. For all eight slides presenting the complex concept of how magneticresonance imaging works, the visual evidence had the same design as in the assertion-evidenceslides. While the size of that evidence was typically smaller, the auditorium in which theexperiment occurred had a relatively larger projected image than exists in most rooms. If thevisual evidence of the topic-subtopic slides significantly affected the results, then the design ofvisual evidence appears to play a larger role in the comprehension of complex concepts thanpreviously assumed.Introduction In engineering conferences, meetings, and classrooms, presentation slides are oftenused to communicate key concepts and factual details. A recent sampling of several thousandslides
. Page 25.748.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2012 Improving Recruitment and Retention for Engineering Degree Students in a Rural Highly Underserved Community AbstractThis paper presents an ongoing STEP-NSF and Department of Education-CCRAA fundedproject and recent findings. The project promotes the increase of engineering enrollment fromsecondary schools through the baccalaureate level among students from Northern New MexicoCollege (NNMC). NNMC is a minority serving institution located in a rural area with povertylevels below the level established by the Federal Government. Hispanic and Native Americanstudents constitute 73% and 11% of
investigator in 70 projects and authored more than 130 technical papers. Sisiopiku has been recognized by many organizations for her professional achievements including the Institute of Transportation Engineers, the Federal Highway Administration, the Illinois Association of Highway En- gineers, and the Women’s Transportation seminar. She is the recipient of the 2007 President’s Excellence in Teaching Award and the 2010 Dean’s Award for Excellence in Mentorship. She is an active member of the Institute of Transportation Engineers and the Transportation Research Board.Dr. Isabel C. Scarinci, University of Alabama, Birmingham Isabel Scarinci is currently a professor at the University of Alabama at Birmingham’s Division of Preven
single course, tointegration of leadership concepts into technical course offerings and other unique expectationsof students to take on leadership projects at their school and report on the experience. It isdifficult to see a generalized theme, but one might assume that a primary focus of the leadershipofferings is based on a belief that a graduating student can lead from any level in his/herorganization. Emphasis is placed on students exploring their own leadership abilities and theways in which they influence group outcomes: interpersonal skills, judgment, moral courage,innovation, sustainability, global collaboration and emotional intelligence appear as key topics,as does the notion of the interrelatedness of ethics and sustainability in a
designed for undergraduates which focuses on understanding how toprocess speech signals. We provide examples of the curriculum, what is covered and howwe cover it. We also provide examples of laboratory projects that are used to complementthe class lecture sessions. We use MATLAB software in all the lab projects.We also discuss possible implementations of the speech coding and processing usinghardware such as DSPs. In the future, we plan to introduce the use of FPGAs for thisapplication as well.The paper is divided into five sections. In Section 2, we start with the discussion ofSystems and DSP curriculum improvement. In Section 3, we give some details of theMultimedia Systems I: Speech course. In Section 4, we present a sample course projecton
be adopted in2013For delivery of the completed modules, the WEI began a cooperative project with NEES(Network of Earthquake Engineering Simulations) to host the WEI developed courseware ontheir NEESacademy powered by the NEEShub infrastructure. Starting in late 2010, the intent ofthe collaboration was to apply developed methodologies to the NSF sponsored NEES EducationOutreach and Training (EOT) programs. In the spring quarter of 2011, the pilot program waslaunched using Moodle, an open-source learning management system, housed and maintained byNEES (www. nees.org). The pilot program, using the online course content provided by WEI,launched the hybrid /blended timber undergraduate design courses at two separate universities asa first step
AC 2012-4757: TAKING MATTERS INTO YOUR OWN HANDS: IS CRE-ATING AN E-TEXTBOOK FOR YOU?Dr. Kathy Schmidt Jackson, Pennsylvania State University Kathy Jackson is a Senior Research Associate at Pennsylvania State University’s Schreyer Institute for Teaching Excellence. In this position, she promotes Penn State’s commitment to enriching teaching and learning. Jackson works in all aspects of education including faculty development, instructional design, engineering education, learner support, and evaluation.Prof. Randy L. Vander Wal, Pennsylvania State University Randy Vander Wal has published more than 100 papers, and has numerous research projects in the areas of energy conversion, storage and efficiency. Related work
for the ASCE Concrete Canoe competition team. She teaches a two-quarter technical elective course, which integrates not just the technical components of the concrete canoe project, but vital project management skills. Professionally, Van Den Einde is a member of ASCE and is currently the Secretary and Treasurer for the San Diego Earthquake Engineering Research Institute (EERI) chapter. Van Den Einde has her heart in the students’ interests.Mr. Terrance R. Mayes, University of California, San Diego Terrance Mayes serves as Director, Student Life and Diversity, for the University of California, San Diego, Jacobs School of Engineering. In this role he founded, alongside the school’s diversity advisory council, the
with him then he'd help me out through the class, so that's why I didn't drop it. (Interviewee 5)In addition, some students showed improved self-efficacy with regards to being involved withtechnical projects. Self-efficacy5, how confident a person feels in their abilities to do something,is used here to describe situations where students emphasized learning something about Page 25.1320.5themselves through the course that showed improved self-efficacy. As much as I disliked this class and it was a struggle for me, I did well when all was said and done and I realized that even though I … don't see myself as someone who is good at these
A&M University Page 25.1372.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2012 Training Tomorrow’s Designers: a Study on the Design FixationThe presence of rich pictorial stimuli around designers is a factor that affects the generation ofnovel ideas. Designers tend to duplicate features from the examples they encounter in theirimmediate surroundings or in their day-to-day activities. This adhesion to the existing featuresfrom their surroundings is termed as “design fixation”. This study explores the fixation effect ofexamples provided to novices as a part of their class project and ways
3APPR XXX Approved Elective/EEGR243 3 EEGR 4XX ECE Elective*** 3HUMA 202 Intro To Humanities II 3 BIOL 101 Biology 4 17 17FOURTH YEAR- (FIRST SEMESTER) FOURTH YEAR - (SECOND SEMESTER)EEGR 390 Principles of Design 2EEGR 400 Intro To Professional 1 EEGR 491 Sr. Design Project II 2 PracticeEEGR 490 Sr. Design Project I 1 EEGR4XX ECE Elective *** 3EEGR 4XX ECE Elective*** 3 EEGR 4XX ECE Elective
world changers and who direct projects that change the world.This paper will document the design, development, and early implementation of these two densenetworks, including the challenges faced throughout these phases, lessons learned, and earlyassessment results.IntroductionThe KEEN NetworkThe Kern Entrepreneurship Education Network, or KEEN, is a consortium of 21 privateuniversities and colleges located across the United States that are committed to working togetherto change engineering education in the United States. Incepted in 2005, the mission of the KernEntrepreneurship Education Network (KEEN) is to graduate engineers equipped with anentrepreneurial mindset who will contribute to business success and in so doing, transform theU.S
Mechanical Engineering at the University of Texas, San Antonio (UTSA). He has been involved with lean implementation projects with several organizations. He has done lean work in the manufacturing, service, and other industries. He is also working to develop and teach a series of lean short courses that CAMLS is currently offering to industry. His current research interests include lean concepts, lean healthcare, lean simulation training games, simulation, operations research, and multi-criteria optimization. Page 25.1104.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2012
on the Dynamics Concept Inventory, developing model-eliciting activities in mechanical engineering courses, inquiry-based learning in mechanics, and design projects to help promote adapted physical activities. Other professional interests include aviation physiology and biomechanics.Dr. Peter Wolfsteiner, Munich University of Applied Sciences Peter Wolfsteiner is professor in mechanical engineering at the Munich University of Applied Sciences (HM) in Germany. He received his Ph.D. degree in M.E. from the Technical University Munich. Prior to joining the faculty at HM, he worked at Knorr-Bremse Group as a manager in the area of new technologies for rail vehicle braking systems. He teaches undergraduate and
average ACT scoresthan Caucasians, the proportion of these minorities that become engineers from the proposedprogram is expected to be larger than that of current graduating classes of engineers. Thissolution can be implemented immediately and is projected to be cost neutral to the US taxpayerbecause of additional federal and state taxes paid by the new engineers relative to those taxesthey would have paid (in some other profession) without this program.Keywords: retention rates; graduation rates; ACT; summer programs; engineer pipeline;Background The solution proposed to the well-documented United States engineer pipelinechallenge[4,5,6,7,8,9,10] has been revisited and revised as a result of another year’s data. [1] Thesolution previously
Operationally Responsive Space) will be introduced as well.We identified six outcomes: 1. Ability to define the necessary steps in the spacecraft integration & test sequence and justify their inclusion. 2. Ability to develop spacecraft test plans that trace back to mission requirements. 3. Ability to execute the following spacecraft test plans and analyze the results: functional checkout, vacuum testing, thermal cycling and vibration qualification. 4. Ability to optimize project schedules in the presence of competing goals of cost, performance and deadlines. 5. Ability to create and present verification reports according to NASA/Air Force standards. 6. Ability to work in multidisciplinary teams.In order to achieve those
engineering design education, innovative design, global design, and global engineering education. He has introduced multinational design projects in a freshman introductory engineering design course in collaboration with institutions in Latin America and the Caribbean as part of his effort to contribute to the formation of world class engineers for the Americas. He is actively involved in the International Division of the American Society for Engineering Education, in the Latin American and Caribbean Consortium of Engineering Institution (LACCEI) as Vice-President for Research, and in the International D+Federation of Engineering Education Societies as member of the Executive Board.Dylan Connole
.) How is the concept of cyberlearning describedin the scholarly literature? 2.) What funding has DUE provided for cyberlearning projects over the past 10years? 3.) What types of cyberlearning awards has DUE made over the past 10 years? 4.) What are theperceptions of cyberlearning among a subset of NSF Program Officers? 5.) Based on the quantitative andqualitative findings, what are possible directions DUE could take with its support for cyberlearning? This study yielded many findings. In scholarly literature, cyberlearning is described using theforms in which it may appear (e.g., games, virtual environments), its purpose, attributes, and outcomes.Over the past ten years, DUE has provided approximately $100M to over 800 cyberlearning
the labs and hands-onexperiences.This paper focuses on the new sophomore level design course which has been piloted as anabbreviated ten-week quarter long version in Autumn 2011 and Winter 2012. The sophomorecourse fills, in part, the major gap in design education that exists between the fundamentals ofengineering course sequence (and its honors equivalent, both of which serve as a prerequisite tothe major) and the senior-year capstone design course. And while the first year course sequencesinclude a design-build project, there exists a wide variance in the machine skills and experienceof entry-level Mechanical Engineering students. This new sophomore course attempts to level-set the practical knowledge of machining among students in addition
(impulsive versus analytic) and instructional strategies to advance their ways of thinking (the use of prediction items and classroom voting with clicker technology; the use of mathematical tasks to provoke students’ intellectual need for the concepts they are expected to learn). He is also involved in the iMPaCT-STEM project to investigate the use of programming activities to foster student learning of foundational algebraic concepts.Dr. Amy Elizabeth Wagler, University of Texas, El PasoDr. Eric A. Freudenthal, University of Texas, El Paso Eric Freudenthal is an Associate Professor of computer science at the University of Texas, El Paso
provides a low-cost instrument that can be used inundergraduate laboratories where more expensive commercial spectrum analyzers are notavailable; secondly, it is suitable for use as a student project. Page 25.32.2II. Design ApproachA common method to design spectrum analyzers consists of implementing a bank of band-passfilters followed by bank of detectors that are fed into an electronic sweep switching device. Theswitching device output is displayed on a CRT to provide spectral of the input signal. The blockdiagram of such scheme is provided in Figure-1. Such implementation, as described is verydifficult due to the great number of filters that
AC 2012-3065: A HANDS-ON COURSE IN DATA COMMUNICATIONSFOR TECHNOLOGISTSDr. Aurenice Menezes Oliveira, Michigan Technological University Aurenice Oliveira is an Assistant Professor in the Electrical Engineering Technology program at Michigan Technological University. She received the Ph.D. degree in electrical engineering from the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, USA, in 2005. Her current research interests include communication sys- tems, digital signal processing, optical fiber systems, and engineering education. Oliveira is the Michigan Tech Project Director of the U.S.-Brazil Engineering Education Consortium funded by FIPSE-U.S. De- partment of Education. Oliveira has also been contributing to STEM K-12
series of foundation courses in mathematics, computing, writingand communication. This is equivalent to the junior year of a traditional undergraduate degree.During the second year, students have the opportunity to choose one of the program tracks andspecialize in their area of interest. This is equivalent to the senior year of an undergraduatedegree. A capstone project (senior thesis) provides the students with the opportunity to tackle areal world problem and work on an independent project for an entire year. Table 1 provides anoverview of the structure of this program and how the courses are distributed over the two years. First year Foundation courses in: Mathematics and statistics
in the curriculum. Statics,computing, electrical science, thermodynamics and a course in materials (either materials scienceor strength of materials) are the most commonly incorporated traditional engineering courses inthe curriculum.As seen in Figure 4, all of the engineering management programs require a course in operationsand production management as well as a course in project management. A course in qualitymanagement is also a part of most of the curricula.Most engineering management curricula also have required courses that are more traditionallyconsidered to be business courses. The common business courses that are required are a coursein economics, and also accounting (cost, managerial or financial) and marketing.All schools also
, most importantly, find and focus on the barriers that impede theadvancement of women faculty within the College of Sciences and Technology (CST). Onecomponent of the project was the development of a climate survey, which was based uponprevious surveys at ADVANCE (research-intensive) universities, but was specifically adapted toaddress faculty issues unique to comprehensive universities. The development of our surveyinvolved our Faculty Leadership Team (FLT), our department chairs/directors, and several otherfaculty members. This paper focuses on the findings from the comprehensive institution climatesurvey that we developed, which consisted of approximately 100 questions in seven areas ofclimate indicators: employment demographics, job
obtain and organizeinformation at a national level that is not routinely available to academic decision makers,specifically industrial needs and how academic practices address those needs. This paperexamines each of these subjects in the following sections, and then discusses implementationstrategies.RelevancyIs engineering economics, or any other specific topic, relevant and how important is it?Traditionally, science has sought to provide knowledge, and engineers put that knowledge to apractical use. This would seem to make engineering economics relevant because two of theprimary criteria of the utility of an engineering project are: Does it work? Does it provide a return on its investment?Nonetheless, if the National Council of
AC 2012-4467: EFFECTIVE ENGINEERING PROFESSIONAL DEVEL-OPMENT FOR ELEMENTARY EDUCATORSKristin Sargianis, Museum of Science, Boston Kristin Sargianis is a Program Manager on the EiE Professional Development team. She has been a part of the EiE project for over seven years, working on curriculum development as well as professional development and research/evaluation efforts. Sargianis was previously a K-2 classroom teacher at Anova: The Massachusetts School for Science, Creativity, and Leadership. She received her B.S. in biology from Cornell University and has worked as a research assistant conducting studies on ecological and marine systems.Sharlene Yang, Museum of Science, Boston Sharlene Yang is the
. Introduction1.1. MotivationBasic linear circuit analysis is frequently a fundamental engineering core course requirement forelectrical engineering nonmajors, as well as for electrical engineering majors, and is therefore avery widely taught subject. For electrical engineering majors, the skills learned in this course areessential for their success in subsequent courses. A bad or unsuccessful learning experience maycause students to change their major or drop out of engineering altogether. Traditional lecture-based instruction uses a “one size fits all” approach that fails to adapt to the widely varyinglearning styles and backgrounds of the students. The goal of this project is to develop computer-aided instruction tools to increase the student success
) More time should be spent on hands on projects in I can effectively lead a team. Science and Technology projects at school. (+0.13) (-0.14) In lab activities, I can use what I I’m interested in learning more about how have learned to build a solution. computers work. (+0.11) (-0.11) Table 1 - The most positively and negatively correlated variables related to student retention.Two of the factors correlated with leaving the club are an interest
accreditation activities, taught at the undergraduate and graduate levels, and conducted faculty development workshops on teaching and assessment worldwide.Dr. Rochelle Letrice Williams, ABET Rochelle Williams recently joined the ABET headquarters staff as the Educational Research and As- sessment Manager in the Professional Services Department. In this role, Williams manages ABET’s educational offerings on a global scale and leads technical education research projects. Prior to joining ABET, Williams held two positions at Baton Rouge Community College: Science Laboratory Manager and Adjunct Faculty in the Mathematics Department. In addition, Williams has worked closely with the National Science Foundation’s Next