- Conference Session
- Biomedical Engineering Division (BED) Poster Session
- Collection
- 2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
- Authors
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Alexis Ortiz-Rosario, The Ohio State University; Ali Kaveh Rahimi
- Tagged Topics
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Diversity
- Tagged Divisions
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Biomedical Engineering Division (BED)
business solutions. They have noted how theBME students have utilized their skills in synergy and research to better communicate withpatients, engineers, and employees within the company. Some concerns the industrypartner has raised is around programming and the student’s lack of training. This concernties to a broader challenge within the OSU BME curriculum that does not prepare studentsfor the level of programming required. In the future, the industry partner will aim toinclude programming booth camps to ensure the students are prepared to handle thesechallenges.The future plan for this course is to become an official course. Currently the course isoffered as an independent study which does not require a syllabus and it is graded as apass/fail
- Conference Session
- Biomedical Engineering Division (BED) Technical Session 1: Sense of Self in Biomedical Engineering Students
- Collection
- 2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
- Authors
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Stephanie Jill Lunn, Florida International University; Cristi L. Bell-Huff, Georgia Institute of Technology; Joseph M. LeDoux, Georgia Institute of Technology
- Tagged Divisions
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Biomedical Engineering Division (BED)
artifacts they develop, we compared the correlation between the scores on thesesubscales of the IRI and the external evaluation of empathy rubric (EEER), a tool for determiningcomponents of empathy as described by Zaki’s framework [31].3 The Art of Telling Your Story“The Art of Telling Your Story” is a course for 3rd /4th year students in BME. The course itselfentails weekly assignments posted on Canvas, in-class sharing of stories, and student participationin the community as responses to Canvas posts and stories presented. A summary of the course,taken from the syllabus, is as follows: Why are stories and narratives important for engineers? Because great engineers are great storytellers. They capture and tell the stories of the people