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Conference Session
Graduate Education in Engineering Technology
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Bimal Nepal, Indiana University Purdue University, Fort Wayne (Eng); Jihad Albayyari, Indiana-Purdue University
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Technology
will learn and get hands-onexperience with quality engineering software which will be enhanced further by working onsemester projects involving analysis of real world projects and published case studies. Further,the paper also outlines the teaching modules and modalities to enhance the learning outcomes ofthe subject.Course objectives and outcomesThis course will expose students to modern quality philosophies and advanced qualityengineering techniques. Topics include fractional factorial design, advanced statistical processcontrol techniques, and correlation and regression analysis to understand the relationshipamongst quality factors. The course will prepare students to take positions such as lead qualityengineer or engineering technologist
Conference Session
Innovations in ECE Education III
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Peter Idowu, Pennsylvania State University-Harrisburg; Mohamed Omer, Pennsylvania State University-Harrisburg
Tagged Divisions
Electrical and Computer
quadratic costfunction parameters. Ct is the total cost, while PL and PD are the total loss and demandrespectively.REFERENCES[1] M. Kezunovic, A. Abur, H. Garng, A. Bose, K. Tomsovic, “The role of digital modeling and simulation in power engineering education,” IEEE Trans. Power Systems, vol. 19, n 1, pp. 64 – 72, Feb. 2004.[2] P. Idowu, “Development of a prototype resource optimizing, access delimited (ROAD) laboratory,” Proc. 2000 IEEE Power Engineering Society Winter Meeting, vol. 2, pp. 1405-1409.[3] M. M. Albu, K. E. Holbert, G. T. Heydt, S. D. Grigorescu, V. Trusca, “Embedding Remote Experimentation in Power Engineering Education,” IEEE Trans. Power Systems, vol. 19, n 1, pp. 139-143, Feb. 2004.[4] M., Varano; M., Patel; D., Asnani
Conference Session
Novel Courses and Content for ChEs I
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Allen White, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology; Glen Livesay, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology; Kay C Dee, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology
Tagged Divisions
Chemical Engineering
their informed consent to participate (IRB approval, RHS#0068), and studentparticipation was voluntary and compensated. All students completed the Index of LearningStyles (ILS)6,7 and the VARK questionnaire8,9, and the supplemental learning opportunities(SLOs) described in this work were held on campus in a teaching laboratory on Tuesdaysbetween 6:00 and 7:00 pm. Five one-hour kinesthetic active SLOs were held during the 10-weekFall 2007/08 quarter: the first two SLOs were held before the first exam in ES 201, the next twooccurred between the first and second exam, and the final SLO occurred prior to the third examin ES 201. Page
Conference Session
Impacts of Public Policy on Engineering Education
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Elizabeth Cady, National Academy of Engineering; Norman Fortenberry, National Academy of Engineering
Tagged Divisions
Engineering and Public Policy
status • Percentage of faculty with discipline specific terminal degree • Percentage of full-time faculty • Promotion Tracking: Number and % of faculty who submit tenure or promotion applications with outcome – assistant to associate, associate to full • Number of years in each faculty rank (time to promotion) • Sabbatical year per years teaching by rank, percentage and tenure status • Number, discipline, and institution of faculty serving on inter-institutional graduate thesis committees • Number, rank, and tenure status of faculty that participated in an NSF review process, advisory committees, or Committee of Visitors • Number, rank, tenure status of faculty participating in professional development symposia/workshops
Conference Session
Use of Technology to Provide Civil Engineering Education
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Jakob Bruhl, United States Military Academy; James Ledlie Klosky; Elizabeth Bristow, United States Military Academy
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
leisure4. Education repositories such as ED-CAST orMERLOT5 contain examples of these. Other professors have integrated digital videos to provideaccess to demonstrations6 or present laboratory preparation guidance or even allow for conductof a laboratory experiment from a remote location7.The authors recently implemented an alternative method of using recent technology to providestudents with a learning resource that they can use at a time and place of their choosing. Themethod is referred to here as “Video AI” (AI stands for “Additional Instruction”) and has beenimplemented in the United States Military Academy’s Department of Civil and MechanicalEngineering with measurable positive effects on both academic performance and studentperceptions of
Conference Session
Innovations to Curriculum and Program
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Angela Bielefeldt, University of Colorado at Boulder
Tagged Divisions
Environmental Engineering
area.Catherine Peters proposed that civil/environmental engineering curricula should “teach studentsthe fundamentals of sustainable energy, in addition to incorporating sustainable engineering andglobal warming issues14. To effectively engineer sustainable systems, energy flow must beunderstood. For example, the Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI) has estimated that about4% of all electricity consumption in the U.S. is consumed by water and wastewater treatment andtransmission, and that electricity accounts for 80% of municipal water treatment and distributioncosts2. Environmental engineers have the potential to lead systematic analysis of products andprocesses from a life-cycle perspective. Environmental engineers may be the best suited of allthe
Conference Session
NSF Grantees Poster Session
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Dmitriy Garmatyuk, Miami University
Course with Broader Appeal to StudentsAbstractThis paper features course material being designed at Miami University under the NationalScience Foundation’s (NSF) Course, Curriculum and Laboratory Improvement (CCLI) grant tospecifically address the problem of students’ declining interest in electromagnetics (EM), whileapplications of EM continue to permeate many areas of electrical engineering both in theindustry and academia. The new approach to teaching introductory course of EM aims to sparkstudents’ interest to the subject via offering them several real-world problems from the selectareas of signal integrity engineering, radar, antenna analysis and EM field propagation in humantissue. The problems are intuitively relevant and presentation of
Conference Session
BME Courses & Curricular Content
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Robert Linsenmeier, Northwestern University; David Gatchell, Northwestern University
Tagged Divisions
Biomedical
AC 2008-1467: PHYSIOLOGY CONCEPTS AND PHYSIOLOGY PROBLEMS FORBIOMEDICAL ENGINEERING STUDENTSRobert Linsenmeier, Northwestern University Robert A. Linsenmeier has a joint appointment in Biomedical Engineering in the Robert R. McCormick School of Engineering and Applied Science, and in Neurobiology and Physiology in the Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences. His primary teaching is in human and animal physiology. He is the Associate Director of the VaNTH Engineering Research Center in Bioengineering Educational Technologies, former chair of the Biomedical Engineering Department at Northwestern, and a fellow of the American Institute of Medical and Biological Engineering and the
Conference Session
Learning Needs and Educational Success
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Brenda Hart, University of Louisville; Veronica Hinton-Hudson, University of Louisville; James Lewis, University of Louisville
Tagged Divisions
Minorities in Engineering
Page 13.751.4industry is scheduled for each week. The selection of the industry primarily depends upon a fewcritical factors such as schedule availability, INSPIRE access to practicing engineers at work,availability of transportation, interdependencies of other sessions, etc.The program participants utilize the classroom and laboratory facilities at University ofLouisville Speed School of Engineering for both engineering as well as non-engineeringsessions. Figure 4 provides a succinct synopsis of seven of the engineering, discipline related,sessions. Over the last decade, several engineering modules have been developed across theengineering discipline that can be used for pre-college students in 9th through 12th grades. Eachdisciplinary
Conference Session
Curriculum Development and Applications
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Gregory Nail, University of Tennessee-Martin
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Design Graphics
of Toledo. The author explains that, because of trends promoted bystate departments of transportation, his program opted to integrate GEOPAK © into designclasses. Specifically, GEOPAK © was integrated into a synchronized CAD laboratory whichincluded highway geometric design, and site and utility layout. A semester long project was usedas the vehicle with which the software was introduced to the students. The conversion fromquarters to semesters was the original impetus for the expansion of the CAD laboratory courseoffering. The prerequisite is a freshman level course which incorporates Microstation ©instruction. The author refers to the challenge of adequately exposing students to all of thecapabilities of GEOPAK © within the available 33
Conference Session
STEM Pipeline: Pre-College to Post-Baccalaureate
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Julie Trenor, University of Houston; Olga Pierrakos, James Madison University
Tagged Divisions
Educational Research and Methods
AC 2008-592: UTILIZING A SOCIAL COGNITIVE THEORETICALFRAMEWORK TO INVESTIGATE THE INFLUENCES OF A SUMMERUNDERGRADUATE RESEARCH EXPERIENCE ON PARTICIPANTS’ACADEMIC AND CAREER PLANSJulie Trenor, University of Houston JULIE MARTIN TRENOR is a Research and Instructional Assistant Professor at the University of Houston, and is the Director of Undergraduate Student Recruitment and Retention for the Cullen College of Engineering. Dr. Trenor holds a Ph.D. in Materials Science and Engineering from Virginia Tech and a bachelor’s degree in the same field from North Carolina State University. Dr. Trenor develops and teaches freshman engineering courses, and directs the women-in-engineering program
Conference Session
Professional Graduate Education & Industry
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Norman Egbert, Rolls-Royce Corporation; Donald Keating, University of South Carolina; Eugene DeLoatch, Morgan State University
Tagged Divisions
Graduate Studies
]. Page 13.561.9 To serve as working environment that fosters professional creative scholarship in the practice of engineering for innovation by establishing, developing, and implementing a ‘teachinglaboratory’ for advanced engineering development that serves to develop the creative engineering scholarship of center faculty for faculty development and that of promising undergraduate engineering students during the summers. Whereas NSF has successfully created and implemented Research Experiences for Undergraduates (REU) on university campuses across the nation, we can do in a similar manner to create and implement Technology Development Experiences for Undergraduates (TDEU) as a training
Conference Session
Successful Outcomes of Student Entrepreneurship
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Khanjan Mehta, Pennsylvania State University; Sven Bilen, Pennsylvania State University
Tagged Divisions
Entrepreneurship & Engineering Innovation
philosophy,curriculum, instructional strategy, preliminary assessment results and the teaching toolsemployed to enhance the students’ entrepreneurial experience.IntroductionFrans Johansson, in his book The Medici Effect1 recounts the story of the Medicis, a bankingfamily in Florence who were patrons in a wide range of disciplines. Due to the Medicis and afew other like-minded families, sculptors, scientists, poets, philosophers, financiers, painters, andarchitects from all over Europe and as far as China converged upon the city of Florence. Therethey found each other, learned from one another, and broke down the barriers between theirdisciplines and cultures. Together they formed a new world based on new ideas—what becameknown as the Rinascimento or
Conference Session
Successful K-12 Programs for Girls & Minorities
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Bruce Gehrig, University of North Carolina at Charlotte; Deborah Sharer, University of North Carolina at Charlotte; Stephen Kuyath, University of North Carolina at Charlotte; Anthony Brizendine, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Tagged Divisions
K-12 & Pre-College Engineering
AC 2008-2128: A COMPREHENSIVE AND INTEGRATED APPROACH TOINCREASE ENROLLMENTS IN ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGYBruce Gehrig, University of North Carolina at Charlotte Assistant Professor, Department of Engineering Technology, Civil Engineering Technology and Construction Program, University of North Carolina at Charlotte. PI on the NSF funded Teaching Engineer to Counselors and Teachers (TECT)project.Deborah Sharer, University of North Carolina at Charlotte Associate Professor, Department of Engineering Technology, Electrical Engineering Technology Program, University of North Carolina at Charlotte. PI on the NSF funded Enhancing Diversity in Engineering Technology (EDiET)project.Stephen Kuyath, University
Conference Session
Experiential and Service Learning
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Jim Chamberlain, Clemson University
Tagged Divisions
Multidisciplinary Engineering
iterative 3-way dialogue between the large group (10-15 students), themodule design group (2-4 students), and a recognized expert. The process encouragesdeep learning as students actively engage in creative conceptualizing, teaching each otherfrom general engineering principles and from their own disciplines, and interaction with aprofessional. Even though only a subset of the students will travel to the host country, allof the students on the project team have a sense of being involved with the siteassessment planning and are invested in the project from the point of view of their chosendiscipline. The IPD adventure is one that gives the student an actual engineeringexperience while engaging his/her passion for the social good
Conference Session
Public Engineering of Engineering, K12 Standards, and Overview
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Tylisha Baber, Michigan State University; Norman Fortenberry, National Academy of Engineering
Tagged Divisions
K-12 & Pre-College Engineering
found on the Social Impact Games website. • The Learning Federation Project[6] of the Federation of American Scientists (FAS) works on research and development strategies to harness the potential of emerging information technologies to improve how we teach and learn. In October of 2005, the FAS hosted a Summit on Educational Games. This summit marked the first meeting of individuals from academia, government, private foundations and the software development industry to determine the challenges that need to be addressed to create a strong marketplace for educational games. Although three games were identified on the website[7], none was determined to have a focus on engineering. • Finally, a general search of the web
Conference Session
K-12 Engineering Outreach Programs
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Susan Powers, Clarkson University; Bruce Brydges, SUNY Potsdam; Gail Gotham, SLL BOCES; James Carroll, Clarkson University; Peter Turner, Clarkson University; Douglas Bohl, Clarkson University
Tagged Divisions
K-12 & Pre-College Engineering
Clarkson’s GK-12 program has been extended significantly with other specificoutreach programs that include extensive teacher professional development (Table 1). The K-16,or even K-20+, professional development is important as many of the teachers are initially lessfamiliar with the project-based approach, and with the interplay between the different disciplineareas. The St. Lawrence County Mathematics Partnership was funded by NYS EducationDepartment (NYSED) as a three year MSP (math science partnership) program to enhance bothcontent knowledge and teaching skills of math teachers. Additional NYSED-MSP funding wasreceived in June 2007 for the current STEM Partnership Program that will engage students andteachers in integrated STEM activities and
Conference Session
Professional Graduate Education & Industry
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Donald Keating, University of South Carolina; Thomas Stanford, University of South Carolina; Joseph Rencis; Eugene DeLoatch, Morgan State University; Mohammad Noori, North Carolina State University; Edward Sullivan, California Polytechnic State University; David Woodall, Oregon Institute of Technology; Norman Egbert, Rolls-Royce Corporation; David Quick, Rolls-Royce Corporation; Albert McHenry; Roger Olson, Rolls-Royce Corporation; Samuel Truesdale, Rolls-Royce Corporation; Timothy Lindquist, Arizona State University; Harvey Palmer, Rochester Institute of Technology; Joseph Tidwell, Arizona State University Polytechnic; Mark Smith, Rochester Institute of Technology; Duane Dunlap, Purdue University; Mark Schuver, Purdue University; Edmund Segner, University of Alabama at Birmingham; Stephen Tricamo, New Jersey Institute of Technology; Barry Farbrother, University of New Haven; Ken Burbank, Western Carolina University; Carla Purdy, University of Cincinnati; Randall Holmes, Caterpillar Inc.
Tagged Divisions
Graduate Studies
Conference Session
Issues of Cooperative Education I
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
ROBERT GRAY, Penn State Erie
Tagged Divisions
Cooperative & Experiential Education
with a local industry.Perceived Shortcomings to Traditional Systems Design CurriculumBefore I began a career in academia as a professor of (electrical) engineering, I worked inindustry for nearly 20 years. A major part of my career was in the military performing duties asan avionics maintenance technician, a flight crewmember in remote operations in Alaska, anavionics systems engineer for the F-16 aircraft, and researcher for guidance and controls systemsin an avionics laboratory. Once in front of the classroom, it did not take long before I noticedthat my senior students had a good grasp of the individual subjects (circuits, digital electronics,microprocessors, mathematics, physics, etc.), but they lacked a solid understanding of how
Conference Session
Alternative Energy Source Projects
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Craig Somerton, Michigan State University
Tagged Divisions
Energy Conversion and Conservation
AC 2008-1054: AN OCEAN ENERGY PROJECT: THE OSCILLATING WATERCOLUMNCraig 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, his M.S. in 1979
Conference Session
NSF Grantees Poster Session
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Patrick Tebbe, Minnesota State University-Mankato; Stewart Ross, Minnesota State University, Mankato; Michael Ostendorf, Minnesota State University-Mankato; Scott Cray, Minnesota State University-Mankato
AC 2008-1803: PROMOTING STUDENT ENGAGEMENT INTHERMODYNAMICS WITH ENGINEERING SCENARIOS (YEAR 2)Patrick Tebbe, Minnesota State University-MankatoStewart Ross, Minnesota State University, MankatoMichael Ostendorf, Minnesota State University-MankatoScott Cray, Minnesota State University-Mankato Page 13.1012.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2008 Promoting Student Engagement in Thermodynamics with Engineering Scenarios (Year 2)I. IntroductionMany thermo-fluids courses are taught with traditional teaching methods and textbooks.Thermodynamics, in particular, is prone to elicit a negative impression from students "whoperceive the subject as dry
Conference Session
Multidisciplinary Teams
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Denine Northrup, Western New England College; Steven Northrup, Western New England College
Tagged Divisions
Multidisciplinary Engineering
-disciplinary teams”1. Western New England College has a long history of incorporatingengineering design into laboratory and course work. Additionally, interdisciplinary team effortsare initiated in the freshman year and continue for all four years.2,3 This paper describes theassessment instrument used in a senior-level interdisciplinary course that students take during thefall semester. The design project brings together students from mechanical, electrical, andcomputer engineering in teams typically consisting of 4-5 members. During the most recentdelivery of the course, due to a limited number of platforms and a larger senior class, the teamsconsisted of 7-8 students.To achieve a good level of interdisciplinary teamwork, educators need to motivate
Conference Session
Factors Affecting Minority Engineering Students
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Barbara Christie, Loyola Marymount University
Tagged Divisions
Minorities in Engineering
Page 13.1045.4classes, or have a school assembly or invite parents for a career night discussion? Mosthigh schools do not have the infrastructure to support extra phone calls, or communityoutreach partnerships. If you have tried to call a high school and reach the principal orfaculty members, you are aware of how difficult it can be to develop a line ofcommunication. Many times you will have to call a teacher at home in the evenings todiscuss a project or program. The engineering faculty and staff within a university arealready stretched between research and teaching and do not have the luxury of time forcommunity outreach programs unless they can operate smoothly and efficiently. Thebarriers to working with several high schools in your
Conference Session
Computer Simulation and Animation II
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Robert Brooks, Temple University; Asher Madjar, Temple University; William Miller; Keerthi V. Takkalapelli, Temple University
Tagged Divisions
Computers in Education
AC 2008-2967: FINITE ELEMENT METHOD - A TOOL FOR LEARNINGHIGHWAY DESIGNRobert Brooks, Temple University Dr. Brooks is an Associate Professor and the Undergraduate Director of the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Temple University. He was voted the "Transportation engineer of the year" by the ASCE-Philadelphia Section. Dr.Brooks' expertise includes finite element methods, highway and runway design, innovative materials in transportation engineering. He won the Tempe University College of Engineering’s Teaching Award for the year 2008.Asher Madjar, Temple University Prof.Madjar is a research professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Temple
Conference Session
Innovations in ECE Education II
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Ronald Hayne, The Citadel
Tagged Divisions
Electrical and Computer
AC 2008-346: BEYOND VHDL SIMULATION TO ON-CHIP TESTINGRonald Hayne, The Citadel Ronald J. Hayne, PhD, is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at The Citadel. His professional areas of interest are digital systems and hardware description languages. He is a retired Army Colonel with experience in academics and Defense laboratories. Page 13.251.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2008 Beyond VHDL Simulation to On-Chip TestingAbstractDigital systems design relies heavily on hardware description languages and their associatedsoftware tools
Conference Session
Interdisciplinary Education
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Jay Porter, Texas A&M University; Jorge Alvarado, Texas A&M University; Joseph Morgan, Texas A&M University; John Poston, Texas A&M University; Kenneth Peddicord, Texas A&M University; John Crenshaw, STP Nuclear Operating Company
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Technology
Science from Washington University in 1991. From 1991 to 1995 he worked at University of California, San Diego and Wayne State University. From 1995 to 2006, he worked in the automotive industry as a system engineer. In 2006 He joined the Electronics Engineering Technology faculty at Texas A&M. His research activities include control system theory and applications to industry, system engineering, robust design, modeling, simulation, quality control, and optimization.Jorge Alvarado, Texas A&M University Dr. Jorge Alvarado is an assistant professor in the Department of Engineering Technology and Industrial Distribution at Texas A&M University. He teaches courses in the areas of thermal
Conference Session
Intellectual Property and Entrepreneurship
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
John Farris, Grand Valley State University; Hugh Jack, Grand Valley State University; Shabbir Choudhuri, Grand Valley State University; Christopher Pung, Grand Valley State University
Tagged Divisions
Entrepreneurship & Engineering Innovation
students to shape their lives, their professions, and their societies. The universitycontributes to the enrichment of society through excellent teaching, active scholarship, and public service”.To fulfill the pubic service aspect of the mission statement, the School of Engineering (SOE) was establishedin 1980 to supply local industry with engineers capable of assuming leadership roles. Since it founding theSOE has been able to expand and build two buildings with the financial support of local industry. In the pastdecade, the forces of globalization and international competition have challenged manufacturing companiesof all sizes that have traditionally supplied much of the economic vitality to the region.At the same time the growth and maturation
Conference Session
Two Year College Tech Session III
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Alexander Shayevich, Pima Community College; Jeff Goldberg, University of Arizona; Judy Edson, University of Arizona
Tagged Divisions
Two Year College Division
AC 2008-605: PERFORMANCE AND RETENTION OF TRANSFERENGINEERING STUDENTSAlexander Shayevich, Pima Community CollegeJeff Goldberg, University of Arizona Jeff Goldberg is currently Associate Dean for Academic Affairs, College of Engineering, at the University of Arizona. He was employed at Vector Research Incorporated and Bell Laboratories previously. Jeff has strong interests in increasing the retention rate of engineering students, improving the classroom experiences, increasing student learning, and increasing the diversity of the engineering student population. Jeff received his Ph.D. from the Michigan, in IOE 1984, and the M. ENGR.and BS from Cornell in ORIE in 1980 and 1979
Conference Session
FPD5 - Teaming and Peer Performance
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Arlisa Labrie Richardson, Arizona State University
Tagged Divisions
First-Year Programs
complexities of cooperative learning group work in order toadequately provide an equitable access for all students. Critical parameters involved in settingup successful groups include preparation to work as a group; group size, student abilities, race,gender and previous experience 30. Teams should engage in teambuilding exercises before thecooperative learning exercise. Research studies have shown that teaching students cooperativebehaviors such as task-related interaction skills, sharing of ideas and information, staying on taskand helping others to understand what was being taught has a significant impact on improvingthe learning experience for everyone in the group 25,35. Some research has found that studentteams should consist of three to six
Conference Session
Design Communications
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
David Jonassen, University of Missouri; Tamara Knott, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University; Richard Goff, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education
AC 2008-717: SCAFFOLDING COLLABORATIVE DESIGN ONLINEDavid Jonassen, University of Missouri Dr. David Jonassen is Distinguished Professor of Education at the University of Missouri where he teaches in the areas of Learning Technologies and Educational Psychology. Since earning his doctorate in educational media and experimental educational psychology from Temple University, Dr. Jonassen has taught at the Pennsylvania State University, University of Colorado, the University of Twente in the Netherlands, the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, and Syracuse University. He has published 30 books and numerous articles, papers, and reports on text design, task analysis, instructional