differences between tasks andprojects that encourage hand-on doing and those thatencourage doing with understanding…”3 With this inmind, the authors set off to design a one week programthat would provide an engaging academic challengefor students.Building Bridges to the Future encompassesengineering aspects of bridge design as well as teamskills, creative problem solving, and careerexploration. Each of the explorations planned for the Figure 1: Students testingcamp are designed to pique student interest and show K’Nex bridge designsthe importance and relevance of both mathematics andscience. Experiences indicate that topics which utilize hands-on activities and lead to a designcompetition will motivate students4. The
adopted from Atman et al.15 The coding consisted of nine elements,namely, problem definition, gather information, idea generating, modeling, feasibility analysis,evaluation, decision, communication, and other. Since the thrust of this research was oninformation gathering activities, the “gather information” element was further broken up intonine distinct information gathering activities, namely, 1. ask client-expert 2. library research 3. internet use 4. ask other-expert 5. plan to gather 6. gather info (general) 7. parts: plan to gather info 8. parts: gathered info 9. procedure: gather infoFurthermore, the “communication” element was also broken up into 1. Citation 2. Presentation or written report 3. Report
Contact with junior robot Page 13.1380.3Figure 2. Decision matrixStudents made models of three of concepts using foam core, box cutters, and glue guns during thesecond week. Digital pictures, descriptions of each model, and a decision matrix for choosing the bestconcept were submitted along with solid models of each part of their design. A Decision matrix like theone shown in Figure 2 was used to select the best design. Process plans were required for the third weekalong with a Pro/E assembly file, G-codes to produce all parts with comments that identify which codesor lines were used to manufacture each feature of the part. A process plan
coding descriptors, for example “planning maintenance” and“developing technical standards”. There was little or no supporting evidence for somedescriptors, and others had to be merged when it became clear that the evidence could notdistinguish one from another. For example, separate descriptors for “marketing”, “assistingclients develop projects”, and “researching client needs” were merged into a single descriptor“influencing clients”.Several unexpected aspects of engineering practice emerged from the interview data. By farthe most significant was technical coordination. There were three questions in the interviewto explore supervision relationships (with superiors, contractors and subordinates). The initialreview of responses led to a single
to successfully perform critical work functions ortasks in a defined work setting. The competencies often serve as the basis for skill standards thatspecify the level of knowledge, skills, and abilities required for success in the workplace as wellas potential measurement criteria for assessing competency attainment2. Product design, as anintegrated profession, covers a wide range, including: engineering (technology, techniques,material and processing), ergonomics (operation, safety, usability), business (marketing,management, planning, corporate identity), aesthetics (form, visualization, style), and evensocial, environmental, and cultural issues. Design educators and professionals are alwaysconcerned with the issue of industrial designers
will operate. The external mentor is expected to give feedback which shouldbe incorporated into future prototypes and the final functional deliverable.Device BenchmarkingThe students must develop a benchmarking plan to assess whether or not their finaldevice meets each specification. Similar to the feasibility testing, the external mentorsmay provide the appropriate medical environment in which to perform the finalbenchmarking.Functional DeliverableAll groups are expected to create a functional deliverable that solves the problem asstated in the problem description by meeting all specifications. Results from thebenchmarking tests are used to assess whether the device passes or fails eachspecification. At the conclusion of the semester
: Page 13.422.2 1. Acquisition of customer’s requirements, 2. Problem formulation, 3. Cost estimation, 4. Product conceptual design, 5. Product representation (Solid Modeling), 6. Product conceptual prototyping, 7. Make/buy decision, 8. Manufacturing process capabilities, 9. Manufacturing process identification, 10. Process planning, 11. Fabrication and Assembly.In this course, interdisciplinary teams with students from various engineering andtechnology disciplines worked together to design, manufacture, and assemble real-lifeproducts. Senior students in manufacturing options participated in this course. Studentsin the MS program actively participated in the project as part of their practice-orientedcredit requirement. The
team work skills.The Toothpick Factory © is a series of activities set in an actual working environment, aproduction facility that makes custom toothpicks. It comes with a full suite of game parts, aswell as lesson plans, classroom teaching materials, and debriefing guidelines. A professionaldevelopment workshop is available to help potential facilitators learn how to most effectively usethe simulation. This presentation will outline The Toothpick Factory© simulation game,highlight the workplace soft skills it reinforces and summarize the initial implementation dataand responses both in classrooms and facilitator training sessions. Page
conducted. Finally, plans for publishingmanuscripts (regarding the above mentioned collaborative international engineeringdesign project will be finalized. Page 13.91.6Technical DetailsEach partner institution is required to work on a component of this internationalengineering design project. At the completion of this project, all the components will beput together to produce a functional engineering application.The complete engineering design project consists of designing the electrical supplysystem of an agricultural form using different renewable energy sources, photovoltaicpanels, a wind turbine, and a small hydro-electric station. This farm is
where the students are responsiblefor planning their own research. A team of staff members supports their efforts, including twostaff members from the faculty of Technology Policy and Management (TPM) who provideexpertise on research methodology. Page 13.1041.2 During a semester small groups of students (2-4) have to work on a research assignment. Atthe start of the project the students have to indicate their preference for the availableassignments, drawn up by the staff. The groups are assembled, based on their choice of topic.In the opening session each group is handed out a project brief containing a description of aresearch topic including a
full-time salariedpositions with families. This caused some of the students to reevaluate their plan. As a resultseveral of the students are planning to take 1 class each semester plus one in the summer insteadof the planned two classes per semester in the fall and spring. This has also impacted ourschedule of projected course offerings.On the positive side, the mathematics issues which we thought might be a major stumbling blockfor those students who either took the prerequisite course long ago and forgotten it or for thosewho never really learned it in the first-place has not been as bad as we had envisioned. Throughin-class reviews and review material/links on the webpage we have been able to help studentsmeet most of the mathematical
to the large base of electrical equipmentmanufacturing companies in the Houston area as well as electrical utilities and independentpower providers throughout Texas. Recent years show widespread use of Power Electronics inpower system applications alongside applications in robotics and automated factories, space anddefense applications, electric vehicles etc. Hence, there is a need for state-of-the-art education inthe emerging and important area of Power Electronics. A senior level course in PowerElectronics (ELET 4326-Power Converter Circuits) was added to the degree plan recently.Power Electronics is an applied discipline and a well-planned hardware laboratory should be anintegral part of its education plan. A laboratory component for the
be an essential component of the Kettering University LITEProgram planning and implementation. Each year, we conduct a number of surveys that providequantitative and qualitative data. We survey participants, faculty, and the undergraduates whoserve as mentors. Participants complete pre- and post-program surveys to measure LITE’simpact on their interest in engineering, as well as program expectations and satisfaction levels.We track participants into their college years, determining where they go to college, why theychose their particular institution, their majors and minors, and whenever possible, their post-baccalaureate plans. We track LITE matriculants closely once they enter Kettering, followingtheir academic performance, as well as
received donations from Falcon Communications Inc. and TimeWarner Telecom including a Nortel DMS-10 switching system, an IP/PBX, IP phones, andSONET OC-3 add/drop multiplexers. Together with the equipment in the current two networkinglaboratories, we plan on developing an integrated advanced TCN laboratory. It will present anintegrated network environment where traditional telephone network, VOIP, data network andbackbone fiber optic network coexist with data, voice and video traffic. Figure 2 shows thefuture advanced TCN laboratory configuration.The DMS-10 system is a carrier class central office switching platform offering service optionsranging from simple dial tone to advanced voice and data networking. Our DMS-10 can supportup to 10,000 lines
changes and provide the most updated equipment forstudents and faculty. In order to start integrating cutting edge classroom technology, changes andupdates needed to be made. First, there were components that had to be integrated in the room tomaximize the program’s technological classroom with an updated laboratory facility and add anew addition of portable computer tablets would provide excellent instructional environment forthe students and faculty.The planning of this project incorporated the present needs while considering the maximumnumber of students for various classes and laboratories that may use the room in the future.Enhancing the traditional “lecture only” classroom environment included purchasing Tablet PCs.They were incorporated
signed the spring of 2007 between OldDominion University and the New College Institute. A search was performed and a programcoordinator was hired in the summer of 2007, who is now on site in Martinsville. These first fewmonths the coordinator has been working with the ODU Department of Engineering Technologychair, the Dean of Applied Science and Engineering Technology at Patrick Henry CommunityCollege and the director of the New College Institute on establishing an office at PHCC and inestablishing a strategic marketing plan to advertise the program and recruit students for coursesbeginning in the Spring 2008 semester. The curriculum and articulation with PHCC are beingmore finely tuned, as well as articulation with other associate degree
EngineerThis section is arguable one of the most popular areas of the website. It provides information onthe specific steps necessary to become an engineer, including the classes that a student shouldtake in high school to prepare for entry to engineering studies. It also discusses the benefits ofbecoming an engineer including the opportunity to work with teams of people to solve problems,the chance to work with new technologies, the ability to work just about anywhere and the powerto make a difference in the lives of individuals.CareersThis section provides information on career planning, descriptions of various engineering careersas well as information on salaries and employment. The Girls Guide to Career Planning presentsinformation on several
, immersing a student in the “real-world” CG work environmentmay not always provide the needed pedagogical structure that will fulfill EL requirements orstandard course and program requirements. Incorporating “soft skills” classes into a CG plan ofstudy can help provide the other component of “real world” skills that employers seek.This paper addresses how experiential learning can be implemented in the CG course or programstructure, which will provide a significant transfer of learning through involvement with real-world projects.IntroductionAn appropriate identification of EL methodologies and criteria needs to be accessible to faculty,as well as, assessment methods for evaluating the EL course. Luckner and Nadler1 defined theEL process in the Book
programsthat move ideas to commercialization while addressing basic human needs such as health, food,security, clean water and affordable energy for people living in poverty in the U.S. or abroad.Grant recipients partner with a non-profit, for-profit educational or governmental organizationsto plan and implement products or services in an economically sustainable entrepreneurialmodel. Sustainable Vision grants range from 20 to 50 thousand dollars with a grant period oftwelve to eighteen months.Conferences and WorkshopsNCIIA has developed a variety of resources to support curricular development and informaleducation as well as advance product development and commercialization.Conferences. NCIIA annual conferences for entrepreneurial educators are a
the assembly of existingcourses, curricula, or educational programs that already exist across the country. Rather, the NationalCollaborative Task Force is taking a deliberate planned, engineering systems approach to the situation inorder to re-engineer a professional component of graduate engineering education, that is professionally-oriented, practice-centered, and focused on accelerating innovation in industry, specifically designed tomeet the progressive needs, skill-sets, and responsibilities of upward mobile engineers who are pursuingengineering and engineering leadership careers directly relevant to the practice of engineering.3.2 The Power of Collaboration in theAdvancement of Professional Engineering Education in the National
understanding of architectural planning and conceptual design,interior and exterior feel, and the aesthetic appeal of construction compared to the typical “paperbased models” currently used by most architectural students.Introduction and Background“Animation/visualization techniques provide virtual experiential learning when combined withinteractive design animation and virtual design navigation. These activities are self-directed,experiential, and personalized for the autonomous self-directed distance learner. Web basedteaching and learning has potential advantages compared to traditional education since it is lessexpensive, easy-to-access, easy-to-update and platform independent. Although multimedia isgenerally considered as an individual pursuit
, notjust in engineering but in every sector of business, government and professional services.A change in University policy in 2004 introduced lower division programs for a campus that hadpreviously relied exclusively on Community College transfers into upper division classes withina 2 + 2 structure. For the electronics program, the change was an opportunity to take a top-down systems view of the subject and therefore more accurately represent the applications thatincreasingly provide employment for the graduates. The planning process started with astatement of expectations and constraints. They are represented in figure 1. Future industry roadmap and careers 4xx Expectations
Enabled Control (SEC) program, where Georgia Tech was chosen as the university experiment leader. Dr. Schrage serves Page 13.649.1 a principal investigator on this program. In the late 1990s, Dr. Schrage developed a unique graduate course in “Safety By Design and Flight Certification”. This project oriented course has a team of students develop a Preliminary System Safety Analysis (PSSA) and a Flight Certification Plan for different aircraft and spacecraft. Dr. Schrage’s recent experiences as a member of the FAA’s Oversight Board for their Certification Process Study and the NASA Aviation
often benefits student learning, there are concerns as Page 13.1257.5well. Finding appropriately qualified adjuncts may be difficult in certain geographiclocations. Adjuncts working full time in industry may have schedules which conflict withinstitutional and student schedules. This may include scheduling classes in eveningswhich are inconsistent with the program’s usual class times and planning around worktravel requirements that may arise during the course of the semester. Limited office hoursand minimal physical presence on campus may limit student interest and effort in thecourse. Adjuncts that are used to working with qualified peers in industry
. Although those courses were notevaluated during that visit because they were an experimental offering, a curriculum review wasunderway and an implementation plan for updating the curriculum was subject to scrutiny duringthat visit. As the full plan was implemented, a programming course, an introductory course inflight mechanics, and a graphics communication course were eliminated in favor of including allof the original elements of those required courses into this introductory sequence.1 The impetus Page 13.227.2of establishing the introductory sequence was in seeking to increase retention of students bymaking them feel more connected with the
is an EDC emphasis in the environmental engineering focus area of theCivil Engineering (CVEN) M.S. degree. A newer EDC emphasis for undergraduate CVENmajors was approved in spring 2007. A college-wide certificate in EDC open to students in anymajor is being planned. Many of the students in the EDC program participate in EngineersWithout Borders (EWB) as an extra-curricular activity (http://www.ewb-usa.org). EWB projectsserve communities around the globe. The EWB student chapter at the University of Colorado isvery strong, with on-going projects in three countries, Nepal, Peru, and Rwanda.The goals of this study were to determine: (1) if there are differences in the attitudes of freshmanstudents toward community service (CS) based on selected
participants were assigned office space together in a centralroom between the two lab buildings. This helped facilitate communication beyond emails once the students beganworking on their independent projects. In 2007, the students developed their own group on Facebook andcommunicating activities through that venue proved to be very effective. The key lesson learned in this category isthat one cannot communicate with the various individuals involved in such a program too frequently. Planned Social ActivitiesFor The Bonds program, a day was spent experiencing the surrounding community via a guided tour from the localChamber of Commerce. While this was not mandatory, a majority of the participants moved into their dorm withenough time to go on
, new planning activities may be defined to encompass higher levels ofachievement; evaluation should be modified accordingly.Academic proposalSpecial attention was given to the experimental teaching. Several constraints were identified inour previous projects27. A research project was started in 2006 looking for a solution of somelimitations. The goals of this research project include that students can: 1. interact with industrial equipment 2. avoid the time that is consumed in the that installation and configuration steps. 3. design and implement different control strategies Page 13.451.7Given that there are several tank-level control
collective and individual goals. Leader When providing needed leadership, the engineer promotes shared vision to individuals, teams, and organizations and empowers them to achieve their individual and collective goals. Professional Roles Holistic Professional Behaviors Self-Grower Motivated for lifelong success, the engineer plans, self-assesses, and achieves necessary personal growth in knowledge, skills, and attitudes. Achiever When given an assignment, the engineer demonstrates initiative, focus, and flexibility to deliver quality results in a timely manner. Practitioner Driven by personal and professional
ABET criteria for continuous improvementrequirements. The assessment process and evaluation of the program outcomes are discussedalong with the results as well.IntroductionAlthough there are several papers published in the field of engineering program outcomeassessment 1, 2, 3, there are very few that discuss assessment process of manufacturingengineering programs. Most of these assessment plans revolve around certain aspects of theprogram such as courses, capstone courses, or engineering labs. This paper presents anassessment procedure which considers all program outcomes assessment processes.The Manufacturing Engineering (MANE) program at Virginia State University developed acurriculum that provides students with balanced coverage of ABET