Environmental Engineering at the Colorado School of Mines in Golden, Colorado. She received her BS degree in Chemical Engineering from the California Institute of Technology and her MS and PhD degrees in CivilDr. Megan Sanders, Colorado School of Mines Megan Sanders is the Senior Assessment Associate at the Trefny Innovative Instruction Center at the Colorado School of Mines. Before joining Mines, Megan worked at the Eberly Center for Teaching Excellence and Instructional Innovation at Carnegie Mellon UJeffrey C. Shragge ©American Society for Engineering Education, 2023Funds of knowledge and intersectional experiences of identity:Graduate students’ views of their undergraduate experiencesAbstractOur S
assignedresources [6]. We instead propose a design which enables users to process tasks on any of a widerange of available devices and handles such failures through automatic time-outs, improvingscalability and efficiency.Mikroyannidis et al.’s FORGE design incorporates open-source GNU Radio, rather thanMATLAB, as a framework [7]; however, they introduce virtual machines to run SDR, raisingpotential questions relating to scalability and security, and require a calendar-based system for theallocation of resources. Somashekar et al. similarly use GNU Radio, but on a more limited scope[8]. Somanaidu et al. also suggest an integrated SDR environment without a custom interface foranalyzing frequency modulation (FM) signals using the USRP 2901 platform [9], a
common than the facultyinitially assumed. Faculty were originally concerned about how they could make the labactivities as similar as possible to help students navigate the basics of learning the roboticsystems. However, this may be a minor concern, as the CRBs have proven intuitive, mainlywhen used concurrently with the IRBs. Students often finished tasks on the CRB in less timethan IRB when given the same task. Students are learning more in less time. This has openedspace in the curriculum and created an opportunity for student-faculty research in previouslytricky areas, given the time, resource, and safety constraints of the IRB-only space.References[1] S. Vaidya, P. Ambad, and S. Bhosle, “Industry 4.0 – A glimpse,” Procedia Manufacturing
treatment in their introductory ChemE class. Future research should consider thelongitudinal and cumulative impact of dashboard use on students’ motivational and course related beliefsover time.AcknowledgementsThis material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant No.1928842. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material arethose of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.Works Cited[1] Godwin, A., Potvin, G., Hazari, Z., & Lock, R. (2013, October). Understanding engineering identitythrough structural equation modeling. In 2013 IEEE Frontiers in Education Conference (FIE) (pp. 50-56). IEEE.[2] Meyers, K. L., Ohland, M. W
. Fairlie, "The Impact of COVID-19 on Community College Enrollment and Student Success: Evidence from California Administrative Data," Education Finance and Policy, p. 745–764, 2022.[2] E. Filatova and D. Hecht, "Using Data Science to Create an Impact on a City Life and to Encourage Students from Underserved Communities to Get into STEM.," in ASEE Annual Conference, 2021.[3] E. Howe and M. Thornton, "Components-first approaches to CS1/CS2: principles and practice," Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education, 2004.[4] S. Janke, S. C. Rudert, Ä. Petersen, . T. M. Fritz and M. Daumiller, "Cheating in the wake of COVID-19: How dangerous is ad-hoc online testing for academic integrity?," Computers and Education Open, 2021.[5
component to the program, community college transfer students will likely continue tohave varying levels of graduation rates and graduation successes. Programs expanded from thisstudy would benefit from the basic structure, but require additional expansions into moreelaborate financial package designs.References[1] "Tennessee Promise." https://www.tn.gov/tnpromise.html (accessed 02/24/23.[2] R. M. Ellestad, D. J. Keffer, J. Retherford, C. Wetteland, M. Kocak, and T. Griffin, "NSF S-STEM: Transfer Success Co-Design for Engineering Disciplines (TranSCEnD)," in 2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Tampa, FL, 2019.[3] V. Tinto, Leaving college: Rethinking the causes and cures of student attrition. ERIC, 1987.[4
New Engineering Education in the Middle East,” Eng. Educ. Lett., vol. 2015, no. 1, p. 8, Feb. 2014, pp1-7.[8] E. Ramadi, S. Ramadi, and K. Nasr, “Engineering graduates’ skill sets in the MENA region: a gap analysis of industry expectations and satisfaction,” Eur. J. Eng. Educ., vol. 41, no. 1, pp. 34–52, 2016.[9] M. A. Mestiraihi, K. Becker, R. Dupont, and D. K. Stevens, “Examining the Preparedness of Water Program Graduates in Egypt: Industries Perspective,” Middle East J. Appl. Sci. Technol., vol. 04, no. 04, pp. 60–74, 2021, doi: 10.46431/MEJAST.2021.4406.[10] M. Al Mestiraihi, K. H. Becker, R. R. Dupont, and D. K. Stevens, “Developing Undergraduate Water Program Courses: Meeting the Needs of the Egyptian Workforce
Paper ID #37538Work In Progress: A Teamwork Training Model to Promote the Developmentof Teaming Skills in Chemical Engineering Students.Dr. Carlos Landaverde-Alvarado, University of Texas, Austin Carlos Landaverde-Alvarado is an Assistant Professor of Instruction in the McKetta Department of Chem- ical Engineering at the University of Texas at Austin. He received his B. S. in Chemical Engineering from Universidad Centroamericana ”Jose Simeon Ca˜nas” (UCA) in El Salvador, and obtained his M. Eng. and Ph.D. degrees in Chemical Engineering at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University (Virginia Tech). He then pursued
. Schönborn, “Value Performance: On the Relation Between Corporate Culture andCorporate Success,” Zeitschrift für Psychologie/Journal of Psychology, vol. 218, no. 4, pp. 234-242, 2010, doi: 10.1027/0044-3409/a000033.[9] S. Beugelsdijk, C.I. Koen, and N.G. Noorderhaven, “Organizational Culture and RelationshipSkills,” Organization Studies, vol. 27, no. 6, pp. 833-854, Jun. 2006, doi:10.1177/0170840606064099[10] G. Hofstede, “Dimensionalizing Cultures: The Hofstede Model in Context,” OnlineReadings in Psychology and Culture, vol. 2, no. 1, Dec. 2011, doi: 10.9707/2307-0919.1014[11] C. Grau and J. Moormann, “Investigating the Relationship between Process Managementand Organizational Culture: Literature Review and Research Agenda,” Management
:e208.[2] Rogers A, Gardner M, Augenstein I. Qa dataset explosion: A taxonomy of nlp resourcesfor question answering and reading comprehension. ACM Computing Surveys (CSUR).2022.[3] Salloum S, Gaber T, Vadera S, Sharan K. A systematic literature review on phishingemail detection using natural language processing techniques. IEEE Access. 2022 Jun 14.[4] Bird S. NLTK: the natural language toolkit. InProceedings of the COLING/ACL 2006Interactive Presentation Sessions 2006 Jul (pp. 69-72).[5] Chollet, F. & others, 2015. Keras. Available at: https://github.com/fchollet/keras[6] Krizhevsky A, Sutskever I, Hinton GE. Imagenet classification with deep convolutionalneural networks. Communications of the ACM. 2017 May 24;60(6):84-90.[7] Elor, Yotam
misconceptions. Students diddemonstrate a good understanding of the I4.0 concepts. Nevertheless, it is essential to remindstudents that I4.0 is an emerging area; therefore, students must be willing to learn and adapt theinnovative technologies and concepts.References: 1. G. Weisgerber and L. Willies, "The Use of Fire in Prehistoric and Ancient Mining: Firesetting," Paléorient, vol. 26, no. 2, pp. 131-149, 2000. Available: http://www.jstor.org/stable/41496587. [Accessed: Feb. 25, 2023]. 2. Bird, M. “Fire, prehistoric humanity and the environment.” Interdisc. Sci. Rev. 20, pp. 131–154 (1995). 3. Y. Moon and S.-S. Seol, “Evaluation of the Theory of the 4th Industrial Revolution,” Asian Journal of Innovation and Policy, vol. 6, no
train the interns. According to the participants, internships are an opportunity tonetwork and build lasting professional connections. While students may be unable to turn everyinternship into a full-time position, each experience will give them something much more valuableand long-lasting: relationships with professionals and co-workers. The connections they makeduring their time at an organization can be stepping stones to their next opportunity.VI. AcknowledgementThis material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant No.(2122442). Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this materialare those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National
, entrepreneurship projects of their ownideation, or competition projects (such as the Baja Society of Automobile Engineerscompetition). Additionally, each year a handful of teams out of the several dozen across thecollege work on community projects. By ‘community projects’ we refer to projects that emergedout of a community partnership and need/desire that the team will work to address in partnershipwith the community, which often entails community partner(s) serving as project mentors.Capstone design instructors guide the teams working on industry, entrepreneurship, andcommunity projects as a whole cohort, with all teams engaging in roughly the same projectmanagement and engineering design course activities, and subject to the same deadlines andanalogous
. L., Zhu, X., & Hwang, T. (2015). Understanding the Construct of Maximizing Tendency: A Theoretical and Empirical Evaluation. Journal of Behavioral Decision Making, 28(5), 437-450.Ehlert, K. M., Rucks, M. L., B, A. M., Desselles, M., Grigg, S. J., & Orr, M. K. (2019). Expanding and Refining a Decision-Making Competency Inventory for Undergraduate Engineering Students. IEEE Frontiers in Education Conference (FIE).Godwin, A., Potvin, G., Hazari, Z., & Lock, R. (2016). Identity, Critical Agency, and Engineering: An Affective Model for Predicting Engineering as a Career Choice. Journal of Engineering Education, 105(2), 312-340.Holland, J. L. (1985). The present status of a theory of vocational
Engineering Education, Minneapolis, MS, Jun. 2022.[2] M. D. Koretsky, J. L. Falconer, B. J. Brooks, and Silverstein, “The AIChE Concept Warehouse: A web-based tool to promote concept-based instruction,” Advances in Engineering Education, vol. 4, no. 1, p. 27, 2014.[3] M. D. Koretsky, B. J. Brooks, R. M. White, and A. S. Bowen, “Querying the questions: Student responses and reasoning in an active learning class,” Journal of Engineering Education, vol. 105, no. 2, pp. 219–244, 2016, doi: 10.1002/jee.20116.[4] M. D. Koretsky, B. J. Brooks, and A. Z. Higgins, “Written justifications to multiple- choice concept questions during active learning in class,” International Journal of Science Education, vol. 38, no. 11
ascore and feedback for all assignments, with formative assignments and activities designed tolead to improved work in the higher stake assignments. Assignment feedback focuses on bothtechnical/engineering and communication standards. The largest writing assignment—the designreport—is completed over the two semesters. The report is broken into chapters with eachchapter being submitted at the completion of a design milestone (e.g., problem identification,conceptual design, detail design and validation) along with the previous chapter(s). Thetechnical communications faculty modified the assignment rubrics to account for this revisionmodel, providing graded incentive for students to engage in iterative writing practice byreviewing and incorporating
, and S. Thomas, “Developing Quantitative Reasoning: Will Taking Traditional Math Courses Suffice? An Empirical Study,” J. Gen. Educ., vol. 61, no. 4, pp. 305–313, 2012, doi: 10.5325/jgeneeduc.61.4.0305.[2] L. A. Steen, Achieving Quantitative Literacy: An Urgent Challenge for Higher Education. Washington, D.C.: Mathematical Association of America, 2004. Accessed: Oct. 09, 2021. [Online]. Available: https://www.maa.org/press/maa-reviews/achieving-quantitative- literacy-an-urgent-challenge-for-higher-education[3] ETS, “HEIghten® Quantitative Literacy Assessment,” HEIghten® Quantitative Literacy Assessment, 2021. https://www.ets.org/heighten/about/quantitative_literacy/ (accessed Oct. 07, 2021).[4] D. Zahner, D. Van Damme, R
special design/research projects at the senior or graduate levels.Bibliography1. J. Dewey, Experience and Education, Macmillan, N.Y., 1939.2. D. A. Kolb, Experiential Learning: Experience as the Source of Learning and Development, Prentice Hall, Englewood Cliffs, N.J., 1984.3. A. Bandura, Self-Efficacy: The Exercise of Control, W. H. Freeman and Company, NY, 1997.4. J. N. Harb, S. O. Durrant, and R. E. Terry, “Use of the Kolb Learning Cycle and the 4MAT System in Engineering Education,” Journal of Engineering Education, Vol. 82, April 1993, pp. 70-77.5. J. N.Harb, R. E. Terry, P. K. Hurt, and K. J. Williamson, Teaching Through the Cycle: Application of Learning Style Theory to Engineering Education at Brigham Young University, 2nd
modules with the broader manufacturing educationcommunity soon so other instructors can incorporate this material into their own courses.References[1] ABET Engineering Accreditation Commission, “Criteria for accrediting engineering programs,” Baltimore, MD, 2020.[2] B. Harding and P. McPherson, “What Do Employers Want In Terms Of Employee Knowledge Of Technical Standards And The Process Of Standardization?,” in Proceedings of the 2010 ASEE Annu. Conf. & Expo., Louisville, Kentucky, Jun. 2010.[3] A. S. Khan, A. Karim, and J. A. McClain, “The state of the use of standards in engineering and technology education,” in Proceedings of the 2013 ASEE Annu. Conf. & Expo., Atlanta, GA, Jun. 2013.[4] Y. Yao, S. Kelley, and Rider
technology.ReferencesAmerican Educational Research Association. (2018). Standards for educational andpsychological testing. American Educational Research Association.Binning, J. F., & Barrett, G. V. (1989). Validity of personnel decisions: A conceptual analysis ofthe inferential and evidential bases. Journal of Applied Psychology, 74(3), 478–494.https://doi.org/10.1037/0021-9010.74.3.478Bothma, C. F., & Roodt, G. (2013). The validation of the turnover intention scale. SA journal ofhuman resource management, 11(1), 1-12.Cable, D. M., Gino, F., & Staats, B. R. (2013). Reinventing employee onboarding. MIT SloanManagement Review.Carrico, C., Matusovich, H. M., & Bhaduri, S. (2023, June). Preparing Engineering Students toFind the Best Job Fit: Starting
their first-, second-,and third-year experiences during these four years. Each year students report on their experiencesfrom the previous year. Students may have participated in different types of co-curricular(s) onceor many times. We drew a random sample of five students from each group and took a closerlook at the individual profiles of co-curricular participation over time between the low, medium,and high GPA groups. We ensured the student was either a first year, sophomore, or junior (weexcluded those reporting to be in grade 12 to focus on the undergraduates’ experiences) during2015-2018 and had consistently scored a cumulative GPA within the above ranges. A summaryof student data used in this WIP can be found in the Appendix.Table 1
Inventory to Assess Students’ Knowledge of Second Law Concepts. age, 24,1, Annual ASEE Conference, Indianapolis 20144. M. J. Prince, M. A. Vigeant and K. E. K. Nottis, Assessment and repair of critical misconceptions in engineeringheat transfer and thermodynamics, in 120th ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition. 2013: Atlanta, Georgia.5. K. C. Midkiff, T. A. Litzinger and D. L. Evans. Development of engineering thermodynamic concept inventoryinstruments. in 31st ASEE/IEEE Frontiers in Education Conference. 2001. Reno, NV.6. S. Yeo and M. Zadnik, Introductory thermal concept evaluation: assessing students' understanding. The PhysicsTeacher, 2001. 39(November): p. 496 - 504.7. D. L. Evans, G. L. Gray, S. Krause, J. Martin, K. C. Midkiff, B. M
publications 3. Belbase, Shashidhar & Luitel, Bal & Taylor, Peter. (2008). Autoethnography: A Method of Research and Teaching for Transformative Education. Journal of Education and Research. 1. 86-95. 10.3126/jer.v1i0.7955. 4. Jagers, R., Borowski, T., & Rivas-Drake, D. (2018). Toward Transformative Social and Emotional Learning: Using an Equity Lens . American Institutes for Research. 5. Brown, M., Thompson, J., & Pollock, M. (2017). Ensuring Equity in Problem Based Learning. NAPE. Gap, PA 6. Rosser, S. V. Group work in science, engineering, and mathe- matics: Consequences of ignoring gender and race. College Teaching 46, 82-88 (1998). 7. Briggs, M. (2020). Comparing academically homogeneous and
students with VR. Future quantitative andqualitative (coded) evaluations of survey questions are required to understand student experiencewith VR. Completion of this study will help in furthering our understanding of how tosuccessfully integrate VR videos in traditional biomedical engineering labs.References[1] B. Marks and J. Thomas, "Adoption of virtual reality technology in higher education: An evaluation of five teaching semesters in a purpose-designed laboratory," Education and Information Technologies, vol. 27, no. 1, pp. 1287-1305, 2022/01/01 2022, doi: 10.1007/s10639-021-10653-6.[2] A. Singh, D. Ferry, A. Ramakrishnan, and S. Balasubramanian, "Using Virtual Reality in Biomedical Engineering Education," (in eng), J
Success for STEM and Non-STEM Majors,” Journal of STEM Education: Innovations and Research, vol. 11, pp. 45–60, 2010.[13] D. A. Trytten, A. W. Lowe, and S. E. Walden, “‘Asians are Good at Math. What an Awful Stereotype’ The Model Minority Stereotype’s Impact on Asian American Engineering Students,” Journal of Engineering Education, vol. 101, no. 3, pp. 439–468, 2012, doi: 10.1002/j.2168-9830.2012.tb00057.x.[14] M. Meyer and S. Marx, “Engineering Dropouts: A Qualitative Examination of Why Undergraduates Leave Engineering,” Journal of Engineering Education, vol. 103, no. 4, pp. 525–548, 2014, doi: https://doi.org/10.1002/jee.20054.[15] A. Lee, “Students with Disabilities Choosing Science Technology Engineering and Math
- identifier for each student the assessment instrument light and perform course- (name or ID) and then in- and assess in SpeedGrader level student assessment put course-level outcome (each instrument is as- scores sessed)Collection Department notes assign- No action required Faculty can attach theof Samples ments on spreadsheets and since rubrics are tied signature assignments(s) must save siganature as- to assessment instru- into SearchLight and signment in Google Drive ment/assignment. Sam- select which Sos and Pis ples (as
learning is well established [1], educational needs havechanged in many ways over the past few years. This is partly due to Covid isolation and itsripple effects, and partly due to a rapidly evolving broader context for how people socialize andaccess, distribute and retain information. A forty-year study from 1976-2017 showed increasedlevels of loneliness and isolation in the 2010’s was strongly correlated with fewer in-personinteractions [2]. Prior to the pandemic a significant portion of college students reported feelinglonely [3]. Students have a deep need for connection [3], which is more pressing in light of theMental Health crisis in the United States which was exacerbated by Covid isolation [4]. Collegestudents have also reported feeling
culture.To continue with this model, the in-country program course(s) could include interculturalexperiential learning activities centered on Kolb's model.While guiding participants through the experiential learning cycle, specific assignments andactivities could focus on fostering global awareness, understanding, and applying interculturalknowledge. Participants could be asked to identify a task that allows them to acquire and applycultural knowledge and document examples of how they learned. The program's experientialcomponent could be improved by placing it in the context of learning alongside local students insmaller groups where interference from a large cohort could be mitigated. Students would needto be afforded adequate self-managed time to
. The circuit below represents an AC circuit in steady-state in the phasor domain (for the complex numbers, you may assume units are V, A, Ω, etc. as appropriate). The current source 𝑖𝑆 is an AC source with 𝜔 = 5 rad/s. Each box represents the impedance of a single circuit element (a resistor, capacitor or inductor). Find the average power 𝑃𝑠 supplied by the voltage source. Figure 1. Example of a holistic problem design. Table 1. Grading rubric for the holistic problem example. Holistic problem design -0.5 Calculation error -0.5 Sign error power supplied/received -0.5 Answer with complex power instead of
, we plan to add howengineering jobs can have a good work-life balance to our engineering careers overview.References[1] M. Yilmaz, J. Ren, S. Custer, and J. Coleman, "Hands-on summer camp to attract K–12 students to engineering fields," IEEE transactions on education, vol. 53, no. 1, pp. 144- 151, 2009.[2] F. Ozis, A. O. Pektas, M. Akca, and D. l. A. DeVoss, "How to shape attitudes toward STEM careers: The search for the most impactful extracurricular clubs," Journal of Pre- College Engineering Education Research (J-PEER), vol. 8, no. 1, p. 3, 2018.[3] F. Cima et al., "Enhancing Preservice Teachers' Intention to Integrate Engineering Through a Multi-Disciplinary Partnership (Evaluation)," presented at