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Displaying results 271 - 300 of 315 in total
Conference Session
Contemporary Issues in Engineering Ethics
Collection
2010 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Ahmed Khan, DeVry University; Abdul Qadeer, Urdu Science University
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Ethics
Implications of Technology. He teaches Wireless Engineering, Network Engineering, Fiber Optic Communications, Technology and Society, and Project Management. He also advises students on their senior design projects. He is author of “The Telecommunications Fact Book, 2E” and co-author of “Technology and Society: Crossroads to the 21st Century,” “Technology and Society: A Bridge to the 21st Century,” and “Technology and Society: Issues for the 21st Century and Beyond.” He is a member of ASEE, and a senior member of IEEE.Abdul Qadeer, Urdu Science University Dr. Abdul Qadeer is the Director of Academic Planning and Development at Federal Urdu University of Arts, Sciences and Technology (FUUAST), Karachi
Conference Session
Frontiers in Engineering Management
Collection
2010 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
William Loendorf, Eastern Washington University
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Management
Patents; Industrial Safety Engineering; Computing Systems; and Technology in WorldCivilization. The findings from this study have also been successfully incorporated into theSenior Engineering Capstone, Senior Capstone: Production Laboratory, and Senior Projectcourses, along with the Industrial Internship Program.This integration has occurred in many facets of these courses. The textbook readings, lectures,and discussions were updated in order to emphasize the findings from the study. In additionhomework assignments, case studies, and real world experiences derived from the study wereincluded as individual or group exercises.Homework projects and case studies related to applying these proven methods, procedures, andprocesses to enhance quality
Conference Session
Measurement Tools
Collection
2010 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Patricia Ralston, University of Louisville; Cathy Bays, University of Louisville
Tagged Divisions
Educational Research and Methods
Dr. Cathy L. Bays is the assessment specialist for the university’s regional reaccreditation Quality Enhancement Plan. In this role she provides leadership across the 8 undergraduate units by demonstrating a broad knowledge of assessment, facilitating unit-specific assessment projects and outcomes, providing faculty development on assessment topics, and supporting the scholarship of assessment. For 15 years she was a faculty member in the School of Nursing at the University of Louisville, serving as Director of the Undergraduate Nursing Program for 5 of those years. Page 15.1022.1© American Society
Conference Session
Special Session: Impacts of Service in Engineering
Collection
2010 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Trevor Harding, California Polytechnic State University; Lynne Slivovsky, California Polytechnic State University; Nina Truch, California Polytechnic State University
Tagged Divisions
Educational Research and Methods
Advancement of Teaching Faculty Fellow for Service-Learning for Political Engagement. She currently oversees two multidisciplinary service-learning programs: the Access by Design project that has capstone students design devices for people with disabilities to participate in adapted physical activity and Organic Twittering that merges social media with sustainability.Nina Truch, California Polytechnic State University Nina Truch is a lecturer in the Communication Studies and Materials Engineering departments at Cal Poly State University. She received the Cal Poly President's Community Service Award in 2005 for work pertaining to the Tsunami Relief Project
Conference Session
Post BS Entrepreneurship Education Needs
Collection
2010 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
James Green, University of Maryland
Tagged Divisions
Entrepreneurship & Engineering Innovation
protection, corporate security, and partner compliance solutions for multiple Fortune 500 companies in the consumer packaged goods, energy, financial services, hospitality and technology industries. While at Booz Allen Hamilton, Dr. Green provided technical and programmatic direction to the DARPA Special Projects Office (SPO), Army Research Lab (ARL), Defense Technical Information Center (DTIC), Information Assurance Technology Analysis Center (IATAC), and other DoD clients for advanced prototype systems research. He performed analysis tasks and provided strategic vision for his clients in the areas of survivability analysis, roadmap studies, threat analysis, and technology simulation and modeling. Dr
Conference Session
Fulfilling the CE BOK2 - Case Studies
Collection
2010 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Kevin Sutterer, Rose Hulman Institute Of Technology
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
department faculty member has significant experience inengineering practice. The Department of Civil Engineering is a campus leader in offering realproject experiences in its courses and in student service activities. Projects with outside clientsare first introduced in the freshman year and culminate with a year-long senior capstone project.Students earn a Bachelor of Science in Civil Engineering upon graduation from the program.Career placement and salaries of department graduates are consistently well above the nationalaverage.RHIT Program Outcomes and Current BSCE CurriculumThe curriculum in the Department of Civil Engineering is in a process of continuousimprovement. Feedback from graduating seniors, alumni, and employees of both interns
Conference Session
Innovations in Civil Engineering Education III
Collection
2010 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Ronald Welch, University of Texas, Tyler
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
engineering educators have homework, design projects, and mid-term exams, andmany times topics are tested again on a final exam. This process allows the student tofirst wrestle with the concept at their own pace in a homework assignment where theycan collaborate with others before being asked to test their skills within a timed eventsuch as an exam. Learning by doing is the primary basis behind the growth of project-based learning (PBL) opportunities.5 Some programs have been completely sold on theconcept to the point of desiring PBL for all learning activities within the program.6,7These collaborative, team design experiences allow even deeper understanding throughgroup work focused on a project. If this process is sound, then why are most
Conference Session
Learning about Power Systems and Power Consumption
Collection
2010 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Justin Reed, University of Wisconsin, Madison; Daniel Ludois, University of Wisconsin, Madison; Maria Hamlin, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee
Tagged Divisions
Energy Conversion and Conservation
power electronics orother power conversion course could improve student engagement throughout the course ascompared to more conventional sample applications. Furthermore, it will be shown that theknowledge base necessary to build an SSTC spans far more technical areas than required in mostconventional power electronics projects, and therefore justifies the SSTC as practical classroomexercise. The hypotheses presented in this paper are investigated and further evaluated with asurvey to gauge student interest in enrolling in a power electronics course based on a variety ofsample applications, including the SSTC. (a) (b) (c
Conference Session
Improving Student Entrepreneurial Skills
Collection
2010 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Daniel Ferguson, Ohio Northern University; Michele Govekar, Ohio Northern University; Amanda Stype, Ohio Northern University
Tagged Divisions
Entrepreneurship & Engineering Innovation
of management education. She currently teaches undergraduate courses in strategy, corporate citizenship, small business and project management. She is the co-program chair of the North American Management Society 2009 conference and past Division Chair of the Management History Division of the Academy of Management for 2005-06.Amanda Stype, Ohio Northern University Amanda Stype is a 2009 graduate of the James F. Dicke College of Business Administration at Ohio Northern University with an Honors degree in International Business & Economics and also in applied mathematics. She currently is a graduate student at Bowling Green State University in their Master of Economics
Conference Session
Innovative Instructional Strategies and Curricula
Collection
2010 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Kingsley Reeves, University of South Florida; Bill Blank, University of South Florida; Victor Hernandez-Gantes, University of South Florida; Maniphone Dickerson, University of South Florida
Tagged Divisions
Mathematics
AC 2010-1675: USING CONSTRUCTIVIST TEACHING STRATEGIES INPROBABILITY AND STATISTICSKingsley Reeves, University of South FloridaBill Blank, University of South FloridaVictor Hernandez-Gantes, University of South FloridaManiphone Dickerson, University of South Florida Page 15.1322.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2010 Using Constructivist Teaching Strategies in Probability and StatisticsAbstractThis paper discusses the early results of an NSF EEC project that focuses on the impact of usingconstructivist approaches to teaching probability and statistics for engineers. Twelve exerciseswere developed and used in a modified version of the course to promote student
Conference Session
Communication - Needs and Methods
Collection
2010 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Christine Nicometo, University of Wisconsin, Madison; Kevin Anderson, University of Wisconsin, Madison; Traci Nathans-Kelly, University of Wisconsin, Madison; Sandra Courter, University of Wisconsin-Madison; Thomas McGlamery, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Tagged Divisions
Liberal Education
a moreinterpersonal communication skill set in students. Indeed, as Trevelyan pointed out in his studyof communication practices of engineers in Australia, “assessment of communication inengineering education is misaligned with practice requirements”5. To better align educationalassessment of communication practices in the first place, educators need to know more abouthow this skill set is defined and practiced in engineering workplaces. This paper intends to helpshed light on that question through reporting on the ways that practicing engineers valued,defined, and practiced “communication skills”.Study Description and MethodsThis study is part of a larger project sponsored by the National Science Foundation whichexamines the alignment of
Conference Session
Computer Education Innovations I
Collection
2010 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Cynthia Fry, Baylor University; Donald Gaitros, Baylor University
Tagged Divisions
Computers in Education
Senior Capstone projects available to all Computer Science majors.In partial fulfillment of the requirements of CSF 4302, all Fellows will present their thesis duringthe annual ECS Scholar’s Day, even if their work is not yet complete.The Fellow’s Research Advisor will direct the thesis. In addition, Fellows must invite a secondprofessor in that field as well as a third professor outside of that field to serve as readers. In thespring of the junior year, Scholars register for CSF 4v01 to be taken in the fall of the senior year.A detailed outline, the first chapter of the thesis, and a bibliography must be submitted to theresearch advisor and the CSF Director at the end of that semester. In the fall of the senior year,students register for CSF
Conference Session
Teaching Technological Literacy - College Courses and Minors
Collection
2010 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
John Krupczak, Hope College; Mani Mina, Iowa State University; Robert J. Gustafson, Ohio State University; James Young, Rice University
Tagged Divisions
Technological Literacy Constituent Committee
results achieved in the Minor in EngineeringStudies Program at Iowa State. The project goal is to develop the concepts and resources tosupport model minors which can be adopted efficiently and widely within American highereducation. To facilitate adoption by other institutions, flexibility is a key objective of theintended guidelines. Since the appropriateness of using the name engineering in the context of aminor is subject to debate, the specific name of minor should be part of that flexibility. Thesedegrees do not focus on teaching specific engineering technical content but on teaching studentshow to think like an engineer. The minor aims to develop the broad understanding and practicaltechnological competence outlined by the National Academy
Conference Session
ERM Potpourri
Collection
2010 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Mitchell Nathan, University of Wisconsin, Madison; Amy Atwood, University of Wisconsin, Madison; Amy Prevost, University of Wisconsin, Madison; Allen Phelps, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Tagged Divisions
Educational Research and Methods
measured the impact that professionaldevelopment training for pre-college engineering had on these beliefs. We examined this in thecontext of a specific, well-regarded, pre-college engineering program, Project Lead the Way(PLTW). We measured teachers’ views before and after training and teaching their first PLTWcourse, as compared to changes observed with a control group of STEM teachers. Some pre-existing differences reached statistical significance: Prospective PLTW teachers were morelikely than control teachers to identify sources of support for engineering in their schools, reportthat science and math concepts were integrated with engineering instruction; and to supportgreater access to engineering. Over time, teachers from both groups were
Conference Session
Engineering Design: Implementation and Evaluation
Collection
2010 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Cameron Denson, Utah State University; Matt Lammi, Utah State University; Kyungsuk Park, Utah State University; Elizabeth Dansie, Purdue University
Tagged Divisions
Educational Research and Methods
inform developers of teamdesign thinking measurements. Curricular and pedagogical efforts are currently in place to develop an understanding ofengineering design among high school students through formal and informal experiences.Engineering in K-12 Education 5 presented discussion of a variety of curricular efforts. Includedin these are The Academy of Engineering, Engineering: An Introduction for High School,Engineering by Design, Engineering Your Future: A Project-Based Introduction to Engineering,Engineers of the Future, The Infinity Project, INSPIRES, Learning by Design, Principles ofEngineering, TeachEngineering.org, TECH-Know, A World in Motion, Engineering the Future
Conference Session
Fulfilling the CE BOK2 - Case Studies
Collection
2010 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Kenneth Fridley, University of Alabama
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
traditional and emergent engineering systems.” Since theBOK2 outcomes explicitly ties sustainability to design, sustainability was formally integratedwith the program’s design outcome by stating the design must be conducted “includingsustainability and within realistic constraints….” The premise is that sustainability isspecific design criteria that must be considered. Sustainability concepts are covered as anintegrative component within many introductory and design courses. Critical to thisapproach, sustainability is a required design criterion in the program’s capstone designcourse, CE 401 Civil Engineering Design Project. Design professionals who specialize insustainability (e.g., design engineers who are LEED AP) work closely with the students
Conference Session
Technological Literacy for K-12 and for Community College Students: Concepts, Assessment, and Courses
Collection
2010 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Stephen O'Brien, The College of New Jersey
Tagged Divisions
Technological Literacy Constituent Committee
the MSTprogram are coordinated by the Department of Technological Studies. The Department ofTechnological Studies provides all of the T&E courses and has five full time professors and~6 adjunct professors. Educational requirements and advising for the MST students arecoordinated by the School of Education.Four works set important context for the Department of Technological Studies curriculumand the design of the MST program: (i) Benchmarks for Science Literacy (“Project 2061”),(ii) Technological Literacy Counts, (iii) Standards for Technological Literacy (STL) and (iv)Technically speaking- why all Americans need to know more about technology.2-5 Thesedocuments discuss the important role of teacher preparation in meeting educational goals
Conference Session
Fulfilling the CE BOK2 - Case Studies
Collection
2010 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Kenneth McManis, University of Louisiana
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
: Page 15.652.11 Sustainability concepts will be introduced to civil engineering students in the freshman orientation, CIVE 101. Sustainable issues are also central to the first environmentalengineering course, CIVE 322. For understanding and applying sustainability principleswithin design and construction, corresponding courses, primarily, the senior capstone designcourse, Civil Engineering Design (CIVE 442) and Construction Engineering (CIVE 480) willbe included as course learning objective. Sustainability will be included for consideration inthe CIVE 442 design criteria, and the finished project will be critiqued with respect tosuccess and/or lost opportunities. In CIVE 480, Construction Engineering, sustainability interms of construction
Conference Session
Research on the First Year I
Collection
2010 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Beverly Jaeger, Northeastern University; Susan Freeman, Northeastern University; Richard Whalen, Northeastern University; Rebecca Payne, Northeastern University
Tagged Divisions
First-Year Programs
. Page 15.1143.2So can we attribute part of the success to the “smarter” students we are selecting? To our talentsas faculty? To the support programs? Considering that it is likely a combination of all of theelements listed above –and some others that are less apparent– this new research takes anothertack. The hypothesis, stemming from psychological research, is that success is better predictedby grit than measures of academic skill. The operational definition of grit involves the ability –or propensity– to overcome obstacles, topersist through setbacks, maintain commitment, and to stick to projects and goals over longperiods, even if interest wanes or the going becomes difficult. It is reportedly possible to quantifysome aspects of this
Conference Session
The Influence of Cooperative Education
Collection
2010 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Alexander Yin, Pennsylvania State University
Tagged Divisions
Cooperative & Experiential Education
study, then, is to answer thefollowing question: 1) does experience in cooperative education or internship program influencesstudents' self-perceptions of their engineering problem-solving skills?Cooperative Education Research Research on the benefits of engineering students’ participation in a co-op suggests thatco-op students have more job interviewsv, higher starting salariesvi, vii, viii and higher grade pointaveragesix, x compared to students who do not participate in these programs. Friel surveyed 691cooperative education directors who reported that co-op students are perceived to be moreprofessional, more skilled problem solvers, better able to manage projects, and more technicallyknowledgeable than students without cooperative
Conference Session
Best Practices in Existing College-Industry Partnerships
Collection
2010 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Kenneth Van Treuren, Baylor University
Tagged Divisions
College-Industry Partnerships
AC 2010-858: NEVER TOO OLD TO LEARN: A REPORT ON THE EXPERIENCESIN BOEING’S WELLIVER FACULTY FELLOWSHIP PROGRAMKenneth Van Treuren, Baylor University Dr. Van Treuren is a professor on the faculty in the Mechanical Engineering Department at Baylor University. He teaches the capstone Mechanical Engineering Laboratory course as well as courses in heat transfer, aerospace engineering, gas turbines, fluid mechanics, and wind power. His research interests include energy education and gas turbine heat transfer. He can be contacted at Kenneth_Van_Treuren@baylor.edu. Page 15.912.1© American Society for
Conference Session
Innovative Teaching and Assessment Tools
Collection
2010 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Donald McEachron, Drexel University; Fred Allen, Drexel University; Elisabeth Papazoglou, Drexel University; Mustafa Sualp, Untra Corporation; David Delaine, Drexel University; David Hansberry, Drexel University
Tagged Divisions
Educational Research and Methods
-coursesequence reinforcing the techniques of engineering design and project management. During thesenior year, students participate in two capstone experiences: a senior sequence of 2 or 3 coursesin their concentration area and a senior design project.We are currently collecting data on student and faculty characteristics with the intent ofcorrelating the following independent variables with the dependent variables of program (studentlearning) outcomes, specifically the achievement of the ABET established performance criteria.Independent VariablesIndependent variables are student and faculty characteristics that may affect learning outcomes.We use several well established and some newly researched instruments to identify the keycharacteristics that may
Conference Session
Assessment and Evaluation in Design
Collection
2010 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Mysore Narayanan, Miami University
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education
hasutilized and assessed the five features in his Senior Design Capstone Course. He also presentsanalyses of the feedback data he obtained and suggests guidelines for further improvement.IntroductionOne has to appreciate the fact that students need motivation to become lifelong learners.Thereore it is the responsibility of the instructors in higher education to develop, generate, createand establish an environment in which students not only obtain necessary backgroundknowledge, but also become enthusiastic in becoming lifelong learners (Deemer, 2003).Educational psychologists have argued that one may want to focus on solving certain specificproblems in a particular type of classroom so that teaching is less emphasized compared to aproductive learning
Conference Session
Leadership and Strategic Planning
Collection
2010 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Monica Cardella, Purdue University; Robert Davis, Purdue University; Shripad Revankar, Purdue University; Loring Nies, Purdue University; Carolyn Percifield, Purdue University; Leah Jamieson, Purdue University
Tagged Divisions
Entrepreneurship & Engineering Innovation
against the uncertainty of these assumptions.Milestone PlanThe remainder of DDP consists of establishing milestones and a plan forhow to reach them.Each milestone tests one or more of the key assumptions. DDP is a learning approach to newventures or projects so there is a studied re-planning based on the knowledge gain/uncertainlyreduction at each milestone. Careful design of the milestone program will permit minimum risk Page 15.58.7to be taken prior to commencing with final implementation of the Blue Ocean opportunity.7. DiscussionOur process has been unique in two dimensions. These tools are traditionally applied in industrycontexts, not academic
Conference Session
Engaging Students
Collection
2010 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Nicole Berge, University of South Carolina; Joseph Flora, University of South Carolina
Tagged Divisions
Environmental Engineering
core knowledge did not differ between the instructionaltechniques, but students in the inquiry-based course demonstrated significant improvement in“innovative thinking abilities.” These observations were corroborated by Leon-Rovira et al.9; theauthors also found that student creativity was enhanced as a result of integration ofactive/inquiry-based techniques. Problem-based learning approaches have also been employedand resulted in positive student feedback.6 Some curricula are integrating entire courses(predominantly upper level design courses) based on such techniques. Quinn and Albano4 reporton a problem-based learning course (i.e., senior year project) in structural engineering in whichstudent feedback is positive. A problem-based capstone
Conference Session
Civil Engineering Division Poster Session
Collection
2010 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Yusuf Mehta, Rowan University
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
-members could discuss their effort as they presented theirsolutions to complex design and analysis problems. In this paper, the assessment tool utilized toassess these courses and the impact on student outcomes is presented.Assessment ToolBefore Fall 2004The assessment tool before Fall 2004 was primarily based on the following metrics: 1. Capstone senior design reports and presentations 2. Engineer-in-training exam 3. Senior exit interviewsThe main disadvantage was that the assessment was based on metrics that were obtained longafter the students had completed the courses.After Fall 2004The department developed a new rubric in summer of 2004 that would assess each courseaccording to the ABET outcomes so that the assessment could be
Conference Session
Culture, Society, and Co-op
Collection
2010 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Ralph Ocon, Purdue University Calumet; Opal McFarlane, Purdue University Calumet
Tagged Divisions
Cooperative & Experiential Education
. Page 15.1378.91. Leadership Roles: Faculty can discuss leadership during any discussion about thedifferent leadership roles students will assume in the corporate world while working onvarious engineering projects. When discussing the future leadership roles engineering andtechnology students will assume throughout their careers, faculty can help to makestudents aware of the importance of leadership and its effects on employees, the projectand the organization.2. Teamwork Assignments: When students are given group assignments that require themto work together, the instructor can use the opportunity to discuss teambuilding and otheraspects of leadership.3. Other opportunities for faculty to raise the issue of leadership in their courses
Conference Session
Past and Future of Manufacturing Education
Collection
2010 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
David Wells, North Dakota State University
Tagged Divisions
Manufacturing
AC 2010-34: CHALLENGES AND RESPONSES OVER A QUARTER-CENTURYOF MANUFACTURING EDUCATIONDavid Wells, North Dakota State University David L. Wells has been Professor of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering at North Dakota State University since January 2000. He teaches undergraduate and graduate courses in process engineering and production engineering systems design and in product innovation and entrepreneurialism. His instruction is characterized by heavy reliance upon project-based, design-centric learning. Course projects are drawn from real industrial applications with real industrial constraints, often interactive with a corporate sponsor. Students are challenged to design effective
Conference Session
The New ABET CE Criteria - Program Development
Collection
2010 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Fred Meyer, United States Military Academy; christopher conley, United States Military Academy; Scott Hamilton, United States Military Academy; Joseph Hanus, United States Military Academy; Steven Hart, United States Military Academy; James Ledlie Klosky, United States Military Academy
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
Page 15.115.1 Director in the Department of Civil and Mechanical Engineering at West Point where he teaches and supervises five senior level design courses. His current areas of emphasis are infrastructure analysis, protection, and resiliency, capstone course development, and integrated structural analysis and design. He is currently teaching a new course in Infrastructure Analysis and© American Society for Engineering Education, 2010 Protective Design and is supervising a faculty team developing another new course in Infrastructure Engineering.James Ledlie Klosky, United States Military Academy Led Klosky is an Associate Professor and acting Deputy Head in the Department of Civil and
Conference Session
Fulfilling the CE BOK2 - Case Studies
Collection
2010 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
George List, North Carolina State University
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
.”  These terms describe the relative degree to which a given course contributes to an outcome  based  upon  the  breadth  and  depth  of  relevant  subjects  covered  in  the  course.    The following guidelines are used in determining the ratings.∀ ≠  minor:  The topic  is  introduced  in  course  lectures,  laboratories,  homework  assignments,  Page 15.653.4 projects,  etc.   Lecture time  devoted to the topic  is  on the  order of  one  week  during  the 3  semester.  The topic is covered on tests and exams, but