Professional Engineer and is a rated pilot in both rotary and fixed-wing aircraft.Dr. Stephanie Farrell, Rowan University Stephanie Farrell is an Associate Professor in chemical engineering at Rowan University. Prior to joining Rowan in 1998, she was an Assistant Professor in chemical engineering and Adjunct professor in biomed- ical engineering at Louisiana Tech University. She received her bachelor’s, M.S., and Ph.D. degrees in chemical engineering from the University of Pennsylvania, Stevens Institute of Technology, and New Jer- sey Institute of Technology, respectively. Farrell’s educational interests are in laboratory development and experiential learning, particularly in the areas of biomedical and sustainable
propulsion systems. At Baylor University since 1998, he teaches courses in laboratory techniques, fluid mechanics, energy systems, aeronautics, wind energy, and propulsion systems. Research interests include experimental gas turbine heat transfer and wind energy.Dr. Buford Randall Jean, Baylor University Buford Randall Jean, Ph.D., Associate Professor of electrical and computer engineering, is the holder of nine U.S. patents and corresponding foreign patents in the field of microwave metrology, which have resulted in scientific and industrial instruments for a wide range of sensing and control applications. Industrial products based upon these inventions are in use world-wide. He has more than 25 years of aca- demic and
AC 2012-5224: TEACHING-TO-LEARN SESSIONS TO ACHIEVE SUB-JECT RELEVANCE IN AN INTRODUCTION TO BIOMEDICAL ENGI-NEERING COURSEDr. Steve Warren, Kansas State University Steve Warren received a B.S. and M.S. in electrical engineering from Kansas State University in 1989 and 1991, respectively, followed by a Ph.D. in electrical engineering from the University of Texas, Austin, in 1994. Warren is an Associate Professor in the Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering at Kansas State University. Prior to joining KSU in Aug. 1999, Warren was a Principal Member of the technical staff at Sandia National Laboratories in Albuquerque, N.M. He directs the KSU Medical Com- ponent Design Laboratory, a facility partially
respecttheir technical expertise nor challenge their capabilities and accustomed pace. The developmentof subject based online tutorials is being used to accelerate the veteran’s entry into the mathsequence and the circuits sequence. These tutorials will include videos of laboratory exercises toinsure that veterans understand the equipment and terminology used in the introductory courses.Additional online courses will be developed in the area of computer based tools includingMatlab, P-Spice, and Verilog (used in introductory course taken by all electrical engineeringstudents.) Page 25.654.3The first task is to develop the mathematics review modules
publications.ConclusionsThis paper describes the various ways universities and industries can collaborate tostrengthen relationships between industries and universities. Gannon University hasemployed many of these collaborations for mutual benefits. As a result of thesecollaborations, faculty has obtained numerous patents, furnished laboratories withmodern equipment either through loan or purchased using industrial funding. Studentsparticipating in these programs are able to gain valuable work experience and themajority of the students receive full-time employment offers as a result of theseinteractions.References 1. Joos, G., Marceau, R.J., Scoot, G., Peloquin, D., An innovative industry- university partnership to enhance university training and industry
and findings at conferences.Examples of research projectsStudents involved in research are first interviewed by faculty members. All students fill outsurveys about team work and their expectations of the research work. Based on the interviewstudents are selected and placed in teams.Pictures below show examples of research projects from the new mechatronis laboratory. Eachteam learns to follow a time line and the team leader submits a progress report every week. Page 25.740.5Picture 1: A Robot Prototype Controlled by Custom Made Arduino Micro-controller Picture 2: Rear Suspension System and Differential System Picture 3
AC 2012-3366: IMPROVING LEARNING TECHNOLOGY DESIGN THROUGHTHE IDENTIFICATION OF ANTHROPOLOGICALLY INVARIANT LEARN-ING BEHAVIORS IN THE ADOPTION OF EDUCATIONAL TECHNOL-OGYMr. Steven R. Walk, Old Dominion University Steven Robert Walk, P.E., is an Assistant Professor of electrical engineering technology in the Frank Batten College of Engineering and Technology at Old Dominion University. He is Founder and Director of the Laboratory for Technology Forecasting. His research interests include energy conversion systems, technology and innovation management, and technological forecasting and social change. He is owner and founder of Technology Intelligence, a management consulting company in Norfolk, Va. Walk earned
consuming. Furthermore,breaking risk analysis down to these fundamental steps clouds the overall goal and point to riskanalysis: making a good decision. To overcome this, case studies or projects may be assigned tohelp instill these skillsets and allow for practice in their application. However, as these aregenerally completed in teams, there may also be a need to devise individualized testing of thissubject matter in an appropriate context.For the past several years, the author5,6 has employed a “one question” final exam in which thestudents are provided an investment scenario and background information from which they havetwo hours to make a compelling argument of whether the investment should be pursued or not.A university computer laboratory is
develop negative impressions about careers in STEM15-16.The academic curriculum for the EMBHSSC focuses on 21st century skills, self-efficacy andteam work. At NJIT the curriculum has a space theme and is aligned with New Jersey CoreCurriculum Content Standards. Students study the properties of space, analyze and predict howobjects move on earth and in space, investigating how people live and survive in space. Inaddition to classroom lessons, students participate in hands-on activities, laboratory experiments,team-build exercises, and go on field trips. Students visit research facilities where they areintroduced to engineers and have the opportunity to see first-hand the career options available tothem if they should choose to study engineering.2
, and itsuse has been incorporated in several textbooks such as Wentworth2. MATLAB is used in varietyof engineering classes and students have good familiarity with this important software package.In most schools MATLAB is widely available in engineering laboratories with access availableto all faculty and students, mainly for classroom use. Many electrical/computer engineeringleading industries use MATLAB and its toolboxes.The first investigation in this paper demonstrates under what conditions a length of connectingwire must be treated as transmission line. Essentially, if the operating frequency is high enoughthat the wire length is a significant portion of a wavelength, then a transmission line model mustbe used. Here, a MATLAB demonstration
students to gather heat transfer coefficient data for the extended area heat exchanger DLM cartridge.Shane Riley Reynolds, Washington State University Shane Reynolds is currently an undergraduate and will be graduating with a bachelor’s of science in chemical engineering in 2012. He helped develop the latest models of the Desktop Learning Modules and he will be working for E & J Gallo Winery as a process engineer after graduation.Dr. Paul B. Golter, Washington State University Paul Golter has been the Instructional Laboratory Supervisor for Washington State University’s Chemical Engineering and Bioengineering Department for the last 10 years. He has also been a part-time graduate student at this time and recently
AC 2012-5362: OUTREACH ACTIVITIES IN TEACHING ENGINEERINGDESIGNDr. Arif Sirinterlikci, Robert Morris University Arif Sirinterlikci is a professor of engineering at Robert Morris University School of Engineering, Math- ematics, and Science. He also serves as a Director of Engineering Laboratories as well as Co-head of the Research and Outreach Center. He has been an active member of ASEE and SME, serving as an officer of both societies and engaged in engineering education and K-12 outreach.Dr. John M. Mativo, University of Georgia John Mativo is Assistant Professor at the University of Georgia, Workforce Education/Faculty of Engi- neering
among American curricula but hope that the generalstructure of the curricula selected is sufficiently representative to facilitate comparisons anduseful observations. Several observations are quickly apparent: 1) Regardless of degree, the number of instruction contact hours for a degree program in Russia is considerably higher than comparable degrees in the American system. American bachelor degrees are in the 120-130 credit hours range compared to ~220 contact hours in the Russian system. The authors realize that contact hours are different than credit hours. The hours included in Figure 1 are also a mixture of lecture and laboratory for both Russian and American systems. It has been assumed that the
facultywho are interested in incorporating educational methods and tools into their classrooms toencourage students to think more deeply about concepts central to chemical engineering. Page 25.322.3If you would like to use the AIChE Concept Warehouse, the address is http://cw.edudiv.orgAcknowledgementsThe authors gratefully acknowledge support from the National Science Foundation’s Course,Curriculum and Laboratory Improvement Program, under the grants NSF 1023099, 1022957,1022875, 1022785 “Collaborative Research: Integration of Conceptual Learning throughout theCore Chemical Engineering Curriculum.” Any opinions, findings, and conclusions
-technologycurricula start with an introductory course [6, 12, 14, 21, 25, 39, 40, 41, 43]. Improvements tothe introductory course have been proposed by including design topics early in the program toretain students’ interest [15, 16, 21, 24, 28, 43], offering laboratory instruction [3, 10, 14, 20], oremphasizing the development of problem-solving skills [1, 10, 15, 16, 24, 25, 39, 40, 41].Baylor University developed a further refinement of a problem-solving course through a self-paced subject-matter-mastery program [41].Our university also includes within its introductory course a culminating team design project toreinforce learned problem-solving principles and skill sets as an experiential-learningopportunity [2]. In many respects, this team-project effort
. Page 25.425.95. Colburn, A., “A guided primer.” Science Scope, 42-44, 2000.6. Gleixner, S., Douglas, E., and Graeve, O., “Prime Modules: Teaching Introduction to Materials Engineering in the Context of Modern Technologies.” Proceeding for the 2007 American Society of Engineering Education National Conference, Honolulu, Hawaii, June 2007.7. Gleixner, S., Douglas, E., and Graeve, O., “Engineering project laboratory modules for an introduction to materials course.” Proceeding for the 2008 American Society of Engineering Education, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, 2008.8. Douglas, E., Gleixner, S., Graeve, O., “Project Based Modules for Teaching Materials Chemistry.” http://www.engr.sjsu.edu/sgleixner/PRIME/, 2006, (Mar. 23
this study in three sections of Classical Physics II, the second semestercalculus-based introductory physics course, and in one section of the upper-level Electricity andMagnetism. Classical Physics II is taught in a modified workshop style, with lecture, laboratory,and problem-solving combined into a two and a half hour class period. The students in the courseare predominantly Electrical and Mechanical Engineering majors, but it is also a required coursefor Chemistry, Biology, Geology, and Physics majors. Electricity and Magnetism (E&M), on theother hand, is lecture based, although in the last two years the instructor has added an optionalproblem-solving session that is well attended by students. E&M is almost exclusively taken
samemeasure requires that blood samples be sent to a lab and can take approximately 1 day to obtainthe results.An entrepreneur recognized the market potential for a clinical device based on this research.However, as developed in the laboratory, the technology was too complicated and expensive forbroad clinical acceptance. Rose-Hulman Ventures provided the venue for exploring differentoptions for productizing the technology and building functional prototypes for the clinicalsetting. This project required multi-disciplinary teams with student interns drawn frombiomedical engineering, optical engineering, mechanical engineering, electrical engineering
labs in industry, university, and government laboratories. Some of the equipments deal with metal organic chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD) for LED’s and solar cells, and molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) products. The financial health of the company (all number in 1000’s) as described in its income statement is as follows5 -Year 12/2007 12/2008 12/2009 12/2010Total Revenue $402,475 $442,809 $380,149
completely online is theinability to adequately fulfill the ABET criteria associated with laboratory and experimentalrequirements.Contrary to the lack of mechanical engineering degrees offered at the undergraduate level viadistance learning, the number of distance master level mechanical engineering degrees offeredhas experienced the same sort of growth cited by Harris above for the distance educationenvironment in general.Purpose of this StudyOne of the challenges in learning more about the distance education programs in mechanicalengineering at the graduate level is the lack of a single comprehensive source that lists all of the Page
, Analysis, and Imaging Laboratory (VAIL), the GeoResources Institute (GRI), Mississippi State University. He is currently an Associate Professor with the Department of Engineering Technology, Prairie View A&M University, Prairie View, Texas. His research interests include image and signal processing, data coding, and scientific visualization.Dr. Yubin Lan, USDA ARS Yubin Lan works as an Agricultural Engineer with Aerial Application Technology Group, Areawide Pest Management Research Unit, USDA-ARS at College Station. He is also an adjunct professor and graduate faculty with Department of Biological and Agricultural Engineering, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas. Lan received his B.S. (1982) and M.S
, computational fluid dynamics (CFD), microfluidics/lab on chip, and energy research.Dr. Hyun W. Kim, Youngstown State University Hyun W. Kim is a professor of mechanical engineering in the Department of Mechanical and Indus- trial Engineering at Youngstown State University. He has been teaching and developing the Thermal Fluid Applications course and the companion laboratory course for the past few years. He is a registered Professional Engineer in Ohio and is currently conducting applied research in hydraulics and micro gas turbines. He helps the local industry and engineers with his expertise in heat transfer and thermal sciences. Kim received a B.S.E. degree from Seoul National University, a M.S.E. from the University of
Page 25.1027.4force on larger particles. Student can select values of the particle diameter and density, 3the number of particles, and the centerline fluid velocity and understand the relativemagnitudes of the different forces.Module III: Experimental The course sequence includes several experimental modules. One mainexperiment is the measurement in the aerosol wind tunnel with the use of Particle ImageVelocimeter (PIV). The aerosol wind tunnel is located in the Turbulence and MultiphaseFlow Laboratory at Clarkson University. The laser used was a 120mJ Nd:YaG laserwith a 20° adjustable width sheet generator. In this experiment, the sheet width was 0.5mm. The digital camera that was
computerengineering courses. Within these classes are permutations of 12 unique TAs and 7 uniqueinstructors. From this dataset, we are able to analyze whether factors such as varying experiencelevels and TA roles (such as discussion mediation versus laboratory instruction) affect differentcomponents of their students’ grades. When analyzing our dataset we sought to answer three basic questions: First, do TAs producestatistically significant differences in the grades of their students when compared to other TAs inthe same course? Second, if there are differences, what components of the assessment processare affected? Finally, is there a correlation between the amount of previous teaching experiencea TA has and the grade outcomes of that TA’s students? We
, North Carolina State University Laura J. Bottomley, Director, Women in Engineering and K-12 Outreach programs and Teaching As- sociate Professor, College of Engineering, North Carolina State University, received a B.S. in electrical engineering in 1984 and an M.S. in electrical engineering in 1985 from Virginia Tech. She received her Ph D. in electrical and computer engineering from North Carolina State University in 1992. Bottom- ley worked at AT&T Bell Laboratories as a member of technical staff in Transmission Systems from 1985 to 1987, during which time she worked in ISDN standards, including representing Bell Labs on an ANSI standards committee for physical layer ISDN standards. She received an Exceptional
AC 2012-5386: TEACHING COLLEGE PHYSICSDr. Bert Pariser, Technical Career Institutes Bert Pariser is a faculty member in the Electronic Engineering Technology and the Computer Science Technology departments at Technical Career Institutes. His primary responsibility is developing curricu- lum and teaching methodology for physics, thermodynamics, electromagnetic field theory, computers, and databases. Pariser has prepared grant proposals to the National Science Foundation, which produced the funding for a Fiber Optics Laboratory. He served as Faculty Advisor to the IEEE and Tau Alpha Pi National Honor Society. Pariser was instrumental in merging Tau Alpha Pi National Honor Society into the ASEE. In addition
; Engineering, Portland, OR, and Michigan Technological University,Houghton, MI.4. Coppola, R., Malyn-Smith, J. editors (2006). Preparing for the Perfect Storm—A Report on the Forum TakingAction Together: Developing a National Action Plan to Address the "T&E" of STEM. Parametric TechnologyCorporation, Needham, MA, and EDC, Newton, MA.5. Altman, J.H. (1997). Career development in the context of family experiences, in Diversity and Women’sCareer Development: from Adolescence to Adulthood, edited by Helen S. Farmer, pp. 229-242. Thousand Oaks,CA.6. Jordan, et al., (2002). Emerging issues in school, family, & community connections. National Center forFamily & Community Connections with Schools, Southwest Educational Development Laboratory
AC 2012-4919: FRESHMAN AND SOPHOMORE INTRODUCTION TOMANUFACTURING-RELATED ENGINEERING HANDBOOKS USING KNOVELDATABASESProf. Julia L. Morse, Kansas State University, Salina Julia Morse is Associate Professor and Program Coordinator for mechanical engineering technology at Kansas State University, K-State, Salina. She teaches lecture and laboratory courses in the areas of man- ufacturing, automation, and computer-aided design. Morse earned a B.S.I.E. from the University of Ten- nessee, Knoxville, and a M.S. in manufacturing systems engineering from Auburn University, where she also worked with Auburn Industrial Extension Service. Her work in industry includes engineering ex- perience in quality control, industrial
significantchanges was switching from programming in C to programming in MATLAB in the fall of 2009,since MATLAB has become the major language used in various engineering disciplines forproblem solving [1, 4, 5]. Following this, the course changed its meeting time from three times aweek to four times a week. It now uses a 2+2 format: two days of lecture per week, with eachlecture day followed by laboratory time to facilitate material understanding by hands-on practice. Page 25.705.2Approximately 120 students will attend one-hour lecture in an auditorium. The following day,students attend a small lab session, usually 26 students, to allow more contact with
that they need to work harder; boosted their self-esteem when they gotgood grades during the program; got more confident in freshman year classes; and founda study buddy. The second and third groups agreed that the mathematics and chemistryclasses served as a good review before the beginning of fall semester. Some studentsfrom the second group stated that they knew what to expect in college, and the scienceclass helped in learning how to write laboratory reports. The third group’s students statedthat the study skills class was good in teaching them time management. Page 25.711.9Discussion:In examining the results obtained, it was indicated that