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Displaying results 1 - 30 of 36 in total
Conference Session
Capstone Design I
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Andrew Willis, University of North Carolina at Charlotte; James Conrad, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education
AC 2008-1741: SENIOR DESIGN PROJECT: A ROBOTIC SYSTEM USINGSTEREOSCOPIC CAMERAS FOR NAVIGATIONAndrew Willis, University of North Carolina at Charlotte Andrew Willis is an Assistant Professor at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte in the Electrical and Computer Engineering Department. He received his B.Sc. in Computer Science and B.Sc. in Electrical Engineering from Worcester Polytechnic University in Worcester, Massachusetts. After working in industry for four years, Andrew attended graduate school at Brown University where he obtained a Sc.M. in Applied Mathematics and a Sc.M. in Electrical Engineering completing a Ph.D. in Engineering Sciences in 2004. He is a member of the ASEE, IEEE
Conference Session
Teams and Teamwork in Design II
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Mark Chang, Franklin W. Olin College of Engineering; Allen Downey, Olin College of Engineering
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education
AC 2008-1961: A SEMI-AUTOMATIC APPROACH FOR PROJECT ASSIGNMENTIN A CAPSTONE COURSEMark Chang, Franklin W. Olin College of Engineering Mark L. Chang is an Assistant Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at the Franklin W. Olin College of Engineering.Allen Downey, Olin College of Engineering Allen Downey is an Associate Professor of Computer Science at the Franklin W. Olin College of Engineering. Page 13.99.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2008 A Semi-Automatic Approach for Project Assignment in a Capstone CourseAbstractThis paper presents a semi-automatic
Conference Session
Capstone Design III
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Morshed Khandaker, University of Central Oklahoma; Peter Orono, Indiana University-Purdue University-Indianapolis; Stephen Ekwaro-Osire, Texas Tech University
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education
’ undergraduateengineering program. In this research, both, an independent evaluator and peer evaluatorsevaluate each student’s performance during the group oral presentation. The Spearman's RankCorrelation method was used to determine whether there is a correlation between the teamparticipation and group presentation in the project. For all group members, the result shows astrong correlation between oral presentation score and project participation grades.1. Introduction In the capstone based design projects, the student work together in teams to create solutionsto design problems originating from four sources. In this study, the sources of the design projectswere faculty projects, industry supported projects, projects for design competitions, and
Conference Session
Capstone Design II
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
James Widmann, California Polytechnic State University
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education
AC 2008-2729: ENHANCEMENT OF CAPSTONE INDUSTRY SPONSOREDSENIOR PROJECTS THROUGH TEAM-BASED, PRODUCT REALIZATIONACTIVITIESJames Widmann, California Polytechnic State University Jim Widmann is an Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering at California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo. He received his Ph.D. in 1994 from Stanford University. Currently he teaches mechanics and design courses. He conducts research in the areas of design optimization, machine design, fluid power control and engineering education. Page 13.534.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2008 Enhancement of
Conference Session
Capstone Design II
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Patrick Walter, Texas Christian University; Robert Bittle, Texas Christian University
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education
AC 2008-375: EVOLUTION AND ASSESSMENT OF AN INDUSTRY-BASEDSINGLE LARGE PROJECT CAPSTONE DESIGN COURSEPatrick Walter, Texas Christian UniversityRobert Bittle, Texas Christian University Page 13.582.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2008 Evolution and Assessment of an Industry-Based Single-Large-Project Capstone Design CourseAbstractThis paper describes 12 years of growth and evolution of an industry-supported single-large-project capstone design course within the engineering program at Texas ChristianUniversity. This relatively new program has graduated only 12 senior classes since 1996,and currently
Conference Session
Capstone Design I
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Michael Plumley, US Coast Guard Academy; William Palm, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; William Simpson, U.S. Coast Guard Academy
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education
solving and basic CAD and manufacturing skills. Sophomoreand junior years are focused on analysis based courses, such as Mechanics of Materials andThermodynamics, in preparation for those requiring integrated knowledge in their senior year,such as Experimental Methods, Machine Design, and Controls.Lab periods in the senior Machine Design course are dedicated to preparing students for theirfinal capstone design project through participation in a common design, build, and test exercise.Machine Design projects focused on only the course at hand may help enforce a notion thatclasses are not integrated. Many projects at the Coast Guard Academy included need statementsrequiring design of small table top models using basic machine components such as
Conference Session
Capstone Design III
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Don Dekker, University of South Florida; Stephen Sundarrao, University of South Florida; Rajiv Dubey, University of South Florida
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education
Society for Engineering Education, 2008 Capstone Design Courses: Content RecognitionIntroduction:The Capstone Design course at The University of South Florida brings realistic designexperiences into the academic environment. The course is completed in each of the two 15 weeksemesters. The students do all of the design phases: define the project, conceptual design,embodiment design and detail design, plus other experiences, such as report writing, makingdrawings, and presentation skills. In addition, the students read and discuss two engineeringethics case studies, are instructed in Pro-Engineer, and have lectures on several pertinent topics,such as patents and licensing, entrepreneurship, professionalism, and safety. The
Conference Session
Capstone Design I
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Susannah Howe, Smith College
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education
Education, 2008 Focused Follow-Up to 2005 National Capstone SurveyAbstractThis work details a survey of engineering capstone design courses focused on faculty teachingload and capstone funding levels. The survey was distributed to the attendees of the inauguralNational Capstone Design Course Conference in June 2007. The survey yielded responses from59 participants, representing 45 institutions. The results of the survey provide valuable insightinto number and duration of design projects, team size, capstone teaching credit, facultyinvolvement, direct project costs, and external funding levels.1. IntroductionCapstone design courses offer engineering students a culminating design experience through anapplied engineering project
Conference Session
DEED Poster Session
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Don Dekker, University of South Florida; Stephen Sundarrao, University of South Florida; Rajiv Dubey, University of South Florida
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education
howtwo heads are better than one. In fact, two people are necessary to operate a Capstone Designcourse. Directing the student teams, grading tests and papers, and preparing discussions in aCapstone Design course is a full course load. In addition to these usual responsibilities, theinstructor for a Capstone Design course is often required to visit industry and non-profitorganizations to find the projects for students to develop. It seems commonplace for academicinstitutions to expect this extra effort from Capstone Design teachers, but this is unrealistic.Capstone Design is a wonderful course to teach because of the mature, motivated students andthe exciting projects, but it shouldn’t be a time-consuming backbreaker for the instructor.Course
Conference Session
The Best of Design in Engineering Education
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Stephen Laguette, University of California-Santa Barbara
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education
, hands-on experience, and integrates analytical and designskills acquired in the companion ME courses. The course objectives are (1) designproblem solving, creative thinking, project planning and teamwork through a challengingdesign and build project; (2) to provide experience in fundamental engineering reportingand communication including project plans, design reviews, and project reports. ACapstone Design program has now been developed and has become an integral andimportant component of the mechanical engineering curriculum. This program nowallows the students to address more significant and practical design projects.The ME Capstone Design Program added an Industry Partner Program for the 2005/06student projects. This program was successfully
Conference Session
Capstone Design II
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Perry Parendo, University of St. Thomas; Jeff Jalkio, University of St. Thomas
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education
availablespots. All indicators point to a successful educational model. Senior Design Interest 30 25 20 Quantity 15 Projects 10 Proposals 5 0 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 YearBibliography 1. Howe, S. and Wilbarger, J.”National Survey of Engineering Capstone Design Courses”, Proceedings of the 2005 ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition
Conference Session
Capstone Design II
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
James Conrad, University of North Carolina at Charlotte; William Heybruck, University of North Carolina at Charlotte; Daniel Hoch, University of North Carolina at Charlotte; Martin Kane, University of North Carolina at Charlotte; Peter Schmidt, University of North Carolina at Charlotte; Frank Skinner, University of North Carolina at Charlotte; Linda Thurman, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education
company employee must help define and/or guide the work. This section describes activities we use to increase company/student communication and contact.This paper will present observations on each of these topics from the University of NorthCarolina at Charlotte's programs. Student outcomes are also identified.1. IntroductionSenior design capstone courses offer engineering students an opportunity to apply the skills theyhave learned throughout their undergraduate education to an applied engineering project in ateam environment. The University of North Carolina at Charlotte College of Engineering hasintegrated a multi-disciplinary senior design program that spans all of the engineeringdepartments. Industry sponsors have been identified and
Conference Session
Capstone Design I
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Robb Larson, Montana State University
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education
club-to-coursework relationship occurs inthe interdisciplinary (ME and MET) Capstone Design course. Club-sponsored automotivedesign and build projects are treated essentially as any other industry-sponsored project,with the twist that they are funded primarily by students who are primarily enrolled ineither the ME or MET curriculum. Many of the students fill dual roles: That is, they helpdefine the projects in their role as club members and are then enlisted by courseinstructors to design/build/test the components as members of the design teams working,resulting in a course grade. This scenario has resulted in a level of student involvement in– and enthusiasm for – the engineering education process that has rarely been seen beforeat this
Conference Session
Capstone Design III
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Mark Chang, Franklin W. Olin College of Engineering; Jessica Townsend, Franklin W. Olin College of Engineering
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education
ExperienceAbstractThis paper presents some of the challenges, successes, and experiences in designing a new seniorengineering capstone program at the Franklin W. Olin College of Engineering. Senior capstonedesign programs in engineering colleges have evolved over many years and are often modifiedand reinvented to keep up with the needs of both students and external constituencies. HarveyMudd College’s Clinic program is one of the largest and longest-running capstone programs inthe country that relies heavily on industry sponsors to provide real world problems and fundingto execute the projects. For many reasons, and in no small way because of its track record ofsuccess, our own capstone course offering is modeled closely upon the Harvey Mudd
Conference Session
Capstone Design II
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
R. Keith Stanfill, University of Florida
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education
, 2008 Web-enabled System for Managing Student Applications for a Selective Industry-sponsored Multidisciplinary Capstone Design ProgramAbstractIntegrated Product and Process Design (IPPD) is an institutionalized two-semester industry-sponsored multidisciplinary capstone design option for seniors in engineering, business, andpackaging science at the University of Florida. Preparing for the launch of the IPPD program inthe fall semester requires coordinating with dozens of project sponsors, faculty and staff fromnine academic departments and students from more than 12 disciplines. Obtaining 25 suitablemultidisciplinary industry projects each year is a time consuming activity. So too is the
Conference Session
Capstone Design III
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Greg Kremer, Ohio University-Athens; David Burnette, Ohio University
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education
Mechanical Engineering from the University of Cincinnati in 1998, and has five years of experience as a Mechanical Design Engineer at General Electric Aircraft Engines.David Burnette, Ohio University David Burnette was both an undergraduate student who participated in the OU ME Sr. capstone design project, and an OU ME graduate student who helped compile the student comments and complete the literature search for this study. He is currently an employee of the Bettis Atomic Power Laboratory. Page 13.1349.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2008 USING PERFORMANCE REVIEWS IN CAPSTONE
Conference Session
Capstone Design III
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Mohamed El-Sayed, Kettering University; Steven Beyerlein, University of Idaho
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education
-based classroom practitioners at the University of Idaho Page 13.362.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2008 DESIGN AND INTEGRATION OF A CAPSTONE COURSE TO ACHIEVE PROGRAM OUTCOMESAbstractA capstone is the top and last stone in a building. Similarly, a capstone course is usually the peakand last experience for students in a higher education program. Depending on the discipline andinstitution capstone courses may take the form of group projects, senior seminars, research, orany other activity that successfully integrates and synthesizes what students have learned throughthe academic program
Conference Session
Multinational and International Design
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Craig Somerton, Michigan State University
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education
AC 2008-706: CREATING A SOLAR OVEN INDUSTRY IN TANZANIA: ACAPSTONE DESIGN EXPERIENCECraig Somerton, Michigan State University CRAIG W. SOMERTON Craig W. Somerton is an Associate Professor and Associate Chair of the Undergraduate Program for Mechanical Engineering at Michigan State University. He teaches in the area of thermal engineering including thermodynamics, heat transfer, and thermal design. He also teaches the capstone design course for the department. Dr. Somerton has research interests in computer design of thermal systems, transport phenomena in porous media, and application of continuous quality improvement principles to engineering education. He received his B.S. in 1976
Conference Session
Design Communications
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Edward Lumsdaine, Michigan Technological University; Monika Lumsdaine, E&M Lumsdaine Solar Consultants, Inc.
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education
corporate behavior and president of her own company. She won a national design award for a passive solar house plan from DOE/HUD. She has extensive technical writing experience in solar energy, product quality, and engineering design. She is certified in the administration and interpretation of the Herrmann Brain Dominance Instrument (HBDI) and conducts team building workshops in industry, business, and educational institutions. She assisted in the 2007/2008 capstone design course as a technical writer as well as the HBDI practitioner/evaluator for project team formation and monitoring. Contact info: www.InnovationToday.biz
Conference Session
Design Communications
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
William Riddell, Rowan University; Maria Simone, Rowan University; Stephanie Farrell, Rowan University; Peter Mark Jansson, Rowan University
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education
design.IntroductionThe significant changes that accompanied the ABET 2000 document1 reflected theobservation by academia and industry that engineering education needed to change tobetter prepare engineering graduates for the current work environment2,3. One result ofthese changes is that both design and communication have been given increasinglyimportant treatment in undergraduate engineering curriculum. Project-based courseshave been gaining acceptance as a means to introduce design experiences into thecurriculum prior to the senior capstone design course4-6. In some cases, communicationcontent has been integrated into engineering content as well7.Undergraduate students in the College of Engineering at Rowan University take asequence of eight project based
Conference Session
Teams and Teamwork in Design II
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Gregory Watkins, California State University, Chico
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education
AC 2008-2381: GROUP SELECTION TECHNIQUES FOR A MECHANICALENGINEERING SENIOR DESIGN PROJECT COURSEGregory Watkins, California State University, Chico Page 13.656.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2008 Group Selection Techniques for a Mechanical Engineering Senior Design Project CourseAbstractThe mechanical engineering program at California State University Chico utilizes a two-semester capstone course in senior design project. It is required that students perform the projectwork in groups, as that is a measured outcome in the course. Assigning students to groups haslong been problematic, with no satisfactory solution despite numerous
Conference Session
Design for Society and the Environment
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Mohamed Samir Hefzy, The University of Toledo; Mehdi Pourazady, The University of Toledo; Abdollah Aliakbarkhan Afjeh, The University of Toledo
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education
project and can be found atthe following URL address:http://www.eng.utoledo.edu/mime/design_clinic/design_expo/fall00pages/2000-01-06/home.htmlFigure 3 Vertical Wheelchair Platform Lift Figure 4 Isometric Schematic of the Vertical Wheelchair Platform Lift Page 13.521.12Outcomes of the Senior Design Course in the Mechanical Engineering Department:The ME Senior Design course is the capstone event of undergraduate education. Each project isdesigned to address several of the “a-k” ABET evaluation criteria for engineering programs(Table 2). The course outcomes are listed in Table
Conference Session
DEED Poster Session
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Karim Muci-Küchler, South Dakota School of Mines and Technology; Jonathan Weaver, University of Detroit Mercy; Daniel Dolan, South Dakota School of Mines and Technology
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education
good understanding of the design process and, in particular, of how to perform each of thetasks involved in it.A very effective approach to teach product design and development is to use a project basedlearning strategy in which students have to immediately apply the concepts, methodologies andtools presented in the course to a project that has the key elements found in an industrial settingbut that meets the severe time constraints found in an academic environment. At the present timesome Senior Design Project and Capstone-type senior-level courses are following that particularapproach (see for example Dutson et al.1, Catalano et al.2, and Muci-Küchler and Weaver3). Inaddition, some of the freshman, sophomore and/or junior level design
Conference Session
Teams and Teamwork in Design I
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Rudolph Eggert, Boise State University
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education
School Press, Boston, M.A.,1993[4.] Dutson, A., Todd, R., Magleby, S., and Sorenson, C., “A Review of the Literature on Teaching EngineeringDesign Through Project-Oriented Capstone Courses,” Journal of Engineering Education, January 1997, pp. 17-28.[5.] Davis, D., Gentili, K., Trevisan, M., and Calkins, D., “Engineering Design Assessment Processes and ScoringScales for Program Improvement and Accountability,” Journal of Engineering Education, April 2002, pp. 211-221.[6.] Howe, S. and Wilbarger, J., "2005 National Survey of Engineering Capstone Design Courses", Proceedings ofthe 2006 ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition, ASEE, 2006.[7.] Todd, R., Magleby, S., Sorenson, C., Swan, B., and Anthony, D., “A Survey Of Capstone Engineering CoursesIn
Conference Session
Design for Society and the Environment
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Emily Callaway, CH2M HILL; Sean St. Clair, Oregon Institute of Technology
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education
and light gauge steel design and construction. Page 13.1130.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2008 Sustainable Research and Design in a Civil Engineering Senior Design CourseAbstractIn an effort to help students understand the broader impacts of land development, a significantsustainability component was added to a capstone senior design project course in a small civilengineering program. This year-long course traditionally involves students completingstraightforward designs in the areas of structural, transportation, geotechnical, and municipalenvironmental engineering. In a
Conference Session
Multidisciplinary Design in the Classroom
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
David Pines, University of Hartford; Hisham Alnajjar, University of Hartford
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education
engineering curriculum went through a major curriculum change in2001 that included adding an interdisciplinary sophomore and junior design course to theexisting freshman and senior design capstone courses. The new courses were added as part of aNSF grant entitled “Integrating Engineering Design with the Humanities, Social Sciences,Sciences and Mathematics.” The interdisciplinary sophomore design course has undergoneseveral iterations since its inception. Initially, the sophomore course paralleled our seniorcapstone design course with each project team of 3 to 6 students working on industrial sponsoredproject with a practicing engineer as the technical mentor. This approach has worked extremelywell for our senor design course because of the effort put
Conference Session
Assessing Design Coursework
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Michael Plumley, US Coast Guard Academy; Vincent Wilczynski, U.S. Coast Guard Academy
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education
instance, students will draw on their knowledge of all courses fortheir capstone design project, including strengths of materials, thermodynamics, and machinedesign to name but a few. The presence of small design, build, and test projects in these coursesis intended to help students develop problem solving and design skills in the context of thosecourses. The portfolio provides a means for instructors of those courses to quickly see how theirclass contributes to the design goals of the program. More importantly, it allows instructors ofcore courses who may be from different departments to see the importance of their course to theMechanical Engineering program. At a small institution like the Coast Guard Academy, whereover 50% of students
Conference Session
Design Communications
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Stephen Ekwaro-Osire, Texas Tech University; Innocent Afuh, Texas Tech University; Peter Orono, Indiana University-Purdue University-Indianapolis
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education
students the ability to develop search strategies that will come up with moremeaningful results. Reading through the results, they will see and learn how to relate and useinformation not only in their final reports, but also in their design notebooks and presentations.The rubrics developed here are applied at two major engineering programs. The rubrics wereused in a capstone course. The implications of the results in the context of engineering designeducation are discussed.1. Introduction Engineering design education is a central element of student training in engineering schools.Design projects are usually open ended and thus present students with challenges. This requiresthem to sift through large amounts of information in all formats. Blake
Conference Session
Multidisciplinary Design in the Classroom
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Tongele Tongele, Southern Illinois University, Edwardsville
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education
?” Once again, let’s resist the temptation of trying the answer the questions, and note thatwhen students become seniors and prepare to graduate, they must take capstone design coursesand do senior projects. This looks like a last opportunity but a major opportunity for students toget in depth in the use of codes and standards. This certainly sounds like the “major designexperience based on the knowledge and skills acquired in earlier coursework and incorporatingappropriate engineering standards and multiple realistic constraints” required by ABET. But thequestions remain relevant even up to this point: “Do students use in depth codes and standards intheir capstone design or senior projects?” There may not be an absolute yes or no to the
Conference Session
Assessing Design Coursework
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Richard Bannerot, University of Houston
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education
) ‚ Initial Testing: Oct 8th ‚ Final Testing and Artifact Evaluation: Oct 31st ‚ Team Presentation: Nov 7th ‚ Team Final Report and Extended Abstract: Nov 19th 12% 5. Midterm exam (closed book), Oct 15th 23% 6. Final Exam (closed book), Dec 12thTeam ProjectThe largest single component of the grade is the grade for the Team Project. Asummarized problem statement (The actual problem description is usually seven or eightpages.) for the Fall 2007 team project is presented in Table 2. All elements of the projectare submitted by the team, not by individuals as in the capstone course. Students self-select into teams of four (to the extent possible). The major deliverables for the projectare: a final report, a