, Engineering Technology(ET) program offers a combined electrical and mechanical engineering technology major, withseveral courses related to renewable energy, energy conversion, green energy manufacturing andsustainability. Our main goal is to create a highly skilled professional workforce ready to “hit theground running” after graduation and also having most of the qualities of a “global engineer”, acritical thinker and an innovator which is in total agreement with ABET criterion c (“an ability todesign a system, component, or process to meet desired needs within realistic constraints such aseconomic, environmental, social, political, ethical, health and safety, manufacturability, andsustainability”). Our ET program developed during the past 6-7years
., Eastern Washington University Jason Durfee is a Professor of Engineering & Design at Eastern Washington University. He received his BS and MS degrees in Mechanical Engineering from Brigham Young University. He holds a Profes- sional Engineer certification. Prior to teaching at Eastern Washington University, he was a military pilot, an engineering instructor at West Point and an airline pilot. His interests include aerospace, aviation, computational fluid dynamics, professional ethics, and piano technology.Dr. Hani Serhal Saad, Eastern Washington University B.S. and M.S. in Mechanical Engineering, Marquette University PhD. in Mechanical Engineering, Wash- ington State UniversityMs. Doris M. Munson, Eastern
graduate in December 2016 with both degrees and is looking forward to securing a teaching position within a research university and continuing his in-depth research on Engineering Ed- ucation. He is one of two scholarships awarded by NARST (National Association for Research in Science Teach- ing) to attend the ESERA (European Science Education Research Association) summer research confer- ˇ e Budˇejovice, Czech Republic in August 2016. In addition, he has been named as one of 14 ence in Cesk´ Jhumki Basu Scholars by the NARST’s Equity and Ethics Committee in 2014. He is the first and only individual from his native country and Texas Tech University to have received this prestigious award. Fur- thermore
Collaboration of Working Groups in Global Airline Operations: Leveraging Smartphone Push-To-Talk Functionalities. in 10th Annual IEEE IT Professional Conference, The College of New Jersey. 2015. Computer Society Chapter of Princeton and the Princeton Chapter of the ACM (Association for Computing Machinery): IEEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers)39. Cohn, A., et al., Analysis of the Potential for Delay Propagation in Passenger Airline Networks. 2007.40. Fernando, A.C., Business ethics and corporate governance. 2010: Pearson Education India.41. Gomes Da Costa, A.C., Por uma pedagogia da presenca [For a pedagogy of presence]. Brasilia: Fundacao Centro Brasileiro para a Infacia e Adolescéncia (FCBIA
. With great effort to haveno interference in these discussions, the PI or a dedicated undergraduate assistant attended thesesessions and took notes. The undergraduate assistant was also critical in providing support andmaintaining order and timeliness among the students on a day-to-day basis, as well as facilitatingvarious activities, workshops, and events that occurred during the program. The seminars andworkshops that were offered throughout the program were presented by experts in theirrespective fields. The subjects of the seminars included twice-exceptional education and thecreative product. Workshops were presented on responsible conduct of research and ethics,graduate school and preparing for the GRE exam, and technical writing. These
design projects for second and third year students,and the 1955 L. E. Grinter Report5 recommended twin goals for engineering education oftechnical (including analysis and creative design) and general (ethics, humanities, socialsciences, math and basic sciences), with engineering content limited to upper division classes.6Constrained by institutional credit-hour caps, courses on engineering design or laboratoryexperiences that supported design activities, such as shop or manufacturing technology, weregradually eliminated from the engineering curriculum.This approach started to reverse in the early 1990’s as employers identified the paucity of real-world content, engineering design and creative content as important shortcomings of
- ing, where she leads research projects that focus on technology in education. She holds a doctorate degree in the psychology in of education from Arizona State University and a masters degree in public health from the University of Arizona.Mr. Derrick Cornell Gilmore, Kentucky State University Derrick C. Gilmore is the Director of Research, Grants and Sponsored Programs at Kentucky State Uni- versity. In this role he provides oversight of administrative functions that include research compliance, re- search ethics, education and policy, administration, and technology transfer. His research interest include: sponsored research capacities/impacts at Minority Serving Institutions, behavioral health for African
; Radiation) Important to know • Fluid (flow) properties • Electrical fundamentals & photo-voltaic effect • Engineering design process • Foundations and ethics of team work • Problem identification and evaluations • Students should use systematic problem-solving method to evaluate and
,phenomenon, or process under investigation by thinking and thus writing and thus thinking evenmore about them” (p. 41). “Analytic Memos” can act as a “prompt or trigger for writtenreflection on the deeper and complex meanings it evokes”45 (p. 42). Examples of “AnalyticMemos” that Saldaña45 provided includes reflections about personal connections to the data,study’s research questions, codes, definitions, patterns, categories, themes, concepts, assertions,possible networks, theory, problems with the study, personal or ethical dilemmas, futuredirections of the study, other analytic memos, and study’s final reporting (pp. 43–50).“Analytical Memos” were used to help deeply contemplate the meaning of the data and usedthem to help analyze the data45
National Science Foundation. We wouldalso like to thank The ASU Polytechnic School and the evaluation team for supporting datacollection and participation in this research.Bibliography!1. Walther, Joachim, Pawley, Alice L and Sochacka, Nicki Wendy (2015) ‘Exploring Ethical Validation as a KeyConsideration in Interpretive Research Quality’, in 2015 ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition, Seattle,Washington, ASEE Conferences. [online] Available from: https://peer.asee.org/24063!2. Fontana, A. and Frey, J. H. (2005) ‘The interview’, in The Sage handbook of qualitative research, pp. 695–727.!3. Roulston, K (2010) Reflective Interviewing: A Guide to Theory and Practice, SAGE Publications. [online]Available from: http://books.google.com/books?id
software testing techniques. This preparationshould increase the students’ chances of success in both creating testable requirements for theirapplications as well as creating adequate test cases.CS/CMP 403 – Senior Problem This is capstone course of Computer Science at AAMU and a continuation of CS/CMP401 (software engineering). During this course, the student is expected to code a single,meaningful project started earlier in CS/CMP 401 and present the results of this project in class.This project must meet a set of standards for software design and documentation. Topics ofprofessional ethics and responsibilities are discussed in the class. Software-testing techniquesmust be used in this course on the selected project to ensure the quality
: The transition from H.S. to college of first-yearengineering students. Proceedings from 2013 ASEE North Central Section Conference, Columbus, OH.[26] Pascarella, E. T., & Terenzini, P. T. (2005). How college affects students: A third decade of research (2nd ed.).San Francisco, CA: Jossey- Bass.[27] Kuh, G. D. (2001). The National Survey of Student Engagement: Conceptual framework and overview ofpsychometric properties. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Center for Postsecondary Research. Retrieved fromhttp://nsse.iub.edu/pdf/psychometric_framework_2002.pdf[28] Messick, S. (1989). Meaning and values in test validation: The science and ethics of assessment. EducationalResearcher, 18(2), 5-11.[29] Ding, L., Chabay, R., Sherwood, B., &
continuously interacting with thedifferent social and material aspects of their surroundings such that each mutually constitutes theother. For a community of practice to function, members need to mutually generate andappropriate a shared repertoire of ideas, commitments, values, ethics and memories. Thiscorresponds to earlier observations by Brown et. al14 that learning communities are “bound byintricate, socially constructed webs of belief, which are essential to understanding what they do”(p.33). The co-generation of these shared practices and purposes motivates members to developand use various resources such as tools, documents, routines, expectations, vocabulary or othersymbol systems. As these resources are continuously shared back and forth
members as well as from theperspective of the team, almost as if we were in the team. Togethering is described as “ananalytical category that accounts for the ethical manner in which individuals engage, respond,and tune to each other, despite their cognitive, emotional, and other differences.”9 The three keycomponents of togethering, which build upon each other, are engaging, responding, and tuning.When a team engages, each individual team member makes a commitment, manifested in action,to work with others in the joint activity. 9 When team members respond, they make efforts tocoordinate individual contributions (their engagements) through agreements and disagreements. 9When the engagement and response contributions of team members results in the
.32Our account of Andrew’s experiences speak powerfully to these themes. At each stage of careertransition, Andrew encountered a startling gap between his expectations and assumptions aboutprofessional work, on one hand, and his lived experience of that work, on the other. Fortunately,Andrew’s personal characteristics (including personality, work ethic, attitude, etc.) likely gavehim an advantage in these situations, allowing him to develop strategies to survive and even thrivewhen faced with ambiguous job roles, incalcitrant coworkers, and sharp increases inresponsibility. Yet even the apparently resilient Andrew acknowledged the emotional andpsychological toll of these challenges, to the point of exploring other employment opportunitiesand new
below. Table 1. Summary of capstone course schedule Week Course Activity 1-4 Lectures covering the following topics: Course orientation and teamwork workshop Need analysis, conducting research, project management Safety, ethics, and other requirements Client relationship management 5-6 PUM #1 – focused on need analysis/specifications 7 Lecture on conceptual design 8–9 PUM #2 – focused on specifications/conceptual design 10 Lecture on prototype design 11 - 12 PUM #3 – focused on conceptual design
work in teams, as well as to understand themotivations and perspectives of others. Communication allows one to convey engineeringsolutions in economic terms, and to substantiate claims with data and facts. Finally, character isdisplayed through such behaviors as fulfilling commitments in a timely manner, discerning andpursuing ethical practices, and contributing to society as an active citizen. It was noted thatservice learning, as applied through engineering, embraces many of these example behaviors.Accordingly, a new hypothesis was posed for the 2014-2015 offering of the first-yearprogramming sequence: that by embracing the entrepreneurial mindset as stated by KEEN –curiosity, connection, and creating value – as well as developing various
elements from the literature.These elements include: (1) the uncertainty of interpreting the problem, constraints, and goalswithin a complex, open-ended situation;10 (2) the unpredictability of solving divergent problemsthat require the evaluation and judgment of many alternative solution paths;6, 7 (3) the uncertaintyof optimizing a design that satisfies the competing demands and constraints of the client as wellas safety, economical, environmental, and ethical concerns;5, 7 (4) the uncertainty of solvingdynamic problems that require a person to constantly adjust, reevaluate and evolve asunanticipated problems arise;6, 9 and (5) designing solutions within imperfect models andincomplete information that requires all engineers to reason through
Engineering Curriculum Abstract In addition to providing the technical expertise required to solve 21st century problems, theengineers of 2020 will be expected to adapt to a continuously evolving environment while oper-ating outside the limits of their discipline and remaining ethically grounded. Their undergraduatetraining must therefore be designed to nurture engineers to transcend traditional disciplinaryboundaries, and to communicate, transfer knowledge, and collaborate across technical and non-technical boundaries. One approach to this challenge is to incorporate biomimicry or bio-inspireddesign into the engineering curriculum. Our research aims to create instructional resources thatprovide exposure to the abundance of design examples that
engineering ABET criteria may force an even furthernarrowing of the engineering curriculum and thus limit the development of the so-called “21stcentury skills” for all students [25], organizations such as NSBE and SHPE continue to provideunique opportunities for engineering students of color to develop many of the professional skillsoutside of the classroom such as those described in the Engineer 2020 vision. These twoprofessional organizations provide unique opportunities for students to acquire skills and buildknowledge that is not (or cannot be) taught in traditional engineering classrooms. AfricanAmerican and Latina/o engineering students develop skills such as communication, ethics, andtime and resource management through interactions with the
regular progress/status reports; schedules Plan/Manual 29 user manual or training manual; business plan; manufacturing plan General 17 varies; client determined deliverables; many deliverables; the usual Student peer evaluations; ethics assignments; individual reflections; classAccountability 16 attendance and participation Final report Interim reports Final recommendation Patent disclosure Conference or journal paper 0 50 100 150 200 250
ASCE President in 2004, envisioned a practice oriented degree in200715. She states: “The master of professional engineering management is designed to meet the needs of those who are already at work in professional practice—to provide them with the professional skills and knowledge they need to succeed in the 21st-century workplace without requiring them to place their careers on hold while they complete graduate school. This master’s program will provide engineers with the knowledge and skills now required of engineering professionals—specifically, an understanding of globalization; of the importance of ethics and professionalism; of how to work effectively with diverse, multinational teams; and
modeling learning and reasoning processes. In particular, he is attracted to fine-grained analysis of video data both from a micro- genetic learning analysis methodology (drawing on knowledge in pieces) as well as interaction analysis methodology. He has been working on how learners’ emotions are coupled with their conceptual and epistemological reasoning. He is also interested in developing models of the dynamics of categorizations (ontological) underlying students’ reasoning in physics. Lately, he has been interested in engineering design thinking and engineering ethics education. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2016 “Turning Away” from the Struggling Individual
session (humanitarian engr) Professional Skills Spring Assignment to designated on-campus dormitory Learning Community 2015 Group sessions on college success and life skills Instruction Strategist College and civil engineering student mentoring Life Mentoring Moral and Ethical Development Educational Professional Skills Seminar Multi-part diversity training Professional Skills Girl Scout Engineering Outreach Event Community Service Local engineering competition Learning Community Field trip/ mentoring
Major Identification Weeks • Ethics in STEM professions 11-16 • Experiential Learning Labs (Options of UCF or Industry Labs) • Synthesizing and integrating experiential learning lab experiences • STEM comparison and Fit Chart (personality, interests, values, social, cultural and numerical fit score) • Major Selection and Career and Major Action PlanningThe STEM Seminar is required of all participants who were undecided or non-STEM, butdeclared a STEM major directly before the first semester of enrollment. The importance here isto embed these new recruits into a community of STEM learners, seeing others with similargoals and aspirations, to help clarify and confirm their STEM decision. The STEM
-interview is conducted with the participant. Pre-determined questions focus on their driving experience, their assessment of aspects of thedriving interaction and interface, and their recollection of various aspects of the drive-along experience and their response.These research procedures are minimally risky, they are driving their personally ownedvehicle, on quiet campus roads or parking lots, and riding a car with “trained” passengersas researchers. Two elements outline ethical consideration in the study:a. Audio and video recording occurred. The recordings were used to code participantbehavior, to examine and transcribe interactions with the existing automation.Additionally, videos may be shown for educational purposes, in classrooms, labs
of Engineering in the New Century.9 In this report, the NAS identifies key attributesthat engineers in the 21st century are expected to exhibit to ensure their success and the successof the engineering profession. The key attributes are listed as: strong analytical skills,practical ingenuity, creativity, communication, business and management, leadership,high ethical standards, professionalism, dynamism, agility, resilience, and flexibility, andbecoming lifelong learners. The NAS also prepared reports entitled The Engineer of 2010,Rising Above the Gathering Storm, and Examination of the U.S. Air Force’s Science,Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics Workforce Needs in the Future and Its Strategy toMeet Those Needs.9-13 One statement is
]. However, there is some evidence to suggest that ambassadormembership does benefit the undergraduate students and their burgeoning sense of themselves asprofessionals, which involves a commitment to serving “the public with specialized knowledgeand skills through commitment to the field’s public purposes and ethical standards” [7]. Forexample, Anagnos and colleagues [8] surveyed students in two such programs and found reportedbenefits including exploration of career goals, a sense of belonging to the engineeringcommunity, and a perception that they were making a difference in the lives of others. In engineering, it may be argued that individuals from minority groups (women,individuals of color) benefit especially from professional
needs within realistic constraints such aseconomic, environmental, social, political, ethical, health and safety, manufacturability, andsustainability”72. A thorough understanding and mastery of the design process is necessary tosolve these difficult challenges; however, one of the most critical stages of the design process,prototyping, has remained largely unstructured and unstudied. This work evaluated the impact onprototyping awareness of a guided prototyping framework. Future work will explore how PFXmay help engineering students test and iterate on designs faster and more effectively. Finally, our work aligns with the National Science Foundation’s second strategic goal “stimulateinnovation and address societal needs through research