of