17.31.2 1 In order to cope with the changing composition of student population on the onehand and a spectacular development in knowledge field on the other, exposure tofaculty development training programs was found inevitable. Indian Society forTechnical Education (ISTE) has been in the field of imparting faculty developmentprogram particularly for the engineering faculty in the country since 1968. Unity ofengineering concepts, increasing international cooperation in engineering activities,frequent activities of an engineer outside his national or cultural domain and often asmembers of an international engineering team are compelling us to venture
. Table 1 were encouraged to establish course websites and tosummarizes the main contents of the course and record formal minutes for each team meeting.practical activities that help students to understand the Examples are shown in Figure 1 and 2.course. Course materials were prepared before thebeginning of the semester. Table 2 shows the gradingpolicy used in the course. Table 2 Grading policy Item Weight(%) Note Attendance 5 IndividualTable 1 Course content and assignments Activities
GC 2012-5638: INTRODUCTORY TEACHING PLAN OF ELEMENTARYENGINEERING DESIGN FOR FRESHMEN MAJORING IN CIVIL ANDENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERINGJi-Ho Park Page 17.33.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2012Introductory Teaching Plan of Elementary Engineering Design for Freshmen Majoring inCivil and Environmental EngineeringJi-Ho Park1) and Young-Uk Kim2)1) Post Doctoral Research Fellow, Department of Civil and EnvironmentalEngineering, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, USA 168012) Professor, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Myongji University,Yongin, Korea 449-728ABSTRACTThe course development of introductory engineering
GC 2012-5659: ISTE ACTIVITIES FOR PROMOTING INTERNATIONALCOLLABORATION IN ENGINEERING EDUCATIONDr. R. Murugesan Page 17.34.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2012 ISTE Activities forPromoting International Collaboration inEngineering Education Dr. R. Murugesan President, Indian Society for Technical Education, New Delhi Vice Chancellor, Anna University of Technology, Madurai, TamilNadu 1 Page 17.34.2 OVERVIEW INTRODUCTION ABOUT ISTE STUDENT DEVELOPMENT
Page 17.35.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2012 JSEE Roles to AEESEAP Masahiro TAKEIProfessor, Graduate School of Chiba University, Division of Artificial System ScienceDirector of International Affairs of Japanese Society of Engineering Education (JSEE)Email: masa@chiba-u.jpTel & Fax: +81-(0)43-290-3212Address: 1-33 Yayoi Inage Chiba #263-8522 JapanAbstractJapanese government launched a project to promote 300, 000 international students byyear 2020 and 450,000 international students by the year 2025. This programawakened and further encourages Japanese universities to develop and enhance bettertheir offered curricula for their
pool of educated, English-speaking talent, the ITindustry has grown from its infancy in the mid-1980s into a US$ 76 billion powerhousethat comprises 6.4% of India‟s GDP. The IT and BPO industry is growth is largely drivenby the supply of the talented manpower However the opportunities available and thesuccess of the Indian IT industry is also posing talent challenges that the industry isfinding difficult to manage. The search for talent is pushing employers to look beyondIndia‟s so-called Tier 1 cities and colleges – and is revealing critical skills gaps in thattalent. According to NASSCOM (The National Association of Software and ServiceCompanies (NASSCOM) is the premier trade association for the IT-BPO industry inIndia, which represents more
, Chungnam National University Professor, Department of Technology Education, Chungnam National University, Daejeon, Korea 305- 764 Page 17.47.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2012The Development and Application of Creative Engineering and Technology EducationPrograms -focusing on Education Center for Creative Future Engineers in ChungnamNational University-Young-Min Kim1), Chang-Hoon Lee 2), Myoung-Hee Oh3), Ki-Soo Kim4)1) Researcher, Education Center for Creative Future Engineers, Chungnam NationalUniversity, Daejeon, Korea 305-7642) Professor, Department of Mechanical and Metallurgical
Page 17.48.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2012The Development and Effect Analysis of Creative Design Educational Program Basedon Integrative STEAM Education through AutomataChang-Hoon Lee1), Young-Min Kim2) and Won-Seok Seo3)1) Professor, Department of Mechanical and Metallurgical Engineering Education,Chungnam National University, Daejeon, Korea 305-7642) Graduate student, Department of Engineering Technology Education, ChungnamNational University, Daejeon, Korea 305-7643) Undergraduate student, Department of Mechanical and Metallurgical EngineeringEducation, Chungnam National University, Daejeon, Korea 305-764ABSTRACTThe purpose of this study was to develop and verify the effect of creative
class at least.4. The Perception of Engineering Faculty to the teaching evaluation Recently the department chairs and deans begin to think the necessity of the qualitative evaluation like portfolio evaluation and peer’s reviews. Especially they considered the course portfolio as an appropriate method of faculty assessment. When we looked at the data from Korean engineering faculty (Cho, et al, 2009), only 28.5% out of 221 respondents were satisfied with current faculty evaluation system (table 1). 69.1% out of 223 respondents agreed that it was necessary for the faculty evaluation system should change (table 2). 76.5% of 217 agreed to increase the ratio of teaching in evaluating faculty performance. 92.7% of 218 respondents agreed to use
to predictions. Indian students significantlyexceeded U.S. students in reading textbooks and reading other printed materials, consistent withpredictions. The two groups did not differ in time writing papers and working on projects. (SeeTable 1.) Given that U.S. students spend about 15 hours per week in lecture and Indian studentsspend about 23 hours in lecture, U.S. students were closer to following the Golden Rule thanIndian students, but neither group appeared to be following the rule.Table 1. Mean Times for Academic Activities for U.S. (N = 410) and Indian (N = 313)Engineering Students On average, each day I spend an U.S.a Indian p-valueb average of ___ minutes Doing homework 122.48
National Science Council (Taiwan) to serve as committee member of research project principal reviewer in Discipline of Applied Science Education. Professor Jou has authored 1 technical book in design, and over 50 research papers in diverse areas of education, e-learning technology, information technology, and automation. In addition to, he served as reviewer of numerous SSCI and SCI indexed journals for many years. Dr.Jou is an editorial board member of the International Journal of Electronic Democracy (Inder- science Publishers), International Journal on New Trends in Education and Their Implications, and The Turkish Online Journal of Educational Technology (SSCI). Dr. Jou teaches multidisciplinary courses in