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Displaying results 601 - 630 of 757 in total
Conference Session
NSF Grantees’ Poster Session
Collection
2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Lorraine Kisselburgh, Purdue University; Carla B. Zoltowski, Purdue University, West Lafayette; Jonathan Beever, Penn State University; Justin L. Hess, Purdue University, West Lafayette; Andrew James Iliadis; Andrew O. Brightman, Purdue University
Tagged Topics
NSF Grantees Poster Session
Tagged Divisions
Division Experimentation & Lab-Oriented Studies
#1237868. Portions of this paper were orally presented at the SEACconference (2013), the Frontiers in Education conference (2013) and the National ScienceFoundation EESE PI meeting (2013). Attendees at each of these venues provided valuablefeedback. We are also grateful for the administrative and technical support received fromHUBZero, GlobalHUB, and Eckard Groll.INTRODUCTIONEducating future engineers to effectively handle novel ethical dilemmas they may encounter intheir careers, especially those developing and implementing new technology, is a critical andrelevant challenge for a nation that is advancing science and engineering technologies at an everincreasing rate. However, the ethics education programs of most engineering colleges do
Conference Session
Addressing the NGSS, Part 1 of 3: Supporting K-8 Science Teachers in Engineering Pedagogy and Engineering-Science Connections
Collection
2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
So Yoon Yoon, Texas A&M University; Yi Kong, Purdue University, West Lafayette; Heidi A. Diefes-Dux, Purdue University, West Lafayette; Johannes Strobel, Texas A&M
Tagged Divisions
K-12 & Pre-College Engineering
together.Engineering Engineering activities in general, which are hands-on and practical to use inActivities the classroom.Model-Eliciting Use of MEA lessons to bring real world mathematics into the classroom.Activities (MEAs)Engineering is Instructional modeling of EiE lessons.Elementary (EiE)Student Teaching engineering in interesting and meaningful ways to increaseMotivation students’ interest in engineering and to encourage students to develop confidence in learning engineering and consider future careers as engineers.Making Mistakes It is O.K. to fail at an engineering task because students can learn from theiris O.K. mistakes.Teacher An increase of
Conference Session
Leadership, Entrepreneurship and Ethics Education
Collection
2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Sangarappillai Sivaloganathan, United Arab Emirates University; Rajesh Ganithi, UAE University
Tagged Divisions
Manufacturing
graduation training in the Railway Workshops he joined the Cement industry where he worked for ten years. He got his M.Sc. from University of Aston in 1981 and Ph.D. from City University London in 1991. He joined Brunel universityin 1995 and worked there as a senior lecturer until he left Brunel in September 2011 to join UAEU. Dr Sivaloganathan was the founding Course Director for M.Sc. in Advanced Engineering Design at Brunel.Rajesh Ganithi, UAE University Mr Rajesh Ganithi started his career in engineering with a Diploma in Tool and Die Making from NTTF, India in 1995. In the next twenty years he has gathered enormous amount of experience and exposure while working in various companies in various capacities in
Conference Session
Multidisciplinary Programs and Curricula
Collection
2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Aaron M. Cramer, University of Kentucky; Lawrence Holloway, University of Kentucky
Tagged Divisions
Multidisciplinary Engineering
disciplines. Within thiscontext, the Power and Energy Institute of Kentucky, a multidisciplinary engineering instituteoffering certificates in power and energy at the University of Kentucky has been created. Amotivating observation guiding this educational program is that exposure to multidisciplinaryideas within the power and energy field will better prepare engineers from all disciplines for thetypes of multidisciplinary problems that they will encounter in their careers. As part of thisprogram, a senior-/graduate-level course in electric power system fundamentals was created.This course is a core course within the power and energy program and is an option forundergraduate students and a requirement for graduate students studying within the program
Conference Session
Understanding our Students & Ethical Development
Collection
2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Elizabeth A. McBride-Pluskwik, Iron Range Engineering, a program of Minnesota State University, Mankato; Puteri S. Megat Hamari, Minnesota State University, Mankato
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Ethics
monitored. You notice that there is some oil spilled on a stair case that presents an immediate safety risk. However, the stairs can only be cleaned by a union worker but none are immediately available to help. Salaried workers have been cited and penalized for assisting with union work in the past, so you are apprehensive to do the job yourself. What should you do? If the penalty came in the form of a fine, would your decision change if the fine as $50, $500, $5,000? Are you liable if you do nothing?The topics that faculty brought to the team were scenarios that the student may encounter in theearly years of their engineering career or typical ethical issues commonly encountered by young
Conference Session
Design, Creativity and Critical Thinking in the Chemical Engineering Curriculum
Collection
2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Kerry Michael Rogy; Cheryl A. Bodnar, University of Pittsburgh; Renee M. Clark, University of Pittsburgh
Tagged Divisions
Chemical Engineering
confidence in their ability to start a business. Using cluster analysis, we alsofound a change in the typology or student groupings based upon their reasons for wanting to starta business. This change brought about a higher awareness of the categorization of students whowanted to start a business, with a distinction between those students motivated to do so basedupon social concerns or the lack thereof.As students enroll in engineering programs at colleges and universities, it is important to build anentrepreneurial mindset. Building the entrepreneurial mindset through epistemic games can helpin shaping the 21st Century skills, which are so important in engineers’ professional careers. Asstudents develop and strengthen these skills, there is much
Conference Session
Developing the Design Skillset
Collection
2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Claes Fredriksson, Granta Design, Cambridge (UK); Mats Eriksson, Univeristy West; Hannah Melia, Granta Design, Ltd.
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education
Concurrent Engineering. Page 24.590.21. IntroductionProduct Development is important in many engineering courses and educational programmes.The Product Development Process, as applied in industry, is practiced in many different ways,depending on, for instance, product technology, company size and type of market. At University,general and systematic approaches to product development need to be covered to preparestudents for various careers in industry.The design process starts with the identification and specification of the product function1-2. Thenext step is the description of concepts, their elaboration into possible layouts, followed byrefinement
Conference Session
Best of DEED
Collection
2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Carl A. Reidsema PhD, The University of Queensland; Lydia Kavanagh, The University of Queensland; Lesley Jolly, Strategic Partnerships
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education
Paper ID #9716Flipping the Classroom at Scale to Achieve Integration of Theory and Prac-tice in a First Year Engineering Design and Build CourseDr. Carl A Reidsema PhD, The University of Queensland Associate Professor Carl Reidsema, University of Queensland Associate Professor Reidsema is a me- chanical design engineer with over 12 years industry experience. Beginning his academic career at the University of New South Wales in 2001, he led the Faculty development of the first hands-on active- learning team based first year common course in engineering design ”ENGG1000 - Engineering Design and Innovation
Conference Session
NSF Grantees’ Poster Session
Collection
2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Tzu-Liang Bill Tseng, University of Texas, El Paso; Richard Chiou, Drexel University (Eng. & Eng. Tech.); Radian G. Belu, Drexel University (Tech.)
Tagged Topics
NSF Grantees Poster Session
Tagged Divisions
Division Experimentation & Lab-Oriented Studies
modeling, numerical modeling, electromagnetic com- patibility and engineering education. During his career Dr. Belu published eight book chapters, several papers in referred journals and in conference proceedings in his areas of the research interests. He has also been PI or Co-PI for various research projects United States and abroad in power systems analysis and protection, load and energy demand forecasting and analysis, renewable energy, microgrids, turbulence and wave propagation, radar and remote sensing, instrumentation, atmosphere physics, electromagnetic compatibility, and engineering education
Conference Session
Engineering Management Division Technical Session 2
Collection
2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Quamrul H. Mazumder, University of Michigan, Flint
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Management
Page 24.191.4students in seven different projects throughout a course. The first project involved the studentslisting two contributions they would like to make to their careers. The next five projects followedthe DMAIC process, and the final project requires a report on the overall process. In eachproject, the students applied the DMAIC principles toward achieving their goal, learning thelanguage and function of Six Sigma as they progress [18]. By applying DMAIC, students wereable to achieve their goals and familiarize themselves with the system.The problems associated with change management is challenging in higher education due to thenature of the environment that promotes academic freedom. Academicians have beenaccustomed with this
Conference Session
NSF Grantees’ Poster Session
Collection
2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Garrick A. Aden-Buie, University of South Florida; Autar Kaw, University of South Florida; Ali Yalcin, University of South Florida; Ram Pendyala, Arizona State University
Tagged Topics
NSF Grantees Poster Session
Tagged Divisions
Division Experimentation & Lab-Oriented Studies
, gender and performance in the prerequisitecourses were recorded. Additionally, as students in the course are typically further into theiracademic careers, students were identified by transfer status: first time in college (FTIC) –started their college at University of South Florida, transfer students from a community college(CC) with a completed Associate of the Arts degree, or other (OT) which includes studentstransferring from another institution without a completed degree. All of the above data werecollected from official institutional records.Student achievement in the course was assessed through a combination of homeworkassignments, class activities and examinations, including the final comprehensive examination.The same topics were covered
Conference Session
Simulations and Project-Based Learning II
Collection
2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Matthew Turner, Purdue University (Statewide Technology); Chris Foreman, Purdue University, West Lafayette; Rajeswari Sundararajan, Purdue University, West Lafayette
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Technology
ability of a system to meet certain power loads and the economic feasibilityof system configurations, students implicitly gain additional understanding of concepts requiredin evaluating real world systems. In fact, HOMER and SAM can follow the student into practicalapplication for career projects.A very good evaluation of the use of HOMER as an educational tool is presented in [39]. Both adiscussion of the HOMER’s capabilities and its use by instructors and students are examined indetail. The results conclusively demonstrate HOMER’s effectiveness in the classroom. SAM isexpected to have similar success, based on the same simulation engine.Effectiveness as real world tools: As discussed, HOMER and SAM are capable tools that aredesigned to simulate
Conference Session
Curriculum & Student Enrollment II
Collection
2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Jason K. Durfee P.E., Eastern Washington University; William R. Loendorf, Eastern Washington University; Doris M. Munson, Eastern Washington University; Donald C. Richter, Eastern Washington University; Terence Geyer, Eastern Washington University; Martin William Weiser, Eastern Washington University; A. Hossain, Eastern Washington University; Hani Serhal Saad, Eastern Washington University
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Technology
seenby Engineering and Technology students (lecture-nonmathematical, lecture-mathematical,lecture/lab, lecture/demonstration). The project is also being conducted using multiple separateinstructors who have agreed to participate in the project research. The use of more than a singleinstructor is an attempt to enable a more representative sample of the type of instruction that astudent experiences during his/her academic career at the university. This use of multipleinstructors will also help minimize the effect of a given instructors influence on student success.This paper is not examining the effects of differing attendance policies among differentinstructors but it should be noted that there is not a single universal policy in use by the
Conference Session
NSF Grantees’ Poster Session
Collection
2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Anirudh Roshan Sriram, Purdue University, West Lafayette; Monica E. Cardella, Purdue University, West Lafayette; Karthik Ramani, Purdue University
Tagged Topics
NSF Grantees Poster Session
Tagged Divisions
Division Experimentation & Lab-Oriented Studies
1987, and a Ph.D. from Stanford University in 1991, all in Mechanical Engineering. Among his many awards he received the National Science Foundation (NSF) Research Initiation Award, the NSF CAREER Award, the Ralph Teetor Educational Award from the SAE, and the Outstanding Young Manufacturing Engineer Award from SME. In 2006 he won the innovation of the year award from the State of Indiana. He serves in the editorial board of Elsevier Journal of Computer-Aided Design and ASME Journal of Mechanical Design. In 2008 he was a visiting Professor at Stanford University (computer sciences) as well as a research fellow at PARC (formerly Xerox PARC). He also serves on the Engineering Advisory sub-committee for the NSF IIP
Conference Session
First-Year Programs Division Poster Session
Collection
2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Lynn K. Byers, Quinnipiac University; Justin W. Kile, Quinnipiac University; Corey Kiassat, Quinnipiac University
Tagged Divisions
First-Year Programs
students. The course provides career and technicalinformation on the four engineering disciplines offered at Quinnipiac University. The followingfour questions are investigated: Is there a correlation between a student’s initial desire to pursuea specific engineering major and their actual and perceived knowledge of that engineeringdiscipline? For those students who are interested in and knowledgeable about a specificengineering discipline, does the introductory course strengthen that interest? For those studentswho are unsure about what specific engineering discipline to choose, are the students more likelyto be interested in a specific engineering discipline at the end of the course? Does theintroductory course increase students’ knowledge
Conference Session
K-12 and Precollege Engineering Curriculum and Programming Resources, Part 2 of 2
Collection
2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Pramod Rajan, Laboratory for Innovative Technology & Engineering Education (LITEE); P.K. Raju, Laboratory for Innovative Technology & Engineering Education (LITEE); John Timothy Gill, Lee-Scott Academy
Tagged Divisions
K-12 & Pre-College Engineering
learningabout the concept of design process. Page 24.694.2IntroductionThe problem of student motivation persists even today in the K-12 level of education and is afactor in issues such as student underachievement and retention7. Students have made realacademic strides in most states, but no state is on track to getting all students the STEM skillsthey need to succeed in college and career. Low-income and minority students lag farthestbehind. Over the past decade, almost $3 billion has been invested in educational technology. In2012, more than $1 billion was raised for educational technology to improve student motivationand learning processes8. With the investment in technology and the need
Conference Session
First-Year Programs Division Poster Session
Collection
2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Kerry Meyers, Youngstown State University
Tagged Divisions
First-Year Programs
peers which is critical to student success incompleting an engineering degree.IntroductionImproving opportunities for higher education for low-income, minority, and urban studentsremains a critical issue in engineering education1, increasing the access to engineeringeducational opportunities of these key populations will have a significant impact on balancingthe shortage of qualified engineers in the U.S. which is important for global competitiveness.Further, engineering educators are tasked with changing traditional ways of educating engineersand broadening the exposure of K-12 students to engineering careers, requirements, andopportunities 2. With the wide range of research citing the need to transform traditional lecture
Conference Session
Distance Learning in Engineering Technology
Collection
2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Rigoberto Chinchilla, Eastern Illinois University; Oyindamola O. Idowu, Waukegan Schools District 60; Thomas C. MacMullen, Eastern Illinois University
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Technology
, serves at numerous departmental and university committees at EIU and has been awarded several research grants in his career. Dr. Chinchilla is a book author and has published several peer reviewed technical papers during his tenure at EIU. rchinchilla@eiu.edu Tel: 2175818534Mrs. Oyindamola O Idowu, Waukegan Schools District 60 Oyindamola Idowu, MSc. in Technology, Eastern Illinois University, is the current Network Adminis- trator for Waukegan School District #60. She worked as Graduate Assistant in the Telecommunications Laboratory at Eastern Illinois University from Aug 2011 – May 2013. She has a B.Tech. degree in Com- puter Engineering from Ladoke Akintola University of Technology, Nigeria. Oyindamola is also a Cisco
Conference Session
Teaching Statics
Collection
2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Carisa H Ramming P.E., Oklahoma State University; John J. Phillips P.E., Oklahoma State University
Tagged Divisions
Mechanics
as Statics. A student’s success inthese courses can be a crucial factor in their decision to stay or leave STEM education. It is thebelief of many that if students can be properly engaged in the learning process early on in theireducation career, with theories and concepts being successfully taught to students, they will findthe course relevant and enlightening, and will be more likely to continue along their chosen pathof education. One problem that arises is determining what is meant by ‘properly engaged’, andhow this can be accomplished in the short amount of time we have with students in our courses.Introductory STEM courses provide the building blocks for student success in later courses, andin the Fundamentals of Engineering (F.E
Conference Session
Materials Division Technical Session 2
Collection
2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Yalcin Ertekin, Drexel University (Tech.); Irina Nicoleta Ciobanescu Husanu, Drexel University (Tech.); Richard Chiou, Drexel University (Eng. & Eng. Tech.)
Tagged Divisions
Materials
processes, machine tool accuracy characterization and enhancement, non-invasive surgical tool design and bio-materials applications. During his career, Dr. Ertekin published papers in referred journals and in conference proceedings in his area of research interest. He has also been PI for various NSF research projects including NSF-TUES and MRI programs. Dr. Ertekin is an active member in the Society of Manufacturing Engineers (SME), and currently serves as a chair of Philadelphia SME Chapter-15.Dr. Irina Nicoleta Ciobanescu Husanu, Drexel University (Tech.)Dr. Richard Chiou, Drexel University (Eng.) Page
Conference Session
First-Year Programs Division Poster Session
Collection
2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
William C. Oakes, Purdue University, West Lafayette; Carla B. Zoltowski, Purdue University, West Lafayette; Monica E. Cardella, Purdue University, West Lafayette; William Travis Horton, Purdue University
Tagged Divisions
First-Year Programs
early in theiracademic careers, report increase motivation to remain in engineering. The challenge ofengaging students as early as their first year is that students can become overwhelmed. Whilethe experience can be very positive, when students are adjusting to college life and course loads,the additional variable of an experiential learning environment can be foreign and sometimes Page 24.782.4overwhelming. In addition, while the vertical integration allows mentoring of younger students,older students do not always embrace the mentoring roles. The results have been bimodal withfirst-year students in the program having either very positive or
Conference Session
Materials Division Technical Session 1
Collection
2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Kumar Vikram Singh, Miami University; Fazeel Khan, Miami University
Tagged Divisions
Materials
this GUI based module and associated exercises areaimed at instilling skills in computer modeling of materials, which means that this training willallow students to use more advanced material models, in the graduate level courses and also laterin their professional careers, to predict deformation behavior. It is envisioned that developinglearning modules in a single platform, i.e. Matlab interactive GUIs, exempts students fromrepeated exercises in software familiarization and allows the development of skills in simulationand validations methods that will commute well even to different future work environment and Page 24.793.4resources.Overview
Conference Session
Methodological & Theoretical Contributions to Engineering Education 1
Collection
2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Yakut Gazi, Texas A&M University
Tagged Divisions
Educational Research and Methods
the value of heutagogyin academic versus workforce development environments in science, technology, andengineering. Page 24.830.2Andragogy, Self-Directed Learning, and HeutagogyAndragogy is a theory that holds a set of assumptions about how adults learn. Accordingto American Council on Education, adult learners are learners over the age 25 and oftenreferred to as non-traditional learners. These individuals usually have additionalresponsibilities such as family, career, military or community and are seeking a degree oreducational offering to enhance their professional or personal lives (American Council onEducation, n.d.)[1]. According to National
Conference Session
Programming, Simulation, and Dynamic Modeling
Collection
2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Benjamin Reed Campbell, Robert Morris University; Luis E. Monterrubio, Robert Morris University; Tony Lee Kerzmann, Robert Morris University
Tagged Divisions
Mechanical Engineering
Paper ID #8825Laboratory Development for Dynamic Systems Through the Use of Low CostMaterials and ToysDr. Benjamin Reed Campbell, Robert Morris University Ben Campbell holds a BS in physics and MS in electrical engineering from Penn State and a PhD in engineering from Robert Morris University. For the first decade of his career, he worked as a laser engineer at the Penn State Electro-Optics Center. In 2011 he joined Robert Morris University as an Assistant Professor of Engineering. He has been supporting RMU’s biomedical engineering program and also teaching dynamics, circuits, and introduction to engineering. Since
Conference Session
Teaching Approaches for Ethics
Collection
2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Richard Raridon, Minnesota State University, Mankato; Rebecca A. Bates, Minnesota State University, Mankato; Deborah K. Nykanen P.E., Minnesota State University, Mankato; Marilyn C. Hart, Minnesota State University- Mankato; Winston Sealy, Minnesota State University, Mankato
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Ethics
need to be able to address with ethicalresponsibility at the forefront of their designs. The learning approach asked students to identifypotential ethical problems and solutions to the real world exploration project that they wereexamining.During the spring 2013 semester, scholars examined ethical issues by examining case studiesfrom career fields related to their majors. Before reviewing the case studies, the idea of ethicswas introduced to the class through a required reading during the Winter Break preceding thesemester. Students read “The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks”, a book documenting thediscovery and now widespread use of the “HeLa” cell and the ethical dilemmas involved
Conference Session
K-12 Outreach and Out-of-School Time Engineering Programming and Research
Collection
2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Tracey Louise Collins, North Carolina State University; Eric N. Wiebe, North Carolina State University; Pam Van Dyk, Evaluation Resources
Tagged Divisions
K-12 & Pre-College Engineering
project are to: 1) Provide an innovative network of support and communications among University-based outreach project directors and educational evaluation experts, creating a learning community to promote sharing of best practices and innovation that will deepen the impact of NCSU’s pre-college STEM programs on students’ future academic and career choices. 2) Develop and demonstrate a system of data-driven planning and analysis guided by best practices to facilitate longitudinal assessment of participant outcomes through development of a common STEM Outreach Evaluation Protocol as well as a database integrating records of NCSU K-12 outreach participants with NC Department of Public Instruction
Conference Session
Entrepreneurship & Engineering Innovation Division Technical Session 6
Collection
2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Zbigniew J. Pasek, University of Windsor; Francine K. Schlosser, Odette School of Business, University of Windsor
Tagged Divisions
Entrepreneurship & Engineering Innovation
context design of supply chains and logistic processes grows inimportance. There are also other trends worth mentioning, in particular in the context of the most recentglobal industrial recession, such as: • Growing anti-globalization and protectionist sentiments • De-industrialization of the highly-developed economies • Accelerated progress of technologies. The extended world-wide effects of recession and what is referred to as a “jobless”recovery from it, bring into focus the skills that future engineers should acquire in the course oftheir studies in order to be successful over the lifespan of their professional careers. A goodmodel to pursue in the curriculum updates or development is a T-shaped profile1 of a futureengineer
Conference Session
FPD 11: Culminating Considerations
Collection
2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Silvia Husted, Universidad de las Americas Puebla; Judith Virginia Gutierrez; Nelly Ramirez-Corona, Universidad de las Americas Puebla; Aurelio Lopez-Malo, Universidad de las Americas Puebla; Enrique Palou, Universidad de las Americas Puebla
Tagged Divisions
First-Year Programs
information literacy, medialiteracy, and information, communications and technology literacy), and Life and Career Skills(such as flexibility and adaptability, initiative and self-direction, social and cross-cultural skills,productivity and accountability, leadership and responsibility) as proposed by the Partnership for21st Century Skills.15-17This paper describes in detail how a second semester cornerstone (and pillar) course(Introduction to Chemical, Food, and Environmental Engineering Design) for CE, FE, and EE ishelping students to develop their creativity, as well as its alignment with the Investment Theoryof Creativity developed by Sternberg and Lubart.5-8 As stated previously, ITC comprises sixresources for creativity: intellectual processes
Conference Session
Classroom Management
Collection
2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Edward F. Gehringer, North Carolina State University
Tagged Divisions
New Engineering Educators
possibly different exams to be generated.6. Combining face-to-face and distance-education coursesAnother opportunity to teach two sections as if they were one is to combine the work fora face-to-face and distance-ed (“online”) section of the same course. Of our respondents,26 of them thought this would save time, and 13 didn’t (Figure 5). The reasons in favorof it saving time mirror those for teaching multiple face-to-face sections. For example,“I've done this dozens of times over a 40+ year career. Definitely easier because there isonly one set of exams and assignments to prepare and you are focused on the topic. Seecomment above about two sections of the same course in the same semester. [11]”Just as with multiple on-campus sections, questions
Conference Session
Women in Engineering Division Poster Session
Collection
2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Christine Valle, Georgia Institute of Technology; John D. Leonard II, Georgia Institute of Technology
Tagged Divisions
Women in Engineering
and Engineering:2000, National Science Foundation, Arlington, VA, 2000 (NSF 00-327).7. Adelman, C., Females and Men of the Engineering Path. A Model for Analysts of Undergraduate Careers, U.S. Department of Education, Office of Educational Research and Improvement, Washington, D.C.; U.S. Government Printing Office, 1998.8. Seymour, E., and Hewitt, N.M., Talking about Leaving: Why Undergraduates Leave the Sciences, Westview Press, Boulder, CO, 1997.9. Williams, F. M., Emerson, C. J., “Feedback Loops and Critical Mass: The Flow of Women into Science and Engineering,” presented at Gender and Science and Technology (GSAT 10), Denmark, 2001.10. Ro, H., Marra, R., Terenzini, P., Trautvetter, L., Walser, A., and Lord, S. “If You