Engineering Education (ASEE) [1]. World War II curtailed the activities of bothgroups. After the war, however, the engineering librarian communities in ACRL and ASEE grewquickly, offering new opportunities for professional development, networking, informationsharing, research, and advocacy.This paper seeks a deeper understanding of the academic engineering librarian community in the1940s and early 1950s through the analysis of data compiled from the Directory of CollegeEngineering Library Personnel [2], published in 1949 by the Engineering School LibrariesSection of ACRL and supplemented by data from other sources such as Who’s Who in LibraryService [3]. The Directory is a rich source of data that includes details such as position titles,degrees
with her family and dogs.Dr. Paul Morrow Nissenson, California State Polytechnic University, Pomona Paul Nissenson (Ph.D. Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, University of California, Irvine, 2009) is a Professor in the Department of Mechanical Engineering at California State Polytechnic University, Pomona. He teaches courses in the thermal-fluid sciences, computer programming, and numerical meth- ods. Paul’s main research interests involve studying the impact of technology in engineering education. He has served on the ASEE Pacific Southwest Section Board of Directors since 2014, including as the PSW Section Chair for 2018-2019.Brooke JonesJeffrey A. PhillipsHarmony Nguyen, The Pennsylvania State University
ACM Conference on on Innovation and Technology in Computer Science Education Vol. 1, ITiCSE ’22, page 19–25, New York, NY, USA, 2022. Association for Computing Machinery. ISBN 9781450392013. doi: 10.1145/3502718.3524766. URL https://doi.org/10.1145/3502718.3524766.[13] Brian P. Helmke. Specifications grading in an upper-level bme elective course. In 2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, number 10.18260/1-2–33278, Tampa, Florida, June 2019. ASEE Conferences. https://peer.asee.org/33278.
ME studentsExecuted in the fall of 2019, the intervention began with recruitment of six student “clients”majoring in entrepreneurship or involved in the entrepreneurship club. These clients pitchedtheir ideas to engineering students enrolled in the CAD course during an event facilitating briefinteractions with both sets of students. Small groups (3-4) of engineering students rotated amongpotential clients, hearing and responding to the clients’ pitches. Some clients openly expressed adesire to recruit engineering students to their entrepreneurial teams for purposes beyond thebounds of the CAD course project. Both the entrepreneurial student clients and engineeringstudent “consultants” rated each other, and the ratings provided a means of
, “LearningEquity in First-Year Engineering Design,” in 2021 ASEE Virtual Annual ConferenceContent Access, 2021. Available: https://peer.asee.org/37425[10] K. E. Rambo-Hernandez, M. L. Morris, A. M. A. Casper, R. A. Hensel, J. C. Schwartz,and R. A. Atadero, “Examining the effects of equity, inclusion, and diversity activities infirst-year engineering classes,” in 2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, 2019. Available:https://peer.asee.org/32782Appendix A Activity 1: COMMUNICATION GAMEIntroduction : For our first activity, you will be playing a communication game with your groupthat highlights the idea of Respectful Teaching. Please keep in mind the following: • Your teammates will not know exactly what you are trying to
research and teaching, including Dean’s Awards for Outstanding New Faculty, Outstanding Teacher Award, and a Faculty Fellow. Dr. Matusovich has served the Educational Research and Methods (ERM) division of ASEE in many capacities over the past 10+ years including serving as Chair from 2017-2019. Dr. Matusovich is currently the Editor-in-Chief of the journal, Advances in Engineering Education and she serves on the ASEE committee for Scholarly Publications.Dr. Wayne Gersie As the inaugural Vice President for Diversity and Inclusion at Michigan Technological University, Dr. Wayne Gersie is responsible for providing vision, strategic leadership, and thoughtful change management for campus diversity, equity, inclusion
knowledge gained from reading publications from professional journalssuch as the International Society of Automation (ISA) - InTech Journal, in implementingIndustry 4.0 in the ET curriculum. (2) Present the results along with a reflective analysis of theimplementation in the pilot Summer III 2022, Control Systems course. (3) Present the process forintegration of additional professional journals such as IEEE, Journal of Engineering Technology(ASEE), and Journal of Manufacturing Processes (SME), in the concentration-specific courses inthe ET Program. (4) Deliberate the importance of integration of professional journals as ateaching strategy to augment the classroom learning experience in the department’s ETAC(Engineering Technology Accreditation
Instructional Strategies (RBIS) in Engineering Science Courses,” Journal of Engineering Education, vol. 102, no. 3, pp. 394–425, 2013, doi: 10.1002/jee.20020.[3] R. S. Moog and J. N. Spencer, Eds., Process-Oriented Guided Inquiry Learning (POGIL). Oxford University Press, USA, 2008.[4] S. R. Simonson, Ed., POGIL: An Introduction to Process Oriented Guided Inquiry Learning for Those Who Wish to Empower Learners. Stylus Publishing, LLC, 2019.[5] E. Mazur, “Peer instruction: Getting students to think in class,” AIP Conference Proceedings, vol. 399, no. 1, pp. 981–988, Mar. 1997, doi: 10.1063/1.53199.[6] E. Mazur, “Peer Instruction: A User’s Manual,” American Journal of Physics, vol. 67, no. 4, pp. 359–360, Apr. 1999, doi: 10.1119
Activity for a First-year Mechanical Engineering Course”, Proceedings of the 2018 ASEE Gulf-Southwest Section Annual Con- ference, doi:10.18260/1-2--29666.[31] Mechanismic Inc., 2022, “MotionGen Pro”, URL http://www.motiongen.io.[32] Kingma, D. P. and Welling, M., 2019, “An introduction to variational autoencoders”, Foun- dations and Trends® in Machine Learning, 12(4), pp. 307–392.[33] Deshpande, S. and Purwar, A., 2020, “An Image-Based Approach to Variational Path Syn- thesis of Linkages”, ASME Journal of Computing and Information Science in Engineering, 21(2), doi:10.1115/1.4048422, URL https://doi.org/10.1115/1.4048422, 021005.[34] Deshpande, S. and Purwar, A., 2019, “Computational Creativity via Assisted Variational
design, and engineering education. He is currently on the Engineering Accreditation Commission of ABET, Inc, a senior member of the IEEE, and a member of ASEE. ©American Society for Engineering Education, 2023 Educating Engineering Students Innovatively: A Model for Improving Retention and Academic Performance of Black Upper-Level StudentsA. IntroductionIn a study of the Florida A&M University-Florida State University College of Engineering pre-engineering program, almost 700 engineering students were analyzed that were enrolled throughthe HBCU (FAMU) partner of the joint college [1]. Of the students who completed the pre-engineering program, 72% eventually graduated from the university with a
Mechanical Engineering, “BSME Curriculum Requirements,” Clemson University, June 2021.[5] K. Del Re, S. Yun, E. Kozikowski, T. Fuerst, and J. Camba, “Integrating a Product Lifecycle Management System into a Freshman Level Classroom Environment”, ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Engineering Graphics Division, Technical Session 2 – Design & Manufacturing, Tampa, FL, June 2019.[6] E. Fielding, J. McCardle, B. Eynard, N. Hartman, and A. Fraser, “Product Lifecycle Management in Design and Engineering Education: International Perspectives”, Concurrent Engineering Research and Applications, vol. 22, no. 2, pp. 123-134, June 2014. https://doi.org/10.1177/1063293X13520316. [7] N. Hartman and M. Springer, “A Distance
,” Proceedings of the 128th American Society for Engineering Education (ASEE) Annual Conference & Exposition, Virtual Meeting, July 26th-29th, 2021, paper ID# 33609.[11] National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. Data science for undergraduates: Opportunities and options. National Academies Press, 2018.[12] A. Estes, S. Ressler, C. Saviz, B. Barry, C. Considine, N. Dennis, S. Hamilton, D. Hurwitz, T. Kunberger, T. Lenox, T. Nilsson, J. O'Brien, R. O'Neill, D. Saftner, K. Salyards, R. Welch, D. Coward and L. Nolen, The ASCE ExCEEd teaching workshop: Assessing 20 years of instructional development. International Journal of Engineering Education, 35(6A), 1758-1786, 2019.[13] H. Wickham and G. Grolemund (2016). R for
classes. Sarira is currently serving as Assistant Director of Faculty Development at the School of Engineering and Center for Excellence in Teaching and Learning (CETL) to enhance teaching and learning effectiveness of engineering courses. She is the winner of 2021 University Teaching Fellow award, 2019 Distinguished Engineering Educator Award, and recipient of 2016, 2017, and 2018 Klewin Excellence in teaching award.Dr. Manish Roy, University of Connecticut Manish Roy is an Assistant Professor in Residence in the department of Civil and Environmental En- gineering at the University of Connecticut. He obtained his Bachelor of Engineering degree in Civil Engineering (Hons.) at Jadavpur University in India. He obtained
team) mental model or a taskwork mental model (Mohammed etal., 2010). Teamwork mental models include knowledge structures of the interpersonalinteraction requirements and skills of team members (Mohammed et al., 2010). Taskwork mentalmodels are knowledge structures associated with work goals and performance requirements.High quality mental models that are shared across team members have been found to positivelycontribute to the success of the team (Kim, 2019). Given the utility of having a shared mental model within a team, a considerable body ofresearch has been devoted to understanding this concept (see Mohammed et al., 2010 for acomprehensive overview). One of the most important, but challenging, elements of this researchhas been the
. For atmospheric temperature, relative humidity, pressure, wind speed and direction, andamount of water collected, the team used the La Crosse Technology® weather station. Thismodel has a Pro 2019 Station Model display, a rain bucket, solar powered anemometer, and athermo-hygro sensor. The rain bucket is a Rain 2.0 Sensor that is self-emptying and measures theamount of water collected by the WOTA system (LTV-R2 Rain Sensor, 2019). The solar-poweredanemometer is an LTV-WSDTH01 Breeze Pro Sensor attached to the roof of the fencing at thehighest point on site. It measures the outdoor air temperature, relative humidity, heat index,barometric pressure, and wind speed (LTV-WSDTH01 Breeze Pro Sensor, 2019). The displayallows workers to check the data
of Knowledge Enterprise at The Ohio State University. Julie is a Fellow of ASEE and the editor-in-chief of Journal of Women and Minorities in Science and Engineering.Micah Organ ©American Society for Engineering Education, 2023 What intercultural communication competence is and why we need to talk about it: A call for awareness among STEM facultyAbstract:In this theory paper we review relevant literature to provide a strong rationale for the essentialrole of intercultural communication competence in advising international graduate students inscience, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM). International students make up asignificant portion of graduate student enrollments at US
and AnalysisThe data used for this study came from PDS reports for 2020 and covered the academic yearfrom summer 2019 through spring 2020. This time frame includes the early phase of theCOVID-19 pandemic lockdown that began in spring 2020. Thus, many students’ reflections werenot yet impacted by that event. We particularly focused on students’ reports in either technicalactivities or research activities and their career goals for analysis, which helped us answer theresearch questions. For technical work experience, we chose four open-ended questions from thesurvey to analyze in this study (see Appendix A). We also selected the four questions fromstudents who reported on their research experience in the survey (see Appendix B). For
, doi: https://doi.org/10.3886/E152102V1.[6] ISI, “Envision Rating System for Sustainable Infrastructure.” Washington, DC, 2015.[7] M. Elzomor, R. Rahat, P. Pradhananga, and C. C. Müller, “A step towards nurturing equitable and sustainable infrastructure systems,” in ASEE 2022 Annual Conference, 2022.[8] H. Pearsall et al., “Advancing equitable health and well-being across urban–rural sustainable infrastructure systems,” npj Urban Sustain., vol. 1, no. 1, pp. 1–6, 2021, doi: 10.1038/s42949-021-00028-8.[9] N. D. McWhirter and T. Shealy, “Teaching decision-making for sustainable infrastructure: a wind energy case study module,” Int. J. Sustain. High. Educ., vol. 19, no. 5, pp. 893– 911, 2018
Arts and Sciences from Three Rivers Community College.Dr. Robin A.M. Hensel, West Virginia University Robin A. M. Hensel, Ed.D., is a Teaching Professor in the Benjamin M. Statler College of Engineering and Mineral Resources at West Virginia University and an ASEE Fellow member. As a mathematician and computer systems analyst, she collaborated in engineering teams to support energy research before entering higher education where she taught mathematics, statistics, computer science, and engineering courses, secured over $5.5M to support STEM education research, led program development efforts, and served in several administrative roles. She has been recognized for her teaching, advising, service, and research and
/1-2--34820.[8] H. E. Dillon, J. M. Welch, N. Ralston, and R. D. Levison, “Students taking action on engineering ethics,” in ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition, Conference Proceedings, American Society for Engineering Education, Jun. 2020. doi: 10.18260/1-2--35247.[9] Association of American Colleges and Universities, “Valid Assessment of Learning in Undergraduate Education (VALUE),” Association of American Colleges and Universities., 2009. Accessed: Feb. 12, 2023. [Online]. Available: https://www.aacu.org/initiatives/value[10] B. Hylton, “Mapping the VALUE Rubrics for Application to the KEEN Framework,” Engineering Unleashed, 1797, 2019. Accessed: Feb. 24, 2023. [Online]. Available: https
and continuousimprovement. A paper was presented at the 2021 ASEE Annual Conference that introduced theframework developed for this program; this is the second paper in the sequence that will share theimplementation of the assessment process and assessment results from the first two years of theprogram.The purpose of this paper is threefold: a) to communicate the process of implementation of theframework developed to effectively assess the student learning outcomes using a learningmanagement system for continuous improvement, b) to share the results of the assessment fromthe first two years of the coursework, and c) to share best practices with peer institutions planningto offer a new degree program in Engineering Technology or similar
practices and promotion of open data in science,” Sci Ed, vol. 6, no. 1, pp. 3–9, Feb. 2019, doi: 10.6087/kcse.149.[2] D. R. Berg and K. E. Niemeyer, “The case for openness in engineering research,” F1000 research, vol. 7, pp. 501–501, 2018. [Online]. Available: https://bit.ly/3SH2PpQ[3] A. Johri, S. Yang, M. Vorvoreanu, and K. Madhavan, “Perceptions and Practices of Data Sharing in Engineering Education,” Advances in engineering education, vol. 5, no. 2, 2016, [Online]. Available: https://bit.ly/3Ur54hJ[4] B. Suhr, J. Dungl, and A. Stocker, “Search, reuse and sharing of research data in materials science and engineering—A qualitative interview study,” PLoS ONE, vol. 15, no. 9 September, Sep. 2020, doi: 10.1371/journal.pone
Mentoring in a College of Engineering.” Darcie holds a Master of Engineering degree in Environmental Engineering (2019) and Bachelor of Science degree in Biological Engineering (2017), both from Utah State University. She is passionate about student success and support, both inside and outside of the classroom.Dr. Idalis Villanueva Alarc´on, University of Florida Dr. Villanueva Alarcon is an Associate Professor in the Engineering Education Department at the Uni- versity of Florida. Her multiple roles as an engineer, engineering educator, engineering educational re- searcher, and professional development mentor for underrepresQuinn Alessandro Corrigan, Minnesota State University, Mankato
uponthe insights from that work to a large dataset consisting of 274 lower-division CS courses, taughtby 37 instructors in three different modalities (face-to-face, online, and virtual) over a period ofthree years (Summer 2019 to Spring 2022) in a public four-year university. The LMS data relatedto assignments and other graded activities are collected and used for each one of these courses.The resulting dataset used in this study consists of many courses in different modalities, taughtby different instructors, and spanning multiple semesters. Having such a large data set enablesthe use of time series classification and forecasting techniques to address key inquiries in thestudy.The driving question of this study is whether it is possible to
were ten PWS students in Cohort 1 involved in the study and table 3 provide demographicinformation of those students.Table 3. Cohort 1 demographic information and number associated with grit and mindset graphs. No Gender Race First Age University Current GPA Major Gen Entrance Standing Date (in year 2) 1 F White No 19 FA 2019 Sophomore 3.88 Electrical Engineering 2 F White Yes 22 FA 2018 Senior 3.73 Electrical Engineering 3 M White No 19 SP 2018 Senior 4.0 Computer Science 4 F White No 20 FA
. Washington, DC: AE3 and ASEE, 2020.[11] P. A. Asunda and J. Weitlauf, “STEM habits of mind,” Technology and Engineering Teacher, pp. 34-38, 2018.[12] C. N. Lippard, M. H. Lamm, K. M., Tank, and J. Y. Choi, “Pre-engineering thinking and the engineering habits of mind in preschool classroom,” Early Childhood Education Journal, vol. 47, pp. 187-198, 2019.[13] J. R. Hanson, S. Hardman, S. Luke, and B. Lucas, “Developing pre-service primary teachers’ understanding of engineering through engineering habits of mind and engagement with engineers,” International Journal of Technology and Design Education, vol. 32, pp. 1469-1494, 2022.[14] D. Bir, D. Paskach, G. Wilkins, L. Angstead, K. Miskowiec, H. Ooi, and B. Ahn
, “Experiential learning implementation inundergraduate engineering education: A systematic search and review,” Taylor & Francis, 08-Feb-2022.[Online]. Available: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/03043797.2022.2031895. [Accessed:20-Jan-2023].[9]“Propeller,” Encyclopædia Britannica. 2019. [Online]. Available:https://www.britannica.com/technology/propeller[10]B. Maheswaran, Y. Guo, A. Hervella, A. Pavlov, and M. D. Dinh, “Water flow generator: Innovatingwater faucet use,” ASEE PEER Document Repository, 09-Jul-2019. [Online]. Available:https://peer.asee.org/water-flow-generator-innovating-water-faucet-use. [Accessed: 13-Apr-2023].[11]B. Maheswaran, A. Bard, A. Sozio, S. Haggans, N. Tarallo, and T. Bennett, “Hydropower from gutters:Generating