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- Biomedical Division Poster Session
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- 2016 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Jennifer R. Amos, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign; Marcia Pool, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign; Karin Jensen, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign; John Vozenilek
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Diversity
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Biomedical
) Industry with topics in career fairstrategies, networking, information literacy, and corporate skills with a simulated industryinternship to create artificial membrane for kidney dialysis, ii) Healthcare professions with topicsin healthcare operations, emergency medicine, inpatient care, and electronic medical recordswith a clinical shadowing experience, and iii) Research with topics in experimental design,ethics, scientific literature, and translating technologies with a research laboratory shadowingexperience. Students self-selected into the three sections during an advising session and wereasked to provide information before classes started to help facilitate setting up the shadowingexperiences. Each section had the same number of lecture and
- Conference Session
- Biomedical Division Poster Session
- Collection
- 2016 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Emma Frow, Arizona State University; Michael R. Caplan, Arizona State University
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Biomedical
past 6 years, her curricular and extracurricular teaching with engineers and scientists has been geared towards encouraging them to think about the broader social, ethical and political dimensions of their research and training.Prof. Michael R. Caplan, Arizona State University Michael Caplan earned his undergraduate degrees from The University of Texas at Austin and his PhD from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Following post-doctoral research at Duke University Medical Center in Cell Biology, Michael joined the faculty of Arizona State University in 2003, and he is now an Associate Professor in Biomedical Engineering. Dr. Caplan’s research focuses on molecular cooperativity in drug targeting, bio-sensing
- Conference Session
- Biomedical Division Poster Session
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- 2016 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Bryan Paul Ruddy, University of Auckland; Poul Fønss Nielsen, University of Auckland
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Biomedical
writtenreports about the design process, prepare group oral presentations, utilize electrical and mechani-cal computer-aided design, and create instrumentation software in LabVIEW. These, in turn, relyon students having achieved a set of learning objectives related to electronic circuit theory, oper-ational amplifiers, and electronic components.BIOMENG 241 is organized with two lectures per week of one hour each, plus one two-hourlaboratory session per week. Lectures cover the design process, passive electronics, operationalamplifiers, filters, digital sampling, component selection, ethics, and safety. Laboratories coverbrainstorming, electronics instrumentation, soldering, operational amplifier circuits, aliasing, andquantization. Project work is
- Conference Session
- Biomedical Division Poster Session
- Collection
- 2016 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Dianne Grayce Hendricks, University of Washington; Ken Yasuhara, Center for Engineering Learning & Teaching (CELT); Alyssa Catherine Taylor, University of Washington
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Biomedical
projects, internships, extracurriculars, and othereducational experiences. In revisiting these experiences with a focus on leadership, students cannewly recognize that these experiences are helping them develop leadership skills. To facilitate reflection on leadership, students in the two featured courses are introduced to the“leadership competencies” identified by Seemiller4 including ethics, analysis, conflictnegotiation, communication, providing/receiving feedback, problem solving, decision making,and personal contributions to effectiveness of group. Promoting familiarity with these leadershipcompetencies is intended to provide students with a vocabulary to articulate their leadershipabilities, and a lens with which to reflect on their past
- Conference Session
- Hands-on Learning in BME
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- 2016 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Eric G Meyer, Lawrence Technological University; Brent L Ulrey , Western New England University
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Biomedical
Expectations Initial Ideas Incomplete, little effort. Good effort, mostly complete. Highly motivated, detailed. 5 Presentation Prototype Setup Absent, not participating. Present, participating. Fully engaged. 5 Final Pitch Incomplete, little effort. Good effort, mostly complete. Highly motivated, detailed. 5 Presentation Management/ Very little effort put into the Highly motivated. Good Good work ethic, team-effort
- Conference Session
- Education Programs in BME
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- 2016 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Miiri Kotche, University of Illinois, Chicago
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Biomedical
program).In 2015, the Monday workshops were expanded to three hours in the morning. Each three-weekrotation culminates in a final team presentation to the clinical mentors. In these workshops,students receive training in Responsible conduct of research, including ethics of human subjectresearch, User-centered design research, Contextual inquiry, Stakeholder interviewing, Analysisand synthesis of research, and Prioritizing user needs. A guest speaker leading discussion andactivities related to empathetic design, facilitates one of the workshops. Meeting times are alsoan opportunity for students to share their observations and experiences for group discussion. Thefaculty instructors guide students to identify trends, understand underlying needs and