-8) at Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico.Arpit Shah, Drexel University, School of Biomedical Engineering, Science, and Health Systems. Arpit Shah is a Ph.D candidate in Drexel’s School of Biomedical Engineering , Science, and Health Systems.Mr. Jay J. Bhatt, Drexel University (Eng. & Eng. Tech.) Jay Bhatt is responsible for building library collections in engineering subject areas, outreach to fac- ulty and students, and teaching information and research skills to faculty and students in Engineering, Biomedical Engineering, and related subject areas. He provides individual and small group consultations to students, instructional sessions to specific classes, online research support in both face to face
National Laboratory. His research includes modeling steady state and transient behavior of advanced energy systems, inclusive of their thermal management, and the characterization and optimization of novel cycles. He has advised graduate and undergradu- ate research assistants and has received multi-agency funding for energy systems analysis and develop- ment. Sponsor examples include the National Science Foundation, Department of Energy and NASA. Dr. Haynes also develops fuel cells and alternative energy systems curricula for public and college courses and experimental laboratories. Additionally, he is the co-developer of the outreach initiative, Educators Lead- ing Energy Conservation and Training Researchers of
committee for several years. He has invested over twenty-five years in the development and maintenance of a multimillion dollar manufacturing laboratory facility complete with a full scale, fully integrated manufacturing sys- tem. Professor Harriger has been a Co-PI on two NSF funded grants focused on aerospace manufacturing education and is currently a Co-PI on the NSF funded TECHFIT project, a middle school afterschool pro- gram that teaches students how to use programmable controllers and other technologies to design exercise games. Additionally, he co-organizes multiple regional automation competitions for an international con- trols company.Dr. Michael Gerald Flynn, College of CharlestonSusan Marie Flynn, College of
newcode in hardware. In addition, they applied Gabor filter functions for edge detection, whichallows the detection of multiple edges in the same image an improvement to the previous versionof the software. Another improvement was the use of multiple simple and complex cell functionsto scan the image frame, allowing a better simulation of the biological brain function.In 2013 the COMET’s program was expanded to include a Mechanical Engineering group. The Page 26.251.8four interns in the group worked on the development of a low-cost dynamic plant and dataacquisition Haptic Paddle laboratory apparatus for use in teaching upper division topics
teaching students the fundamentalsand applications of engineering design and modeling.● dimensioning and tolerancing ● developing algorithms ● roots of equations● ANSI Y14.5 Standards ● modeling basic engineering ● interpolation● basic programming systems ● systems of linear● basic CAD ● data assimilation and equations interpretation ● design with constraintsEngineering Communication - These labs provide opportunities for students to communicatetheir findings in the other laboratories through a series of written and oral exercises.● email etiquette ● editing
: laboratories woven throughout finaltwo years of most programs. The students would also benefit from taking basic engineeringcourses, i.e. math and science courses at the local institution closer to their “homes” with arelative small class size. A benefit to the mainstream institution would be that they gaindiversity in their graduating classes without proportional expansion of general student recruitingactivities. It is also seen that there might be some nontrivial benefit to participating faculty atmainstream institutions with respect to experiencing effective teaching approaches for diversestudents. Both groups of academics recognize the opportunity for development of infrastructurein the local tribal communities in response to some serious needs of
M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in electrical engineering from the University of Wyoming in 1992, 1994, and 1998, respectively. During his Ph.D. studies, he also obtained a graduate minor in statistics. He is currently an Associate Professor and Undergraduate Coordinator with the Electrical and Computer Engineering department at North Dakota State University, where he teaches courses and conducts research in signal processing. Since its inception in 2008, Dr. Green has been an active member of the NDSU Advance FORWARD Advocates, a group of male faculty dedicated to effecting departmental and institutional change in support of gender equality. As part of this group, he regularly trains men, at NDSU and other institutions
TAMIU. He and his team was recently awarded a $1.2 million NSF award to promote mathematics education in the area of need in Laredo through pro- viding scholarships to juniors and seniors at TAMIU to prepare talented, skillful, and highly qualified teachers to teach immediately after graduation. Dr. Goonatilake was a recipient of the Scholar of the Year Award in 2006 and the University Honors Faculty of the Year in 2013. He was a PI for more than three program-funded grants and Co-PI for more than 10 different program grants since joining TAMIU. He has a very active research agenda that involves network anomaly detection, probability, disease preva- lence, and microeconomics. He was extensively involved with many
experiences.Dr. Marie C Paretti, Virginia Tech Marie C. Paretti is an Associate Professor of Engineering Education at Virginia Tech, where she co- directs the Virginia Tech Engineering Communications Center (VTECC). Her research focuses on com- munication in engineering design, interdisciplinary communication and collaboration, design education, and gender in engineering. She was awarded a CAREER grant from the National Science Foundation to study expert teaching in capstone design courses, and is co-PI on numerous NSF grants exploring com- munication, design, and identity in engineering. Drawing on theories of situated learning and identity development, her work includes studies on the teaching and learning of communication
Barringer, Florida Gulf Coast University Dr. Tony A. Barringer currently serves as Associate Provost/ Associate VP for Faculty Affairs at Florida Gulf Coast University. He also serves as full professor in the Division of Justice Studies where he teaches in the area of criminal justice. Dr. Barringer has presented and published widely as his research is focused on the plight of minorities in the criminal justice system. Dr. Barringer has been PI or co-PI on grants in excess of one million dollars. He is truly committed to the area of diversity and all of its associated benefits.Mr. Anthony M. Hyatt Mr. Anthony Hyatt Senior Coordinator of Community Outreach Florida Gulf Coast University Phone: (239) 590-1034 Email
1998 Department ofEducation longitudinal study on women and men majoring in engineering, it is the student’sperception about their credit overloads in engineering that influence their decisions to leaveengineering due to the high ratio of classroom, laboratory, and study hours to credit awarded.Engineering pathways are used rather than pipelines to describe the students trajectory andstoryline narrated by the individual student. It is not a paved roadway with exit ramps at set intervals, rather a trail that one constructsalong contours of the terrain. One can wander away from a rough trail marked by the footstepsof predecessors, finding another pathway that may fit one’s proclivities and changing valuesthere from here. And “there” is
Diversity track of the Teaching and Learning Department at Vanderbilt’s Peabody College. Lydia has a bachelors’ degree in Sociology (Georgetown University) and a master’s degree in Special Education (The University of Vir- ginia). She has worked on both qualitative and quantitative research projects spanning diverse topics such as revitalized neighborhoods and their schools, early childhood skill development, and the experiences of STEM graduate students.Mr. Stacey Houston II, Vanderbilt University Page 26.555.1 Stacey L. Houston, II is a Ph.D. student in the Department of Sociology at Vanderbilt University
further argued students who complete advanced mathematics and science courseswhile in high school are more academically prepared to pursue and succeed in STEM degreeprograms and professions2,7–12. Adelman8 explains that students at a minimum need to completethree and three-quarters worth of credits in mathematics in high school to successfully pursue abachelor’s degree. Further, students need to complete two and half credits in science, with twoof those having a laboratory portion8. Adelman8 recommends as mathematics courses calculus,pre-calculus, or trigonometry, and the science courses he recommends includes a combination ofbiology, chemistry, and physics. These are the same courses ANSEP recommends high schoolstudents to complete19. Adelman8