drive it. Where will this leadership comefrom? China? India? The United States? The choice is ours to make.”14 These calls and many Page 14.11.3others like them are not the only evidence of the increasing need for leadership in technicalareas. One need only look at the rapidly changing landscape of global competition, the flatteningof industry organizational charts and continued reliance on multi- and inter-disciplinary teams inglobal and domestic environments.Over 50% of engineers serve in a management or leadership position during their career, manyhaving take their first steps in management within 5 or 6 years of graduation.15
internship opportunities, provided by advisory committee members, which would include high school students •Develop technology career development workshops specifically for technology studentsProposal of faculty development •Create opportunities for faculty to teach at otheropportunities institutions, perhaps on an exchange basis •Create opportunities for full and part-time faculty to meet to discuss program requirements and
and strength of materials issues involved. Italso promotes an appreciation of the complexity of such a commonplace structure. It broadens Page 7 of 8the students’ knowledge of the career opportunities that is present in building bridges. It allowsour students to strengthen their technology skills, exercise their creativity, and also practice theirresearch skills. They will research materials and methods being used. Finally, our students willdemonstrate their new knowledge and insight by designing their own bridge and then testing itfor strength and the integrity of structure. When they finish, they will be better informed about
. Page 14.500.3 Motivational Description Factor motivation to study engineering due to the belief that engineering will Financial 9, 10 provide a financially rewarding career Parental 9, 10 motivation to study engineering due to parental influences Influence motivation to study engineering due to a belief that engineers improve the Social Good 9, 10 welfare of society Mentor motivation to study engineering due to the inspiration or encouragement of
continuing education courses, seminars, etc. throughout your career? [ ] Yes [ ] No Poor. Major weaknesses. Consider each ability listed below. Using the columns at the right, rate the Fair. Minor weaknesses. Completely unprepared. quality of preparation to demonstrate each ability that you feel you received
Mechanical Engineering concepts to various engineering projects.One such program is the “Great Moonbuggy Race” sponsored by NASA Marshall Space FlightCenter. It is believed that participation of the students in these completions will increase theexposure of the students to other fellow mechanical engineering students and hence will motivatethem in pursuing their careers. On the other hand, participation in the competitions will give thestudents a hands on experience in which they can appreciate the classroom knowledge and it’sapplication to real-world engineering problems. Indeed it is observed that the participatingstudents have enhanced their performance in various courses. It is therefore imperative to gainfunding for such competitions on a
(ASSET) Program ATIC, along with the Career Preparation Center at ASU, has developed a program that focuseson the placement of qualified students in an industrial environment. The program, entitled ATICStudent Success in Entrepreneurship Training (ASSET), helps students connect with industry,promotes the pursuit of the student’s entrepreneurial goals, and helps introduce industry to agreater portion of the talented student population on the Polytechnic campus. The ASSETprogram is advantageous to both students as well as participating companies. Benefits for Companies/Businesses: • Company/business gains bright, energetic students who can apply their latest education and skills. • Confidence knowing intern selection is from a
opportunity.”Other community building activities throughout the week included group projects and eveningsocial activities such as trips to downtown and a local amusement park, all with the intendedlearning outcome of knowing how to navigate the campus shuttle and city/county publictransportation systems.Orientation components of the program, while somewhat traditional in nature, were designed toeducate students about the resources available to aid them in academic and personal successwhile at UCSC and beyond. Toward that end, students attended presentations with professionalstaff from the Financial Aid Office, the Science & Engineering Library, the Career Center, andthe Services for Transfer and Re-Entry Students office. ETTP participants were
and programs developed through these approaches will servethree purposes: to expand learning opportunities for our undergraduate students; to createattractive courses for our graduate students; and to offer courses to local practicingengineers interested in advancing their careers and planning to become professionalengineers. The courses might also help to fill the need for engineers to engage in lifelonglearning as a condition for maintaining professional engineering licensure, though servingthat need was not a primary design objective.Bridge CoursesOur concept of bridge courses was based on several assumptions or design criteria: 1. The defined set of bridge courses comprises a flexible system of post-BS 500-level (i.e., first-year
Headquarters Commander for the 439th Engineer Battalion (USAR) while deployed and attached to 2nd Brigade, 82nd Airborne Division in Baghdad, Iraq, in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom. MAJ Korpela is a graduate of the Armor Officer Basic Course, Engineer Captains Career Course, Ranger School, Airborne School, Air Assault School, and the Combined Arms and Services Staff School. His awards include the Bronze Star and Purple Heart. His research interests include embedded systems and autonomous control of small, unmanned ground vehicles.Ryan Ebel, United States Military Academy Page 14.839.1
businesses.Faculty adapt or develop learning materials involving the InovaED database, and share new orimproved materials with CATI so they can be used at other institutions. Faculty and studentssearch the InovaED database for relevant IP or documents from previous project to serve as thebasis for activities, assignments, and projects. Students benefit by working with real materials onreal problems, often in collaboration with business principals and employees. The resultingproject documents go back to CATI, where they can be used by future student teams, or used tohelp businesses launch new offerings. In some cases, student start their own ventures; more often,their experiences play an important role in their careers or ventures they start in the future
1, the students in ourmaterial and energy balance are no different, showing a strong preference for a visuallearning style (average score = - 5 on the Felder-Silverman scale). By creating a tool toaid in transforming written information into visual images, we believed that we couldhelp students develop an essential skill that they will need not only in the material andenergy balance class, but throughout their careers as engineers. Visual/Verbal 25 20 20 15 15 12 12 12 10 9 6 5
injury or handicap. The increasing life expectancyand the search for better health care and preventive therapies have influenced the demand growthfor medical devices. To remain competitive in the global market, medical device manufacturersneed highly qualified engineers to develop innovative and functional products.Undergraduate engineering students are often taught theoretical concepts without having theopportunity to actually apply these concepts in a real-world context. The National Academy ofEngineering (NAE) made the following two recommendations that are relevant to academicinstitutions: (1) academic institutions should take the steps to cultivate U.S. student interest, andaptitude for careers in engineering, and (2) academic institutions
as part of project reports in a design class at the first year,sophomore, and junior level.Conclusion and future plansInformation literacy instruction for engineering science students at Trinity University hasprogressed from at most one class period in their four-year career to a planned sequence offormal meetings at least once a year. Almost all of the faculty have included either libraryinstruction or one-on-one consultation with the librarian for the students in their classes,suggesting that they see the value of this process and support the information literacy goals of thelibrary and the university as a whole.In terms of the design classes, the senior year has been less structured, with librarian-studentinteraction left to the students
AC 2009-1609: A DESKTOP EXPERIMENT MODULE: HEAT TRANSFERAdrienne Minerick, Mississippi State University Adrienne Minerick is an Assistant Professor of Chemical Engineering at Mississippi State University. She received her PhD and M.S. from the University of Notre Dame and B.S. from Michigan Technological University. Since joining MSU, Dr. Minerick has taught the graduate Chemical Engineering Math, Process Controls, Introduction to Chemical Engineering Freshman Seminar, Heat Transfer, and Analytical Microdevice Technology courses. In addition, she is an NSF CAREER Awardee, has served as co-PI on an NSF REU site, PI on grants from NSF and DOE, and is the faculty advisor for MSU’s
experience encompassing engineering and environmental consulting, research and development, and technology development. Career experience includes teaching at the University level, conducting fundamental research, and developing continuing educational courses.Howard Evans, National University, San Diego Dr. Howard Evans was appointed founding Dean of the School of Engineering and Technology, National University, in October, 2003. He received B.S. degrees in Physics and Chemical Engineering from Brigham Young University, and a Ph.D. in Chemical Engineering Science from the California Institute of Technology. Dr. Evans has over 20 years of executive and senior technical management experience at 3M
degree program. It also reflects Rose-Hulman’s emphasis on service activities. In addition to “leadership,, Rose-Hulman recentlyadded “service” to the institutional student learning outcomes. Thus, underlying theme in theLeadership Academy is that leadership skills are applicable in all areas of one’s life, not just atwork.In the Post-Course Survey, the participants were asked “In what areas of your life do you thinkthis leadership training will help you?” Every participant identified at least one area in additionto work. Their responses included the following: ≠ Student ≠ Family ≠ Extra curricular ≠ Friendships ≠ Career ≠ Follower & Leader ≠ CommunitySeveral
women’s’ hands. Family attitudes about femaleemployment and a woman's ability to combine both work and family responsibilities areoften identified as key to accessing work and remaining within the labor force.Second, and this is particularly relevant for our study, social conditions often dictate thatwomen need to abide by what is known here as a "code of modesty". This recommendssegregation of men and women in the quest to guard family honor. This code is adheredto in varying degrees by different groups within the society and often confines women toseeking work in predominantly female work environments, such as schools. Engineeringundergraduates who wish to pursue their chosen career will have no choice but to workwith male counterparts.As we
,management skills, economics, intellectual property protection, and teaching methodology thatcould be considered as seminar topics. We had few seminars on ethics, legal studies andengineering attributes. Within the department, we have a faculty member who has degrees inlaw as well as chemical engineering. This individual discusses topics such as importance ofmaintaining a laboratory notebook, issues with intellectual property, and how to apply for apatent. Another faculty member who worked in the industry prior to academic career discussedon difference between academic environment and industrial practice, and plagiarism in themodern digital world. One could rotate between topics by assessing interest of students throughsurveys. This also reduces the
of DfE too older chairs that can be found through university surplus. The entirelearning lab experience is developed to offer the learners the opportunity to apply what they havelearned in lecture. The designed and controlled lab experiences provide a beneficial learningenvironment to apply or reinforce the new knowledge before application to their design projects.We will use both formative and summative assessments to evaluate our course objectives.Utilizing internal curriculum development resources, we will ensure that assessments andlearning activities align with the overarching learning outcomes of the course and program.Assessments focus on assessing attitude changes toward sustainability and related careers,development of skill sets to
students to pursue both knowledge and wisdom, and to aspire to ethical and moral leadership within their chosen careers, their community, and the world. We value a spirit of community among all members of the college that respects academic freedom and inquiry, the discovery and cultivation of new knowledge, and continued innovation in all that we do.The mission statement of the University is reflected in these mission statements. In addition,these mission statements guided the development of our objectives, which are presented later inthis paper.FacultyA full-time teaching load in the College of Engineering at Villanova is 12 contact hours persemester. If a faculty member is an active scholar, this load is reduced to 9
schools andprograms, and promote interdisciplinary education. Yet current education models areprimarily based on the learning in the classroom with a clear delineation betweendisciplines. Students attend the lectures and are evaluated through homework problems,class projects and exams. Even though the importance of team work has been stressedover the years for the successful engineering career development, the extent ofimplementation is limited to the team projects in the classroom. Manyengineering/business courses are pure lecture-based, and do not usually containcomponents that help student to boost their communication skills within the frameworkof engineering problems. The limited exposure to this critical success skill has resulted inisolated
Research New Graduation Program: The Manufacturing Engineering(ME) Program. It has been specially designed in order to fulfill the lack of formation ofdedicated professionals to work hard with the goal of promoting the development ofManufacturing and Management researches. The program fits the necessities of professionalsand enterprises interested in the improvement of career and quality performance. It is a flexibleprogram that is developed in according to the needs for the accomplishment of the main goal ofthe group. It is important to point out that it has also hands on study totally developed in teams,which is not easy but necessary. No doubt that it is the most difficult part of the program, towork in teams, but as much as possible the groups
training, exposure to global health issues and a medically-themed designcourse. As a result the expectation is that they will continue to cultivate these issues throughouttheir career, generating a new mindset within both the technology developer communities andthe medical community that uses technology. A key feature of the GHD program is immersionwithin a community where global health issues are prominent, leading to a problem formulation Page 14.766.8and specification process that is then the target of the two-semester design sequence. Studentsare expected to return to the field site well before the end of their program so that direct
technologyprogram for their future careers in modern manufacturing companies, a new curriculum inRobotics Application Engineering has been developed and applied in the semester of spring 2008.This paper describes the course and laboratory of Robotics Application Engineering for studentsof manufacturing technology program (ITMT) in the Department of Industrial and EngineeringTechnology (IET).There are four Robotics courses offered in the IET Department spanning from 100 level to 400level to teach concepts, operation, programming, maintenance, interfacing, and applicationdevelopments of industrial robots. Robotics Application Engineering is taught as a 400 levelcourse for senior undergraduate students in the ITMT program. This course teaches
AC 2009-2473: MEASURING THE EDUCATIONAL BENEFITS OF DIVERSITY INSTEM EDUCATION: A MULTI-INSTITUTIONAL SURVEY ANALYSIS OFWOMEN AND UNDERREPRESENTED MINORITIESTerrell Strayhorn, University of Tennessee, Knoxville Dr. Terrell Strayhorn is Associate Professor of Higher Education, Special Assistant to the Provost, and Director of the Center for Higher Education Research and Policy (CHERP) at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. Recipient of a 2008 NSF CAREER Award (EHR #0747304) for his research on minorities in STEM, Strayhorn is author of several books and over 50 chapters, refereed articles, reports, and analyses
specifications are usedin this area, contractors make serious safety and economic mistakes dealing with these works.Most construction engineering and management programs in the United States require thestudents to learn structural design principles. Often the students do not realize the importance ofthe practical applications of the structural concepts covered in these courses. In many cases,course instruction emphasizes theory and abstract concept. Many students do not understandmath-oriented coursework, probably due to their marginal background in analytical skills. Evensome students understand the structural courses but they can not visualize the necessity of theseclasses in their career, and therefore feel it is ‘irrelevant’. These same students
Program Objectives, we have developed several additional objectivesspecific to our project. • Enable international opportunities for career growth and collaborative research • Evaluate water treatment alternatives across a range of economic, geographic, climate and water composition contexts • Advance applications of nanotechology to membrane science and water treatment • Investigate potential for membrane applications in developing economiesA group of international partners were invited to participate in the project by identifyinginternationally prominent groups who brought specific expertise complimentary to thecapabilities of the U.S. team. For example, a group in Toulouse, France was well known fortheir ability to produce
fundamental principles are now embedded in variouscomputational software packages developed by nuclear fuel vendors, software companies,universities and national laboratories. These software packages have become a larger componentof nuclear engineering practice, and therefore a gap presents itself as nuclear engineers transitionfrom the classroom to the workplace. Furthermore, the currently increasing demand for nuclearengineers is persuading more nuclear engineers to explore their career opportunities immediatelyafter receiving their undergraduate degree. This implies that most of these engineers will enter Page 14.484.2the workplace with little to
some haveeven asked for another AIAD for the upcoming summer; again this speaks to the success of theprogram motivating and educating students potentially interested in careers in engineering. Figure 5. Sophomore AIAD SurveyProject Sponsor ExperienceProject sponsor feedback is voluntary, and it provides us with an outside look at our academicprogram. We send students, who are products of our curriculum, out to an AIAD. We shouldknow if we are preparing them for engineering in the real world. Sponsors are asked to assess thestudents’ abilities and our program objectives. Their feedback helps in our internal assessment ofthe department’s goals, the level of student competence, and the scope of certain