and regenerated back into the community.Research ApproachThis research rests on theories of hands‐on learning, integrated learning, and continuationlearning. It hypothesizes that when an idea or concept is revisited in different contexts andenvironments, i.e. through kinesic, multidisciplinary, or repeated experiences, the learner will Page 22.1624.2have better understanding of the concept and its applications. Materials science is inherently aninterdisciplinary field in which knowledge of chemistry, physics, mathematical modeling, andengineering are often combined in use. In fact, practitioners in the materials science world oftenrefer to a
-course”and still teach the material like they did twenty years ago1,2. While still other programs haveattempted to embraced a more systems oriented approach in an attempt to provide what theybelieve to be the up-to-date skill sets needed by their graduates. However, now along comesanother new technology paradigm that threatens to stretch the ET/EET curriculum even furtherfrom its early, legacy, component centric, beginnings. This newest challenge has arisen recently,due in large part, to the upsurge of what is now being termed “convergence science” and itsattendant, collateral effect on technology. What is this new challenge? It is the ability to educateET/EET technicians in a manner that will allow them to deal effectively with emerging
, design, and distributed control. The built-in library of LabVIEW has a number of VIs that canbe used to design and develop any system. LabVIEW can be used to address the needs of various coursesin a technology and science curriculum 6, 7, 8, 9.LabVIEW Application AreasLabVIEW is extremely flexible and some of the application areas of LabVIEW are Simulation, DataAcquisition, and Data Processing. The Data Processing library includes signal generation, digital signalprocessing (DSP), measurement, filters, windows, curve fitting, probability and statistics, linear algebra,numerical methods, instrument control, program development, control systems, and fuzzy logic. Thesefeatures of LabVIEW will help provide an interdisciplinary, integrated teaching
. Page 22.1712.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2011 Working Towards the Student Scrum - Developing Agile Android ApplicationsAbstractStudent project teams are an integral part of the software engineering curriculum. This paperreports on the classroom experiences of student teams developing Android applications usingScrum. The course in study is a software engineering undergraduate elective in Agile SoftwareDevelopment which used Android mobile phones donated by Google as the developmentenvironment for student teams to learn and practice Scrum. Scrum is an agile projectmanagement framework increasingly being adopted in the development of commercial
the more established manufacturing industries. Alternative energy and biomedicalmanufacturing were both recognized as very high demand areas. Other areas of recognizedneed were all listed and could be used as a crude ranking of priority nationally, but it does notconsider regional variations. There were a few mismatches between academic and manufacturingpriorities, most notably in automotive and electronics manufacturing. Recommendation: Alternative energy and biomedical manufacturing should be very high priorities. Recommendation: Academics should consider curriculum modifications for automotive and electronics manufacturing.4. Curriculum PrioritiesA complimentary question was asked from an academic perspective
. Prior to his current position, he served as the CTO and acting CEO of IP SerVoniX, where he consulted for telecommunication firms and venture firms. He has also served as the CTO of Telsima (formerly known as Kinera), where he carried out extensive business development with telecommunications and wireless carriers, both in the US and in India. Before joining Kinera, he was the CTO at Comverse in Wakefield, Massachusetts. Prior to joining Telcordia, he was an associate professor at Clarkson and Wayne State Universities, where he developed the communications curriculum and conducted research in computer networking and source coding algorithms. Dr. Mohan authored/co-authored over 95 publications in the form of books
and the programs areprovided with a new mode of completing the education outcomes which results in studentsworking on high level research projects.References 1. Lew, V.M. and Mirman,C.R.: Integrating Technology into the Mechanical Engineering Curriculum. Proceedings of the 1996 ASEE International conference on Engineering Education and Practice, Washington, DC, 6/96. 2. Otieno, A. and Mirman, C,: An Engineering Technology Capstone Experience - An Industry Based Partnership. Proceedings of the 2003 Conference for Industry and Education Collaboration, Tucson, Arizona, 1/03. 3. Jones, T., Lambert, A., Et al.: Organizational Leadership and Effective Team Problem Solving Strategies in
technology in the classroom. She is a co-PI on two NSF grants in the areas of integration of computation in engineering curricula and in developing comprehensive strategies to retain early engineering students. She is active nationally and internationally in engineering accreditation and is a Fellow of ABET.Robert Y. Ofoli, Michigan State University ROBERT Y. OFOLI is an associate professor in the Department of Chemical Engineering and Materi- als Science at Michigan State University. He has had a long interest in teaching innovations, and has used a variety of active learning protocols in his courses. His research interests include biosensors for biomedical applications, optical and electrochemical characterization of
Advisor for ASHRAE, as manager of a series of continuingeducation classes on energy in buildings, and as an instructor of an undergraduate HVAC course.Combining this experience with literature research and several personal interviews with industrypersonnel a list of educational needs for future HVAC engineers will be created. This will thenbe discussed with regard to what is achievable in the engineering curriculum and what otheroptions for attainment (workshops, continuing education, on the job experience, etc.) arepossible. The combination of options that are being pursued by Minnesota State University,Mankato will then be described.II. Putting it into PerspectiveWhile fuel efficiency in automobiles is often in the news, it has only been
, coupled with therecent State budget crisis has forced many community colleges to cancel low-enrollment classesand high-cost programs including those in engineering.In response to this situation, Cañada College, a federally designated Hispanic-serving institutionin the San Francisco Bay Area, has developed an innovative program entitled Online andNetworked Education for Students in Transfer Engineering Programs (ONE-STEP). Funded bythe National Science Foundation Engineering Education and Centers through the Innovation inEngineering Education and Curriculum, and Infrastructure (IEECI) program, ONE-STEP aims toimprove community college engineering education through the use of Tablet-PC and wirelessnetwork technologies. The program includes a Summer
industry or enrollin graduate programs and are confronted with the challenge of developing electronic medicaldevice prototypes. These prototypes requires the integration of very diverse technical skillsincluding analog and digital electronics, microcontroller hardware and software,telecommunications, power electronics and signal processing. The course investmenttraditionally used to foster and hone these skills is not practical in a four-year BME program. Inorder to accommodate the broad nature of the BME curriculum, and still equip BME studentswith the skills they will need in electronic medical device prototyping, our program implementsa problem-oriented, top town approach to teaching medical electronics. Two senior level, co-requisite courses
AC 2011-2614: UNPACKING THE INTERDISCIPLINARY MIND: IMPLI-CATIONS FOR TEACHING AND LEARNINGWendy C. Newstetter, Georgia Institute of Technology Wendy C. Newstetter is the Director of Learning Sciences Research in the Wallace H. Coulter Department of Biomedical Engineering at Georgia Tech.Her research focuses on understanding learning in interdisci- plines towards designing educational environments that develop integrative problem solving. Page 22.1583.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2011 Unpacking the interdisciplinary mind: Implications for teaching
the approach taken and experiences in teaching a junior level surfacemodeling course at ET-WWU designed to expose CAD/CAM technologists to this importantCAD domain. It will start by motivating the value of surface modeling in developing key skills Page 22.1403.2that have been identified as essential to the education of a CAD/CAM specialist. This will befollowed by an overview of the CAD/CAM curriculum taught highlighting the role that thesurface modeling class plays in supporting other junior and senior level core requirements.Details of the course will then be given. Here some attention will be given to techniques thatstudents are introduced
engineering problems. By integratingsimulations across several sequential required courses in the mechanical engineering curriculum,we plan to increase students’ ability to use FEA-based simulations effectively and improve theirunderstanding of the concepts developed in these courses. Cognitive research has shown that people’s understanding lies in a spectrum from“novice” to “expert” 3. Conventional learning materials tend to relegate beginners to “novicethinking” by presenting simulation exercises as recipes handed down by authorities. Wieman’sgroup has shown that interactive simulations, when designed using a rigorous scientificapproach, are much more effective in helping physics students develop an expert cognitivestructure than lectures
, aerospace, defense, pharmaceuticals,healthcare and consulting with an emphasis on industrial distribution and business to businesschannels.There is greater demand for students to enter the major than the major can currentlyaccommodate. One of the reasons that this is the case is the extent to which the program hasbeen able to integrate ideas of engaged scholarship into the curriculum by considering multiplestakeholders of the program.The depicted diagram in Figure 1. shows the relationship between the various services performedin the program as a cycle of engagement. The whole point is emphasizing how the variouscomponents of teaching and research are mutually reinforcing and enhance both the educationalexperience offered to students, and the skill
. Page 22.1611.2Cloutier and Richards2 communicated that measuring customer satisfaction at an educationalestablishment might be regarded as one of the greatest challenges. Therefore, it is vital tomaintain a curriculum that is both rigorous and relevant. In the field of EngineeringManagement, as well as many other STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, andMathematics) disciplines, discussions about the need for Six Sigma training, projects, andcertification have reached a fevered pitch. While recognizing that educational institutions havean obligation to prepare our students for the workforce, we realize we cannot respond to everyrequest presented by our students or the organizations that hire them. In the case of Six Sigma, aresponse was
, technological literacy has not been a significant focus ofinstruction and assessment in K-12 curriculum or in higher education outside of engineering.Some technological topics are being integrated in other areas such humanities, social sciences,and mathematics instruction but primarily for supporting of instruction within these areas. As defined in the broadly recognized report of the National Academies2, technological Page 22.524.2literacy encompasses three interdependent dimensions – knowledge, ways of thinking and acting
design operate as expected.7For these reasons, the UOL is considered to be a crucial and integral part of the chemicalengineering education. While its major goal is to provide students a suitable platform to integratetheory and practice, the course also allows an opportunity for designing experiments, developingprojects and promoting teamwork. Previous studies focusing on the importance of UOL inchemical engineering curriculum generally address skills attained 8, 9 or discuss the benefits ordrawbacks of virtual laboratory compared to hands-on laboratory experiments. 10-12 In this study, Page 22.960.3we describe the course design in which skills
, University Park Michael Alley is an associate professor of engineering communication at Pennsylvania State University. He works in the Leonhard Center for the Enhancement of Engineering Education and is the author of The Craft of Scientific Writing (Springer, 1996).April A Kedrowicz, University of Utah April A. Kedrowicz is the Director of the CLEAR Program at the University of Utah, an interdisciplinary collaboration between Humanities and Engineering. This college-wide program integrates communi- cation and teamwork instruction into the core, undergraduate engineering curriculum. Dr. Kedrowicz received her Ph.D. in Communication from the University of Utah and is the founding director of this innovative program
the basic elements in a dynamic system. Stock can beconsidered as a container, and then flow is the flux of water coming into or leaving it. A pressingcurrent issue in US is the national debt (stock), which will keep increasing if the annual deficit(flow) is not properly addressed. The mathematical relationship between these two quantities isstraightforward: Stock is equal to the time integral of flow, and flow is equal to the derivative ofstock. On the other hand, this analysis can also help students to better understand these conceptsin calculus.Second, positive and negative feedback will happen in a system that is connected into a loop,which is ubiquitous in almost all the complicated systems. An example of negative feedback isthe
Partnership Program and an Instructor in the Department of Mechanical Engi- neering at the University of Colorado Boulder. She received BS and MS degrees in Mechanical Engineer- ing from The Ohio State University and a PhD in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Colorado Boulder. Dr. Kotys-Schwartz has focused her research in engineering epistemology, engineering student learning, retention and diversity. She is currently investigating the use of Oral Discourse Method for con- ceptual development in engineering, the impact of a four-year hands-on design curriculum in engineering, the effects of service learning in engineering education, and informal learning in engineering.Derek T Reamon, University of Colorado
engineering education community. He co-created the Integrated, First-Year Curriculum in Science, Engineering and Mathematics at Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology, which was recognized in 1997 with a Hesburgh Award Certificate of Excellence. He has authored or co-authored over 70 papers on engineering education in areas ranging from curricular change to faculty development. He is currently an ABET Program Evaluator and a Senior Associate Editor for the Journal on Engineering Education.Natela Ostrovskaya, Texas A&M University Dr. Ostrovskaya is a senior lecturer in the Department of Nuclear Engineering, Texas A&M University.Tatiana Erukhimova, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Texas A&M University Tatiana
Art2STEM project plan integrates several keyconcepts or components as foundational to its success. These include the following:3.1. An Emphasis on Creative Arts: Art2STEM endeavors to tap into girls’ talents and interestsin the creative arts and illuminate how their creativity can be applied in the context of STEMcareers. The project acknowledges that girls have considerably more exposure to and oftenarticulate future careers in the arts and entertainment. Yet the activities are designed to take themon a transformational journey to experience and visualize new career options.3.2. Intentional After-School and Summer Camp Activities: Art2STEM promotes learning ininformal environments and provides real-world inquiry- and problem-based learning
assess the both general and specificoutcomes of the laboratory experience.IntroductionMeasurement and instrumentation courses are typically the ‘catch-all’ course for topics inexperimental design and execution in mechanical engineering curriculum. Course objectivesinclude the introduction of modern data acquisition systems and techniques, the development andpresentation of statistical techniques for data analysis, and the introduction of formal uncertaintyanalysis. These three course topics are employed in nearly every rigorous engineering experimentthat a student would perform in either an industrial setting or during advanced graduate research.However, most laboratory experiments are ‘canned’ and handed to the student with a detailedprocedure
courses. The modules, which include learningobjectives, instructional videos, interactive quizzes with feedback, and sample grading rubrics,can assist faculty in clarifying their communication expectations and, in turn, emphasize tostudents the importance of skills transfer between communication and engineering contentcourses by providing a consistent message across the curriculum. Our paper, therefore, willdemonstrate our modules and share assessment strategies with a broader audience of engineeringfaculty who may face similar challenges, both with integrating communication skills intoengineering courses and with developing consistent expectations for student work. We believeour online modules offer teaching materials and direct assessment tools
difficult time to follow algorithms and programming sequences. Infact, some studies show that while students can often learn the syntax of individualcommands in any programming language quickly, the skill of combining commands intoa program and integrating them with a hardware device is harder to learn.2In order to better prepare freshmen students and introduce them to available lab resourcesand general engineering and computer science curriculum, the Department ofEngineering Science at Sonoma State University has been requiring students to take anintroductory course to engineering. Introduction to Engineering (ES110) is a two-credithour core engineering course with one hour lecture and 2 ½ hours of lab per week.Majority of students enrolled in
January 2004 under the supervision of Dr. Reginald Perry. Upon completion of his PhD, Dr. Soares was immediately hired as an assistant professor (Tenure Track) in the Electronic Engineering Technology department at FAMU. Dr. Soares has made many contributions to the department, from curriculum improvements, to ABET accreditation, and more recently by securing a grant with the department of education for more than half a million dollars. Page 22.1054.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2011 DSP Based Jitter Measuring MethodIntroductionIn the past decade
as an elective, reaching arelatively small audience. Recently, authors increasingly argue that teaching an entrepreneurialmindset requires an integrated approach.2,3,4Kettering University has adopted this approach by trying to incorporate entrepreneurial ideasdirectly into existing classes. This can be difficult to accomplish for several reasons. First,engineering professors find it difficult to make room in the course syllabus for an entrepreneurial Page 22.845.2education. Further, many faculty have not been exposed to the “entrepreneurial mindset” andthus do not feel prepared to broach the subject in class. Kettering University has
AC 2011-1145: COLLABORATING TO PREPARE STUDENTS FOR THEGLOBAL WORKPLACEIsabel Simes de Carvalho, ISEL, Lisbon, Portugal Isabel S. Carvalho received a Licenciatura in Chemical Engineering from the Technical University of Lis- bon. She received her M.S. and PhD degrees in Mechanical Engineering from the Technical University of Lisbon in 1990 and 1996, respectively. Following a year in the aeronautics industry in France (aero engine manufacturer) she is, since 1999, an Associate Professor at the Military Institute and also lectures at the Mechanical Engineering Department at ISEL. Research interests include energy production and efficiency and active and collaborative and blended (online) teaching and learning in
students in exploring and understanding engineering content in K- 12 education through professional development activities, and • Serve as a national model for other undergraduate institutions in integrating engineering content in K-12 education.This initiative to integrate engineering content in the middle school curriculum and train teachersregarding engineering concepts has been extremely successful as evidenced by participantfeedback [4-5].Clinic Modules: Four engineering clinics are included in the workshop. These clinicsrepresented the four engineering disciplines at Rowan University namely Chemical, Civil andEnvironmental, Mechanical and Electrical and Computer Engineering. The Bridge moduleallows participants construct