- Conference Session
- Persistence and Retention II: Curricular Issues
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- 2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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George D. Ricco, Purdue University, West Lafayette; Matthew W. Ohland, Purdue University, West Lafayette
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Educational Research and Methods
, gender issues, existential phenomenology, and Lagomorph physiology.Matthew W. Ohland, Purdue University, West Lafayette Matthew W. Ohland is Associate Professor of Engineering Education at Purdue University. He has de- grees from Swarthmore College, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, and the University of Florida. His research on the longitudinal study of engineering students, team assignment, peer evaluation, and active and collaborative teaching methods has been supported by over $11.4 million from the National Science Foundation and the Sloan Foundation and his team received the William Elgin Wickenden Award for the Best Paper in the Journal of Engineering Education in 2008 and multiple conference Best Paper awards
- Conference Session
- They're Not "Soft" Skills!
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- 2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Susan M. Lord, University of San Diego; Candice Stefanou, Bucknell University; Michael J. Prince, Bucknell University; John Chen, California Polytechnic State University; Jonathan D. Stolk, Franklin W. Olin College of Engineering
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Educational Research and Methods
encourage student ownership is a criticalissue that continues to confront and challenge teachers from kindergarten through graduate school.Of the many factors that contribute to the student response in autonomous learning environments,perhaps the least explored are the contextual or environmental factors. In 2000, Paul R. Pintrichnoted that “there is a clear need for more descriptive, ethnographic, and observational research onhow different features of the context can shape, facilitate, and constrain self-regulated learning”.15More than a decade later, the need remains. Studies have shown that students’ positive perceptionsof their assigned tasks and instructors’ autonomy support can lead to increases in intrinsicmotivation, self-regulation
- Conference Session
- Research on Engineering Design Education
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- 2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Ann F. McKenna, Arizona State University, Polytechnic campus; Gül E. Okudan Kremer, Pennsylvania State University, University Park; Carolyn Plumb, Montana State University; Hyun Kyoung Ro, Penn State University; Alexander Yin, Pennsylvania State University, University Park
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Educational Research and Methods
course, and students satisfy thisrequirement in a variety of ways. A large proportion of students participate in real-world,industry-sponsored projects. Nearly all programs have a strong connection with industry at thecapstone level, leveraging their geographical location both to identify design projects and toinvolve people from industry as adjunct faculty in the classroom. In addition, there is interestamong some faculty and administrators in allowing student credit for activities such asundergraduate research or competitive design projects sponsored by student organizations.At the ASU Polytechnic campus, the Bachelor of Science in Engineering (B.S.E.) degreeprogram enrolled its first students in fall of 2005 and graduated the first cohort of
- Conference Session
- Digital Technologies and Learning
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- 2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Michael Hergenrader, University of Southern California, Information Sciences Institute; Joanna Drummond, University of Pittsburgh; Jihie Kim, University of Southern California
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Educational Research and Methods
. Kim received a Ph.D. from the USC, and a master’s and a bachelor’s degrees from the Seoul National University. Her current interests include pedagogical discourse analysis, human-computer interaction, social network assistance, and assessment of student collaborative online activities. She leads synergistic work among machine learning experts, educational psychologists, NLP researchers, and STEM instructors. She is the PI of five NSF projects including the CCLI/PedDiscourse, CCLI/PedWiki and NSDL/SocRecomm projects under the EHR Directorate and CreativeIT/PedGames and IIS/PedWorkflow projects under the CISE Directorate. Under the retired PedDiscourse effort, her team designed, deployed and evaluated software
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- They're Not "Soft" Skills!
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- 2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Eckehard Doerry, Northern Arizona University; James Dean Palmer, Northern Arizona University
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Educational Research and Methods
sequence is straightforward: to introduce the students tothe design process early in their college careers, and maintain a constant rate of increasingcomplexity throughout the four years of study. By graduation, the students are well versed in thedesign process, oral and verbal communication, and key teaming skills, and hence areimmediately able to contribute productively in their first professional employment.2.1 Evaluation of Team Members in Senior Capstone DesignAlthough peer evaluation is incorporated in every team-based design course within the program,we focus here on our experience with the final course in the D4P sequence for Computer Science,called Senior Capstone Design. In this course, teams of students work on real corporate
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- Special Session: Moving Towards the Intended, Explicit, and Authentic: Addressing Critical Misalignments in Engineering Learning within Secondary and University Education
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- 2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Kevin Anderson, University of Wisconsin, Madison; Sandra Shaw Courter, University of Wisconsin, Madison; Mitchell J. Nathan, University of Wisconsin, Madison; Amy C. Prevost, University of Wisconsin, Madison; Christine G. Nicometo, University of Wisconsin, Madison; Traci M. Nathans-Kelly, University of Wisconsin, Madison; Thomas Dean McGlamery, University of Wisconsin, Madison; Amy K. Atwood, University of Wisconsin, Madison
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Educational Research and Methods, K-12 & Pre-College Engineering, Liberal Education/Engineering & Society
US Dept. of Education, including the AWAKEN Project (funded by NSF-EEP), which examines learning, instruction, teacher beliefs and engineering practices in order to foster a more diverse and more able pool of engineering students and practitioners, and the Tangibility for the Teaching, Learning, and Communicating of Mathematics Project (NSF-REESE), which explores the role of materiality and action in representing mathematical concepts in engineering and geometry. Dr. Nathan is on the editorial board for several journals, including The Journal of Pre-College Engineering Education Research (J-Peer).Amy C. Prevost, UW-Madison Ms. Prevost is a doctoral student in Education Leadership and Policy Analysis at the