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Conference Session
K-12 and Pre-College Engineering Poster Session
Collection
2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Greg Murray, Pittsburg State University; Randy Winzer, Pittsburg State University
Tagged Divisions
K-12 & Pre-College Engineering
associate professor in the Electronics Engineering Technology program at Pittsburg State University in Pittsburg, KS; he served as the program coordinator from 2002 until 2007. He holds both BS and MS degrees in Engineering Technology and has several years of experience supporting various information technology infrastructure projects; primarily those in support of educational content delivery and K-12 education. The past nine summers Professor Winzer has conducted a STEM outreach effort titled ’Adventures in Robotics’ which has had over 500 participants. Page 22.1647.1 c American Society
Conference Session
Experiential Learning Programs and the Transition to Industry
Collection
2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Hoda Baytiyeh, American University, Beirut; Mohamad K. Naja, The Lebanese University
Tagged Divisions
College Industry Partnerships
’ demographics and information related to their process of locating a job.Participants were requested to use a 5-point Likert scale to rate five factors that may have helped Page 22.317.3them in the transition process such as an internship, final project, or career centers. Participantswere also asked to rate 10 factors on a 5-point Likert scale reflecting the challenges they mayhave faced when they started their career.Five open-ended questions were included at the end of the survey asking participants to share theparticular aspects that would have facilitated a smoother transition process. For example, theywere asked to describe if their summer school
Conference Session
NSF Grantees Poster Session
Collection
2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Milo Koretsky, Oregon State University; David L. Silverstein, University of Kentucky; Ronald L. Miller, Colorado School of Mines; John L. Falconer P.E., University of Colorado, Boulder
Tagged Topics
NSF Grantees
., University of Colorado, Boulder Page 22.336.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2011 Collaborative Research: Integration of Conceptual Learning throughout the Core Chemical Engineering CurriculumOverview and ObjectivesWe will report on the progress of the first 9 months of a recently funded CCLI project. The goalof this project is to create a community of learning within the discipline of chemical engineering(ChE) focused on concept-based instruction. The project plan is to develop and promote the useof a cyber-enabled infrastructure for conceptual questions, the AIChE
Conference Session
NSF Grantees Poster Session
Collection
2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Ashley Ater Kranov, Washington State University; Mo Zhang, Washington State University; Steven W. Beyerlein, University of Idaho, Moscow; Jay McCormack, University of Idaho; Patrick D. Pedrow, Washington State University; Edwin R. Schmeckpeper, Norwich University
Tagged Topics
NSF Grantees
College of Engineering and Architecture, ”A Direct Method for Teaching and Assessing the ABET Professional Skills in Engineering Programs”, won the 2008 ASEE Best Confer- ence Paper Award. She has served as evaluator on a number of multi-institutional, interdisciplinary NSF sponsored grants. She is principal investigator on a NSF Research and Evaluation on Education in Science and Engineering project called ”A Direct Method for Teaching and Measuring Engineering Professional Skills: A Validity Study.”Mo Zhang, Washington State University Mo Zhang is a doctoral student major in educational psychology at Washington State University. Her research interests include applied statistics, educational measurement, design of
Conference Session
Electrical and Computer Engineering Laboratories
Collection
2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Seunghyun Chun, University of Texas, Austin, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering; Bruce McCann, University of Texas, Austin; Ariane L. Beck, University of Texas, Austin; Eric Dean, National Instruments; Alexis Kwasinski, University of Texas at Austin
Tagged Divisions
Division Experimentation & Lab-Oriented Studies
of Texas at Austin in 1975. He then joined Schlumberger where he held R&D and manufacturing management positions in the U.S. and France. Dr. McCann was President of two global business units within Schlumberger and retired in 1999. Since that time, he has served as an Adjunct Professor in the ECE Department at The University of Texas at Austin where he teaches circuit analysis, design, engineering economics and project management.Ariane L Beck, The University of Texas at Austin Dr. Ariane L. Beck is the Assistant Chairman of the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineer- ing at The University of Texas at Austin. She received B.S., M.S., and Ph.D. degrees in Electrical and Computer Engineering from The
Conference Session
NSF Grantees Poster Session
Collection
2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Kathleen Meehan, Virginia Tech; Robert W. Hendricks, Virginia Tech; Cortney V. Martin, Virginia Tech; Peter Doolittle, Virginia Tech; Justeen Olinger, Virginia Tech
Tagged Topics
NSF Grantees
Department.Cortney V. Martin, Virginia TechPeter Doolittle, Virginia Tech Director for the Center for Instructional Development and Educational Research, and Associate Professor of Educational Psychology at Virginia Tech.Justeen Olinger, Virginia Tech Student Assistant with the NSF-CCLI Grant at Virginia Tech. Page 22.994.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2011 Lab-in-a-Box: Online Instruction and Multimedia Materials to Support Independent Experimentation on Concepts from CircuitsIntroductionA project known as Lab-in-a-Box (LiaB) was developed in 2004 as one of the
Conference Session
Ethical Perspectives on the Grand Challenges of Engineering
Collection
2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Donna M Riley, Smith College
Tagged Divisions
Liberal Education/Engineering & Society
of engineering.For those interested in engineering ethics and the delivery of engineering ethics curricula, theGrand Challenges offer a rich field of proposals. While ethical questions associated with many ofthe topics have been addressed elsewhere,10-15 the descriptions of the Challenges mostly do notinclude ethical analysis.This paper, along with others in this session, takes the risk of asking some hard questions of theGrand Challenges. Underlying the Grand Challenges project is a presumption that, having beenselected, the fourteen Challenges are not only important undertakings, but also that they shouldgo forward. But are they necessarily morally imperative? Are they necessarily for the greatergood? Ought they be undertaken at all? Such
Conference Session
Tricks of the Trade in Teaching I
Collection
2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Stephan A. Durham, University of Colorado, Denver; Wesley Marshall, University of Colorado, Denver
Tagged Divisions
New Engineering Educators
ideas for class activities, projects, and other methods ofengaging students.Teaching is a skill that few faculty excel at upon becoming an Assistant Professor. Becauseengineering educators are hired as teachers does not mean they instantaneously become effectiveteachers. Some people are “born teachers” and know how to teach by intuition (4). Though itmay be a slow process, others must learn how to teach effectively. Some faculty consistentlywork to improve their teaching by finding better ways of engaging students in their classes whileothers spend their careers teaching unproductively. One growing set of resources are theteaching workshops, videotaped lectures, and teaching consultants that many universities nowoffer. However, these programs
Conference Session
NSF Grantees Poster Session
Collection
2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Tom Weller, University of South Florida; Jeff Frolik, University of Vermont; Paul G. Flikkema, Northern Arizona University; Wayne A. Shiroma, University of Hawaii at Manoa; Carol Haden, Magnolia Consulting, LLC; Rhonda R. Franklin, Univeristy of Minnesota
Tagged Topics
NSF Grantees
; received the B.S. degree from the University of Hawaii, the M.Eng. from Cornell University, and the Ph.D. from the University of Colorado at Boulder.Carol Haden, Magnolia Consulting, LLC Carol Haden is a Senior Consultant for Magnolia Consulting, LLC, a small woman-owned research and evaluation company based out of Charlottesville, Virgina. For the past eight years, she has specialized in the evaluation of informal and formal STEM education programs. Dr. Haden has evaluated projects sponsored by the National Science Foundation, NASA, the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, the Arizona Board of Regents, and the Arizona Department of Education.Rhonda R. Franklin, Univeristy of Minnesota Rhonda R. Franklin is an
Conference Session
NSF Grantees Poster Session
Collection
2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Stella A Quinones, University of Texas, El Paso; Benjamin C. Flores, University of Texas, El Paso; B. Lush, University of Texas, El Paso; Gabriel Della-Piana, Evaluation Consultant ; Denise Carrejo, Ph.D., University of Texas, El Paso Center for Institutional Evaluation, Research, and Planning
Tagged Topics
NSF Grantees
El Paso (UTEP) in 1990 after receiving his Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering from Arizona State University. He is Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering and Acting Dean of the Graduate School. He has held several administrative positions including Associate Dean for Graduate Studies for the College of Engineering, Chair of the Electrical and Computer Engineering Department, and Interim Chair of the Computer Science Depart- ment. Dr. Flores is an expert in retention strategies for non-traditional undergraduate and graduate students in the STEM disciplines. From 1999 to 2007 he was the Project Director of the NSF supported Model Insti- tutions for Excellence Initiative. Currently he is Director of two
Conference Session
ETD Design II: Mechanical Engineering Technology
Collection
2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Roelof Harm deVries, University of Pittsburgh, Johnstown
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Technology
increase in the amount of time the students are using CADD. Some goals of thecourse cannot be mapped into the CADD environment. These include competency withlettering, geometric constructions, use of drawing instruments, and descriptive geometry. Othergoals can be met either on the board or on CADD. Examples include proper techniques formaking a drawing, practicing orthographic projections, sections, and auxiliary views. In thereconfigured course, these are taught almost exclusively on CADD. A third group of goals canbe met only on CADD, including competency in basic modeling commands, and exposure torelatively new software models used in industry, such as Frame Generator.The effectiveness of the reconfigured course will be assessed in several
Conference Session
Student Entrepreneurial Skills and Mindset I
Collection
2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Kenneth Reid, Ohio Northern University; Daniel Michael Ferguson, Purdue University, West Lafayette
Tagged Divisions
Entrepreneurship & Engineering Innovation
entrepreneurial skills.Mindset of student engineers are benchmarked at the beginning of the freshman year and thenagain at the end of the freshman year, soon after completion of a team based poverty alleviationfreshman capstone project. Two pre and post control samples of freshman engineer mindsets arebeing collected from similar sized engineering programs at comparable colleges in ourgeographic vicinity. Initial beginning-of-year testing results indicate a statistically significant tilttoward a fixed mindset in freshman engineering students compared to a growth mindset observedin an opportunity sample of freshman business students. We are tracking engineering studentsboth at the group and at the individual level, by major and by other statistically
Conference Session
Faculty Tools
Collection
2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Walter W. Schilling, Milwaukee School of Engineering
Tagged Divisions
Computers in Education
availability, this is certain to change. This is not, however, withoutrisk, both at an institutional and individual level.This article addresses four aspects of cloud computing. First, it provides an overview of theservices. Two major types of systems will be profiled, including file synchronization systems(DropBox, Ubuntu-One, etc.) and project management systems (GForge). The article will thenaddress the impact upon an individual campus infrastructure. Beyond an IT aspect, the articlewill address the legal issues of using such a system, including the potential FERPA and DMCAramifications to the institution and the faculty member. Lastly, a set of recommendations will beprovided to faculty members who are interested in using cloud functionality in
Conference Session
Communication: From Pecha Kucha to Bullets
Collection
2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Isabel Simões de Carvalho P.E., ISEL, Lisbon, Portugal; Christy Moore, University of Texas, Austin
Tagged Divisions
Liberal Education/Engineering & Society
the course development along the last years and on theexercises and the short and long term assignments as well as on the several engagementtechniques is provided elsewhere (Carvalho, 2006; 2007; 2009; 2010).Although the course curriculum is wide and fairly standard, the main goal of the EnergyProduction and Management course is to confront students with the advantages anddisadvantages related with the usage of different technologies and fuels for energyproduction. To raise awareness and promote understanding the links between Energy andEnvironment and Policy and Economy and to become acquainted with the ongoingresearch in this field (Technology Platforms and International Projects) at National,European and World wide levels. The energy
Conference Session
Curricular Developments in Energy Education I
Collection
2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Hayrettin B. Karayaka, Texas A&M University, Corpus Christi; Mehrube Mehrubeoglu, Texas A&M University, Corpus Christi; Faruk Yildiz, Sam Houston State University; Korinne Caruso, Texas A&M University, Corpus Christi
Tagged Divisions
Energy Conversion and Conservation
AC 2011-530: A NUCLEAR POWER INDUSTRY CAREER DEVELOP-MENT WORKSHOP FOR HIGH SCHOOL TEACHERS IN A HISPANICSERVING INSTITUTIONHayrettin B Karayaka, Texas A&M University, Corpus Christi Bora Karayaka is a Mechanical Engineering and Engineering Technology faculty, and the power and en- ergy leader in the program. With his over ten years of industry experience, he has extensive experience in project management, and a clear understanding of deadlines, industry requirements, safety and reliability issues, and other aspects in the power and energy fields. He is responsible for teaching the energy and power courses in the department. Dr. Karayaka’s research interests include power generation and renewable energies. He
Conference Session
ABET and Curriculum-Level Assessments
Collection
2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Karyn L. Biasca, University of Wisconsin, Stevens Point; Steve Hill, University of Wisconsin, Stevens Point
Tagged Divisions
Chemical Engineering
their internships and a video of the students describing their workexperiences.The utility of electronic portfolios to enhance and document student learning is widelydocumented, primarily in the context of teacher education. Rutkowski3 described an electronicportfolio system developed at the University of Minnesota that allows students to collectexamples of their work as electronic files (artifacts), and allows sharing these items with a targetaudience by creating folders containing the desired items and assigning appropriate accesspermissions.Students in this project used the ePortfolio software product from Desire2Learn® to create theirportfolios. There were two primary reasons for using this software
Conference Session
Architechtural Engineering Eduction: Emergent Topics
Collection
2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
David Jan Cowan, Indiana University Purdue University, Indianapolis; Craig Greene, College of the North Atlantic; Modibo Boubacar Traore, Purdue University, School of Engineering and Technology; Wanda L. Worley, Indiana University Purdue University, Indianapolis; Tarawut Boonlua, Mahasarakham University
Tagged Divisions
Architectural
to Asianculture and spiritual beliefs. It highlights the notion that we, as architectural educators, could domore to set the stage for our daily interchanges with our students.As noted above, this paper intends to move beyond the wealth of architecture that these studentswere exposed to and delve into the uniqueness of the educational experience both from studentand practitioner viewpoints. This paper covers a broad expanse of pedagogy and brings to thediscussion an examination of immersive, experiential education that is project-based. It also tapsinto service learning and the manner in which the American students and faculty gained Page
Conference Session
Experiential Learning and Globalization in BME
Collection
2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Barbara Burks Fasse, Georgia Institute of Technology; Paul Benkeser, Georgia Institute of Technology
Tagged Divisions
Biomedical
AC 2011-1256: DEVELOPING THE GLOBAL BIOMEDICAL ENGINEERTHROUGH A 12-MONTH INTERNATIONAL UNDERGRADUATE RESEARCHEXPERIENCE IN THE U.S. AND CHINABarbara Burks Fasse, Georgia Institute of Technology Barbara Burks Fasse is an educational psychologist and senior research scientist in the Coulter Department of Biomedical Engineering at Georgia Tech. Dr. Fasse studies the efficacy and value of student-centered learning initiatives– specifically Problem-Based and Project-Based Inquiry Learning– in classrooms, in- structional labs, and undergraduate research experiences. She joined the BME faculty in 2007 following ten years in Georgia Tech’s College of Computing where she was a member of the NSF-funded Learning By Design
Conference Session
Stimulating Broader Industrial Participation in Undergraduate Programs
Collection
2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Linda A Thurman, University of North Carolina, Charlotte; William F. Heybruck, University of North Carolina, Charlotte
Tagged Divisions
College Industry Partnerships
% Students > "Agree" F09 Sp10 F10 n=160 n=91 n=155Mock Interview DayPrepared for co-ops, internships or FT employment 84.4% 94.4% 89.7%Interviewer gave useful feedback 81.9% 85.4% 83.2%Found it valuable 86.3% 96.6% 85.8%Sponsored Senior Design ProgramThe sponsored Senior Design Program aligns teams of students to work on company sponsoredtechnical projects. The companies provide a technical contact for the team to work with. Thiscontact insures that the team is working
Conference Session
Making Elementary Engineering Work: Lessons from Partnerships and Practice
Collection
2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Elizabeth A. Parry, North Carolina State University
Tagged Divisions
K-12 & Pre-College Engineering
AC 2011-1333: MAKING ELEMENTARY ENGINEERING WORK: PART-NERSHIPS AND PRACTICE–NORTH CAROLINA STATE UNIVERSITYElizabeth A Parry, North Carolina State University Elizabeth Parry is a K-12 STEM curriculum and professional development consultant and the coordinator of K-20 STEM Partnership Development at North Carolina State University’s College of Engineering. She has over twenty five years of experience in industry and STEM education. Prior to her current position, Ms. Parry was the project director of RAMP-UP, an NSF and GE funded project focused on increasing math achievement in K-12 through the use of collaboration between undergraduate and graduate STEM students and classroom teachers. She is an active member of
Conference Session
Innovations in Design within BME Curricula
Collection
2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Aura Gimm, Duke University; Richard Goldberg, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; Kevin Caves, Duke University; Robert Malkin, Duke University
Tagged Divisions
Biomedical
experience can be limiting for both student learningand the depth that project teams can achieve. While providing challenging engineering problems,all capstone design courses address basic principles of engineering design, teamwork, technicalcommunications, ethics, and professionalism. In this paper, we will discuss how a few simpledesign challenges have been used in three capstone design courses to practice and applyengineering design principles and problem solving skills. These challenges are relativelyinexpensive to implement and could be done in teams or individually. The competitive aspectsof the challenges can further motivate students. The design challenge goals can be tailored tofocus on specific aspects of design practice or skills, such as
Conference Session
Computer Science Applications
Collection
2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Ryan J. Meuth, University of Advancing Technology
Tagged Divisions
Computers in Education
AC 2011-120: USING THE PROCESSING PROGRAMMING ENVIRON-MENT IN ENGINEERING EDUCATIONRyan J Meuth, University of Advancing Technology I graduated from UMR with a B.S. of Computer Engineering in 2005, after which I stayed at UMR (Now Missouri University of Science and Technology) to pursue and complete a Master’s and PhD in computer engineering. I worked for Dr. Donald C. Wunsch at the Applied Computational Intelligence Laboratory in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering. There I worked on the Learning Applied to Ground Robotics project, developing a ground vehicle that can not only navigate unknown terrain, but be able to learn from experience with the world. During the summers since 2006 I worked at
Conference Session
Topics Related to Telecommunications
Collection
2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Antonio Francisco Mondragon-Torres, Rochester Institute of Technology; Mahesh Nandan Kommi, Rochester Institute of Technology; Tamoghna Bhattacharya, Rochester Institute of Technology
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Technology
hardware implementation of the entire system would give the students a deepinsight of the OFDM concepts and would allow them to extend their research to various otherapplication of the OFDM communication system.The platform is being developed in Simulink which is a block level system design frameworkthat has time awareness. So what are the possibilities opened by using Simulink? First, we have aplatform that has time dependency as real systems do, at the same time the Simulink blocks canbe designed using Matlab code that is more algorithmic focused and do not have an embeddedtime relationship. Since the focus of the project is on hardware design, exploration andimplementation, the Simulink blocks can be implemented by FPGA vendor libraries, C or
Conference Session
Attracting Young Minds: Part I
Collection
2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Claude Villiers, Florida Gulf Coast University; Shelby Gilbert, Ed.D., Florida Gulf Coast University; Yves J. Anglade, Florida A&M University/Florida State University
Tagged Divisions
Minorities in Engineering
at The City College of The City University of New York. Prior to this position, he was employed by the Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT) as a research engineer. Dr. Villiers also was employed by The University of Florida and worked on several projects sponsored by the FDOT and the Federal Highway Administration.Shelby Gilbert, EdD, Florida Gulf Coast UniversityDr. Yves J. Anglade, Florida A&M University/Florida State University Page 22.664.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2011 An Examination of the Florida Education Fund’s Summer SAT Prep
Conference Session
Innovations in Materials Education
Collection
2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Craig Johnson, Central Washington University; Arthur D. Morken, Central Washington University
Tagged Divisions
Materials
development of a program related task and guide students to higher levels of learning onBlooms Taxonomy through the development of student created learning aids.One specific need was reflected in the disparate skills of our majority component of ‘transfer’students in our programs. Through informal observations the authors realized students simplydid not have familiarity with the equipment at our facility (as opposed to their previousexperiences elsewhere). In this study, the authors target one simple skill relevant to resistancewelding that could be used as an introduction to metallurgy concepts (welding band saw blades).This student project was used not only to provide students with a practical skill for theirapplications toolbox but additionally as
Conference Session
Computer Science Applications
Collection
2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Norena Martin-Dorta, University of La Laguna; Isabel Sánchez Berriel, University of La Laguna; David López Rodríguez; Héctor Amado; Jose Luis Saorin, Universidad de La Laguna; Manuel Contero, Universidad Politécnica de Valencia, Instituto Interuniversitario de Investigación en Bioingeniería y Tecnología Orientada al Ser Humano (I3BH)
Tagged Divisions
Computers in Education
is a professor of engineering graphics and computer aided design at La Laguna University. She received an MS degree in engineering from Polytechnic University of Valencia, Spain in 1991. He made a PhD in developing spatial abilities using multimedia technologies and sketch-based modeling in 2006. She worked for private companies since 1992 as a project engineer in water supply systems. She joined La Laguna University in 2001Manuel Contero, Instituto Interuniversitario de Investigacin en Bioingeniera y Tecnologa Orientada al SerHumano (I3BH). Universidad Politcnica de Valencia Manuel Contero is a full professor of Engineering Graphics and CAD with the Graphic Engineering De- partment at the Universidad Politcnica de
Conference Session
Emerging Areas: Biotechnology, Microtechnology, and Energy
Collection
2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Jason M. Keith, Michigan Technological University; Daniel López Gaxiola, Michigan Technological University; Daniel A. Crowl, Michigan Technological University; David W. Caspary, Michigan Technological University; Abhijit Mukherjee, Michigan Technological University; Dennis Desheng Meng, Michigan Technological University; Jeffrey D. Naber, Michigan Technological University; Jeffrey S. Allen, Michigan Technological University; John T. Lukowski, Michigan Technological University; Barry D. Solomon, Michigan Technological University; Jay Scott Meldrum Sr., Michigan Technological University; Thomas F. Edgar, University of Texas, Austin
Tagged Divisions
Chemical Engineering
ASEE.Daniel Lpez Gaxiola, Michigan Technological UniversityDaniel A. Crowl, Michigan Technological UniversityDavid W. Caspary, Michigan Technological University David Caspary is the Manager of Laboratory Facilities and Instructor in the Chemical Engineering De- partment at Michigan Technological University. He received a B.S. Engineering degree from Michigan Tech in 1982 and has also worked as a Training Specialist, Project Engineer, and Project Manager. He has over 25 years experience instructing and coordinating Unit Operations and Plant Operations Labora- tory, implementing distributed control and data acquisition systems, and designing pilot-scale processing equipment.Abhijit Mukherjee, Michigan TechDennis Desheng Meng
Conference Session
Unique Developments in Engineering Technology
Collection
2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Aleksandr Sergeyev, Michigan Technological University; Nasser Alaraje, Michigan Technological University
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Technology
everyday life requires human-specialists with up-to-date knowledge to Page 22.9.2maintain and monitor existing robots, as well as to develop new, more advanced, smart, and safemachines. During the last decade, popular interest in educational exploitation has increasedsignificantly1,3. Robotics in education is seen as an interdisciplinary, project-based learningactivity drawn mostly on math, science, and technology and offering major new benefits ineducation at all levels2,4,5. Some specialized robotics jobs require new skills, such as those ofrobot installer and robot integrator. While universities have long included robotics research intheir
Conference Session
Topics Related to Telecommunications
Collection
2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Min-Sung Koh, Eastern Washington University; Esteban Rodriguez-Marek, Eastern Washington University; Claudio Talarico, Eastern Washinton University
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Technology
Real Time Communication Systems With PCsAbstractCommunication system classes have been traditionally taught with a lecture-only format.However, the proliferation of new concepts and algorithms in communication systems makes itincreasingly hard for students to master them only through mathematical derivations.Furthermore, without a hands-on demonstration of how the algorithm is used in real-lifeapplications, students without strong mathematical skills can become frustrated and generate aretention problem in EET/CET/EE programs. To overcome this problem, the theory taught inlecture has been complemented with laboratory experiments and class projects. However, manytraditional communication systems’ laboratory experiments are related to various
Conference Session
Developing Young MINDS in Engineering, Part II
Collection
2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
G. Padmanabhan, North Dakota State University; Robert V. Pieri, North Dakota State University; Carol Davis, North Dakota State University
Tagged Divisions
Minorities in Engineering
thetribal college and Reservation high and middle school students3. This project with theparticipation of extremely dedicated faculty established a collaborative platform which is oftenthe most difficult thing to accomplish. As the ONR funding ended in 2004, the North DakotaExperimental Program to Stimulate Competitive Research (NDEPSCoR) agreed to include theproject in their proposal to the National Science Foundation(http://www.ndsu.edu/epscor/NATURE/index.html). The project continued with the fundingfrom NSF under the title Nurturing American Tribal Undergraduates in Research and Education(NATURE). Major activities under the project continued to be Sunday Academy4 and SummerCamps5,6. A tribal college student research mentoring component was