AC 2009-961: "IT'S NOT MY JOB TO TEACH THEM HOW TO WRITE":FACILITATING THE DISCIPLINARY RHETORICAL SOCIALIZATION OFINTERNATIONAL ESL GRADUATE ASSISTANTS IN THE SCIENCES ANDENGINEERINGAshley Ater Kranov, Washington State University Dr. Ashley Ater Kranov is Assistant Director of the Center for Teaching, Learning and Technology at Washington State University(WSU). She specializes in outcomes assessment and faculty development. Dr. Ater Kranov is a leader in university and community internationalization efforts, including developing and assessing global competencies in faculty, staff, and students. The paper describing her collaborative work with faculty in the WSU College of Engineering
Craig E. Morin is a Design Engineer with MindWare Technologies in Columbus, Ohio where he develops medical research equipment. Previously he was a Graduate Teaching Associate with the OSU Fundamentals of Engineering for Honors (FEH) Program where he taught labs and developed course materials. Mr. Morin earned his BS in Electrical and Computer Engineering (2004) and his MS in Biomedical Engineering (2008), both from The Ohio State University.Patrick Wensing, Ohio State University Patrick M. Wensing is a senior honors student in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering (ECE) and has served as an Undergraduate Teaching Assistant for the OSU Fundamentals of Engineering for Honors (FEH
product/process?). 7. Consideration of the influence of the context on the Implications issue (including where appropriate, cultural, social, How do the results of your Airplane Design Challenge economic, technological, ethical, political, or personal experiment “What is the difference between product and process context) design?” help you understand the importance of these concepts for *The papers are ranked on a 1 to 5 scale for each with 1=low and Engineering? (How does one affect the other and vice versa? Why is 5 = high on each of the criteria. Both rubrics have an
represented 27 other countries. These countries were spread across every continentexcept for Antarctica. Table 1 presents the distribution of participants across the disciplines. Thisdistribution of disciplines reflects the distribution of engineers and scientists in Norway. Page 14.1197.7Table 2 presents the distribution of institutions in which the participants are studying orworking. As shown in Table 2, more than half of the participants came from Norway’stwo largest institutions: the University of Oslo and the Norwegian University of Scienceand Technology in Trondheim.Figure 1. Distribution of the 28 home countries of the participants. All
Mechanical Engineering at Stanford University. Engineering and education have been his foundation interests. He has served as Associate Directors of Stanford's Center for Design Research and the Stanford Learning Lab (now known as the Stanford Center for Innovation in Learning). Today, although also actively involved as consultant in a variety of technology sectors, education remains a central theme in his academic and entrepreneurial activities. George earned a Ph.D. at Stanford University for his work on management of non-homogeneous redundancy in fault tolerant electromechanical systems design.Helen Chen, Stanford University Helen L. Chen is Research Scientist at the Stanford Center for Innovations
faculty and students at UKZN. Page 14.840.4The objectives of this project-abroad experience are to expose students to a different culture andto the application of technologies appropriate to South African needs by collaborating on short-term engineering design projects with South African students.20 For the third visit in 2008 aspecial effort was put into the development and application of more effective assessmentprocedures for the program.21 The purposes for a more thorough assessment emerged from aconsideration of the American Higher Education’s principles of good practice for assessingstudent learning, which include:• Assessment is most
AC 2009-85: USING COMMUNITY ADVISORY PANELS (CAPS) FOR THEDEVELOPMENT OF A STEM PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT MODEL FORTEACHERS OF AMERICAN INDIAN STUDENTSKurt Becker, Utah State University Kurt Becker is the Department Head of the Engineering and Technology Education Department at Utah State University. He is currently the Co-Principal Investigator for the National Science Foundation (NSF) funded National Center for Engineering and Technology Education and Principal Investigator for the NSF funded project: Communities of Effective Practice: A professional STEM Development Partnership Model for Teachers of American Indian Students. His areas of research include adult learning cognition, engineering
AC 2009-924: THE PROFESSIONAL TRAINING FEATURES FORNON-DESTRUCTIVE TESTING GRADUATE STUDENTSAnatoliy Protasov, National Technical University of Ukraine “KPI” Dr. Anatoliy Protasov is a Head of Nondestructive Testing Department of National Technical University of Ukraine “KPI”. He graduated from the National Technical University of Ukraine “Kiev Polytechnical Institute”, Electric Engineering Department, MS, Ph.D. He has research experience in Nondestructive Testing Methods. Page 14.1245.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2009 The Professional Training Features for Non-Destructive Testing
Design competitions into the undergraduate experience, studentsare better prepared to enter the field of engineering and make more meaningful contributions totheir firms at an earlier rate.According to a report published for The Royal Academy of Engineering, UK (2006)1, the pace ofchange in industry is expected to intensify in both the technological and non-technologicaldomains. Particular themes that have emerged include: (a) an increased need for firms to focuson solving customer problems; (b) a growing requirement to provide system solutions tothose problems; (c) and the increasing complexity of the management task. Anotherimportant factor is globalization which will continue to affect both the demand and the supplyside of industry.Certain
AC 2009-484: SUSTAINABILITY AND IMPACT OF GLOBAL PROJECTSJared Geddes, Brigham Young UniversityW. Vincent Wilding, Brigham Young UniversityRandy Lewis, Brigham Young University Page 14.1107.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2009 Sustainability and Impact of Global ProjectsAbstractA Global Projects in Engineering & Technology course at Brigham Young University has beenin existence for three years to broaden the learning experience of engineering students by solvingreal-world engineering challenges using multi-disciplinary teams. The first two classes involvedprojects implemented in Tonga (2007) and Peru (2008). With the class currently in its
AC 2009-1269: THE JAVA-DSP PHASE 3 PROJECT: AN INTERDISCIPLINARYMULTIUNIVERSITY EFFORTAndreas Spanias, Arizona State UniversityLinda Hinnov, Johns Hopkins UniversityMichael Stiber, University of Washington, BothellCajetan Akujuobi, Prairie View A&M UniversityMarios Pattichis, University of New MexicoCostas Pattichis, University of CyprusEd Doering, Rose-Hulman Institute of TechnologyKarthikeyan Ramamurthy, Arizona State UniversityShalin Mehta, Arizona State UniversityRaja Ayyanar, Arizona State University Rajapandian Ayyanar joined the ASU faculty as an assistant professor in August 2000. He received a BE in electrical engineering from P.S.G. College of Technology, India in 1989; an MS in power electronics from the
alternative energy sources energy conservationinitiatives, sustainability and most importantly maintaining a reliable, efficient andenvironmentally sound energy infrastructure underline the imperative nature of this need.The College of Applied Science (CAS) at the University of Cincinnati (UC) has maintained afocused mission of serving the needs of utility industry and the community at large as needs arisefor technical education in alternative energy. Within the College of Applied Science today wehave an Associate Degree program in Electrical Engineering Technology (EET) with option fordevelopment of power plant operations and maintenance personnel. The College is also investingresources in development of additional curriculum and funding for Energy
AC 2009-1287: A COLLEGE-WIDE PROGRAM FOR TEACHING LEADERSHIP:FRAMEWORK, MODEL, AND OUTCOMESVal Hawks, Brigham Young UniversityJohn Harb, Brigham Young UniversityAlan Parkinson, Brigham Young UniversitySpencer Magleby, Brigham Young University Page 14.11.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2009 A College-wide Approach for Teaching and Developing Leadership: Model, Framework and OutcomesIntroductionIn 2005 the College of Engineering and Technology at BYU began an initiative to assure thateach student graduated with the ability to understand and practice leadership. This paper presentsa
capabilities vital forengineering professionals. In the next phase a refined set of computational themes wassent back out to the industry panel for ranking. Results from the industry panel and thecurrent Delphi process will be presented. Implications of the results for a computationalthinking thread in the engineering curriculum will be discussed as well as plans for futureproject activities.IntroductionRapidly developing computational technologies are radically reshaping the nature of theworkplace 1. Jobs that consist primarily of routine engineering and computationalactivities are quickly moving oversees to cheaper labor markets or being completelyautomated. This and other immense changes in global political and economic dynamicsmeans the 21st
context for science, engineering and technology investigations. He also proposed and implemented the pioneering concept of integrated adjustable virtual laboratories and designed easy-to-use authoring tools to create such labs. Dr. Cherner holds an MS in Experimental Physics, and Ph.D. in Physics and Materials Science. He has published over 80 papers in national and international journals and made dozens of presentations at various national and international conferences and workshops. Dr. Cherner has served as a Principal Investigator for several government-funded educational projects.Edward Bigos, Springfield Technical Community College Edward Bigos, a professor of Electronics/Computer Systems
University before joining NKU. At NKU, he teaches graduate and undergraduate classes in the area of computer networks and network security. He has chosen academic career since he believes that by teaching he can contribute towards community development.Wei Hao, Northern Kentucky University Dr. Hao came to NKU in August 2008 from Cisco Systems in San Jose, California, where he worked as a software engineer. He earned his PhD in Computer Science from the University of Texas at Dallas in 2007. He brings both academic and industrial expertise, having also worked for Motorola and Alcatel. His research interests include Web Technologies (such as web caching, web services, and web-based
new set of skills and competencies so they can contribute to the economic andsocial growth of the nations on this hemisphere while they develop technology and transfer theknowledge through the region.Changes in the global economy, especially the importance of moving to a knowledge-basedeconomy1, have changed the role of the engineer and engineering education in the 21st century.This comes at a time when there is a shortage of engineers and a decreased interest of students tostudy engineering. The global market and outsourcing has changed the skills required ofengineers. The engineer now has to “think globally and act locally” in order to bring global jobsto their region and be able to adapt products to the global market. Preparing these
AC 2009-841: INTRODUCING A FLEXIBLE ADAPTATION FRAMEWORK FORIMPLEMENTING LEARNING-FACTORY–BASED MANUFACTURINGEDUCATIONMukasa Ssemakula, Wayne State University Dr. Ssemakula received his BS in Mechanical Engineering, MS in Manufacturing Technology, and Ph.D. in Mechanical Engineering all from the University of Manchester Institute of Science and Technology (England). After working in industry, he joined the faculty of the University of Maryland where he taught courses in the areas of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering as well as conducting research in Manufacturing Systems. Since 1993, he has been on the faculty of Wayne State University’s Division of Engineering Technology where he has been a
AC 2009-2221: ENHANCEMENT OF NETWORK-BASED MANUFACTURINGEDUCATION: A QUASI-WEB-BASED INSTRUCTION APPROACHTzu-Liang (Bill) Tseng, University of Texas, El Paso Dr. Tseng’s educational background is in IE with an emphasis on artificial intelligence and web based technologies in manufacturing. In addition to his many years of industrial experience, he has taught many different engineering courses at undergraduate and graduate levels. His areas of teaching emphasis include internet-based techniques to manufacturing, computer integrated manufacturing, design of experiment and simulation. In the classroom, his teaching methods emphasize creativity and active hands-on based learning. Dr. Tseng is also a
AC 2009-320: ACTIVE AND INTELLIGENT MATERIALS: THEORY MEETSAPPLICATIONJohn Marshall, University of Southern Maine John Marshall received his Ph.D. from Texas A&M University and is the Internship Coordinator for the Department of Technology at the University of Southern Maine. His areas of specialization include Power and Energy Processing, Applied Process Control Engineering, Automation, Fluid Power, and Facility Planning. Page 14.156.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2009 Intelligent Materials: Theory Meets ApplicationThe focus of this paper is a “hands-on” activity that was
transfers (of current) and deferral of admission bysome international students. The program has two tracks- information technology/advancedcomputer applications (ITAC) and industrial/ manufacturing technology (ITM) each withroughly 10 active students. Of these students, their background is very diverse such asgovernment services, military, manufacturing, engineering design, supplier, software, machinetool, electrical, economics, and computer engineering. Furthermore, the very wide levels of workexperience among students have created even greater heterogeneity in terms of their researchinterest. Page 14.858.2MS Tech Program ObjectiveThe program
AC 2009-2125: COMPLEX SYSTEMS: WHAT ARE THEY AND WHY SHOULDWE CARE?Nadia Kellam, University of Georgia Nadia Kellam is an Assistant Professor and engineering educational researcher in the Department of Biological and Agricultural Engineering at the University of Georgia. She is co-director of the Collaborative Lounge for Understanding Society and Technology through Educational Research (CLUSTER) research group. Her research interests include interdisciplinarity, creativity, identity formation, and the role of emotion in cognition.Joachim Walther, The University of Georgia Joachim Walther is an Assistant Professor with the Faculty of Engineering at the University of Georgia with a
AC 2009-653: DEVELOPING A RUBRIC TO ASSESS CRITICAL THINKING INASSIGNMENTS WITH AN OPEN-ENDED COMPONENTKaren Alfrey, Indiana University-Purdue University, Indianapolis Karen Alfrey is Director of the Undergraduate Program in Biomedical Engineering at IUPUI. Her areas of focus include computational neuroscience and biological modeling, undergraduate mentoring and advising, curriculum development, and assessment. She holds a PhD in Electrical Engineering from Rice University.Elaine Cooney, Indiana University-Purdue University, Indianapolis Elaine Cooney is professor of electrical and computer engineering technology at IUPUI. She is the author of RFID+ The Complete Review of Radio Frequency
, andnanotechnology deals with things in the scale of 1nm~1µm. Some interesting examplesabout the scale of both natural and manmade things are illustrated in Figure 1 [1]. Page 14.810.3 Figure 1. The scale of things – nanometers and more [1]MEMS are the acronym of “Microelectromechanical Systems”. The typical size ofMEMS components is in the range from 1µm to 1 mm. MEMS is actually a relatively"young" technology with history of only several decades. In 1959, R. Feynman predicteda future prosperity of science and technology about the "small" world [2]. Since then,scientists and engineers made tremendous effort to explore this amazing "small" world.In
AC 2009-838: INTRODUCING ADVANCED WIRELESS SENSOR NETWORKSINTO UNDERGRADUATE RESEARCHXiaojing Yuan, University of HoustonHeidar Malki, University of HoustonGangbing Song, University of HoustonConsuelo Waight, University of Houston Page 14.799.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2009 Introducing Advanced Wireless Sensor Network Undergraduate Research Xiaojing Yuan, Heidar Malki, Gangbing Song, Consuelo L. WaightAbstractAdvances in sensor technology and the availability of affordable mass data storage devices areenabling a new security infrastructure. The infrastructure goes beyond traditional
AC 2009-141: INTERACTIVE INSTRUCTION, REMEDIATION, AND RESEARCHINMarilyn Reba, Clemson University Page 14.781.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2009 Interactive Instruction, Remediation, and Research in Freshman Calculus via Pen-Technology and Web-based SoftwareAbstract Too many students in Freshman Calculus are unprepared for the pace at which new conceptsare introduced, are unable to implement prerequisite Algebra skills, and are unwilling to seekanswers to their questions in front of their classmates. We report on how the Department ofMathematical Sciences at Clemson University, through a
AC 2009-2024: STUDENT OUTLOOK TOWARD MEDIA-BASED MODULES INELECTRONICS AND NETWORK ANALYSISJean-Claude Thomassian, State University of New York, Maritime College Dr. Jean-Claude Thomassian received his BS degrees in Electrical Engineering and Mechanical Engineering from the University of Toledo in 1992 and 1993, respectively, and MS and Ph.D. degrees in Electrical Engineering from The University of Toledo in 1995 and 2002. His main professional interests are in mixed mode IC design and electrical engineering education; his recent research activity concentrates on symbolic analysis of circuits and MOS models.Anoop Desai, Georgia Southern University Dr. Anoop Desai received his BS degree in
AC 2009-1410: A REMOTE- ACCESS ROBOTICS AND PLC LABORATORY FORDISTANCE LEARNING PROGRAMAkbar Eslami, Elizabeth City State University Dr. Akbar Eslami is a professor and Engineering Technology coordinator in the Department of Technology at Elizabeth City State University. He received his Ph.D. in Mechanical Engineering from Old Dominion University. His research interests are in computer aided manufacturing, remote control, and automation.Aliza Williams, Elizabeth City State University Mrs. Aliza Williams is a senior student in the Department of Technology at Elizabeth City State University and 2008 McNair and VA-NC LSAMP-NSF Scholar. Her research interests are in networking, and
equality and fairness among students will also be discussed. This data was gathered fromstudents within the Purdue School of Engineering and Technology at Indiana University-PurdueUniversity Indianapolis (IUPUI) via an electronic survey. The results will be analyzed incomparison to the results of similar studies, should they exist, facilitated by schooladministration in order to determine whether a disparity exists in the answers given to fellowstudents and answers given to the School. Specific gaps in the engineering and technologycollege experience will be identified, and recommendations will be given for students, faculty,and administrators. Implications for policy, practice, and improvement will also be discussed.IntroductionWhen entering the
AC 2009-151: INTEGRATING SYSTEMS-ON-CHIP IN AN UNDERGRADUATEECE CURRICULUMYing Tang, Rowan University Ying Tang is Associate Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Rowan University, Glassboro, NJ. She received the B.S. and M.S. degrees from the Northeastern University, P. R. China, in 1996 and 1998, respectively, and Ph. D degree from New Jersey Institute of Technology, Newark, NJ, in 2001. Her research interests include operational research, discrete event systems, Petri nets applications, artificial intelligence, and hardware and software co-design.Linda Head, Rowan University Linda M. Head is an Associate Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Rowan