final step was to have OEM engineers lecture on the importance and relevance of theintegration of analysis and experimental techniques. The students’ reflection on collective learningwrapped up the course, and helped to prepare them for competence and relevance in their ownautomotive engineering careers.Course Project PreparationIn order to accomplish the previously described course objectives, two of the faculty membersworked in collaboration with a professional engineer and two additional participants from theOEM research lab. A test setup mimicking the OEM laboratory was constructed (Figure 2), andall components were checked for safety as a practice run was performed in attendance of theprofessional engineer. With the support of the
passivelearning is actually associated with a decrease in course performance.2,3 Conversely, activelearning includes the use of pedagogical strategies that encourage student engagement withcourse material. Research shows that when students reflect, discuss, ask questions, or pose andresolve problems, they stand a better chance of actually learning and understanding coursematerial, compared to a traditional lecture wherein they passively receive information from theinstructor.4 More specifically, when students are actively involved in their learning process, theyreceive a host of benefits including improvements in retention of information,5,6 examperformance2,7 and thinking and writing skills8 to name a few.Of course there are some challenges associated
cards. The program sent all thecards together in a package ahead of the riders, so they would receive them when they stoppedfor lodging.Social media interactions between BME CUReS REU participants and current Texas 4000 ridersThe Texas 4000 students on the bike ride post photos and notes to the Texas 4000’s websitethrough a social media aggregator. Similarly, the BME CUReS REU participants post to theREU program’s website through a blog with photos and commentary. Blog post content variesfrom reflections on research and the impact of cancer, to letters to the Texas 4000 student riders,to fun photos from local social trips. The program shares this blog and relevant postings with theTexas 4000 throughout the 10 weeks.Adoption of Texas 4000
this materialare those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National ScienceFoundation.Bibliography[1] S. G.-O. a. E. O. Sheybani, "Retaining Minority Students in Engineering: Undergraduate Research in Partnership with NASA," in ASEE Annual Conference, San Antonio, Texas, June 2012.[2] C. a. Z. D. Alvarado, "Women in CS: an evaluation of three promising practices," in Proceedings of the 41st ACM technical symposium on Computer science education, 2010.
contactwith their home mentors throughout the summer program. Following the program, homeinstitution mentors continue mentoring by helping to reflect on the summer experience andprepare for conference presentations. The REU faculty members continue to mentor their REUstudents after the program, but students have direct access to their home institution mentors. Toencourage collaboration with the home institutions, we submitted press releases with a shortstudent biography and information on their REU research and national presentations. Thesereleases were well received.AssessmentInteractions with home institution mentors are self-reported by students in a pre-program surveyand include mode and frequency. Students are requested to meet with their home
aortic valve dis- ease. Currently, she is investigating cyber-based student engagement strategies in flipped and traditional biomedical engineering courses. She aspires to understand and improve student attitude, achievement, and persistence in student-centered courses. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2016 Work in Progress: Evaluation of the Concept Mapping in a Student-centered Biomaterials CourseIntroductionConcept mapping is a reflective technique used for teaching practices in science and engineeringclassrooms. It requires students, either individually or part of a team, to create an intellectualframework that shows major ideas and emphasizes their
developed under the guidance of the following design principles: The workshop should entail approximately six hours of professional learning time Facilitators should include experts, practitioners, and seasoned TAs Participants should work in table groups of approximately eight people Sessions should make use of a diverse set of delivery modes, such as individual reflection and planning, small-group collaboration, and whole-group discussions Sessions should model what effective learning environments look like Participants’ experience and expertise should be acknowledged and leveraged Content should be based on research and proven educational practices A majority of the activities should be
coursework compared to only 40 percent in the GES group. Three quarters(75%) of the HES students reported that scholarships allowed them to pursue their preferredmajors and made it possible for them to do research or participate in service learningopportunities (significantly higher than the GES group). While 60 percent of the GES studentsagreed that scholarships allowed them to pursue their preferred majors, no GES studentsindicated that the scholarships made it possible for them to pursue research or service learningprojects, which was a statistically significant difference. Another significant gap between the twogroups is reflected in the 55 percent of HES students who affirmed that scholarships had giventhem more time to research graduate
Paper ID #14472Is Student Performance in CHE Core Courses Affected by Time ElapsedSince Completion of Material and Energy Balance Course Sequence?Dr. Kevin D. Dahm, Rowan University Kevin Dahm is a Professor of Chemical Engineering at Rowan University. He earned his BS from Worces- ter Polytechnic Institute (92) and his PhD from Massachusetts Institute of Technology (98). He has pub- lished two books, ”Fundamentals of Chemical Engineering Thermodynamics” and ”Interpreting Diffuse Reflectance and Transmittance.” He has also published papers on effective use of simulation in engineer- ing, teaching design and engineering
support this, Hithcock & Hughes also argue that reflecting, criticising and putting forward a more informed view to the educational process would be possible by doing research in education. Consequently, the educational practice could benefit from the outcomes of such research. Also, there has been strong links between research in education and the research traditions of the social sciences which both are complex and complicated themes 15. v. The final shift entitled the influence of ‘Information, Computational and Communication Technology (ICCT)’ on engineering education.Having the above shifts in engineering education in mind, it is believed that individuals differin regard to what mode of instruction
become a valued resource for business incubator programs throughout Virginia and her success as a business consultant is reflected in the successful outcomes of her clients. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2016 Beyond "The Innovator's DNA:" Systematic Development of Creative Intelligence in an Engineering Entrepreneurship ProgramIn a seminal paper published in the Harvard Business Review in 2009 and titled “The Innovator’sDNA,” Dyer, Gregersen, and Christensen argue that there are "five discovery skills thatdistinguish the most innovative entrepreneurs from other executives." The specific skills theyidentified through their research were (1) associating, (2) questioning, (3
limitwithout any kind of visual aid. This forces the student to work a mental schema and to practiceoral communication skills. During the presentations the students are also evaluated on theguidelines received in Unit 4.B. RA II and Ability ( i): The recognition of the need for continuous learningAccording to the proposal of Candy [17], there are two areas that the student must develop inorder to achieve the continuous learning: (a) will be able to do (motivation): curious, disciplined,analytical, reflective, responsible, creative, independent and (b) can be done (ability): hasdeveloped skills of search and retrieval of information, has knowledge about the learningprocess, develops and uses its evaluation criterion (critical thinking).Extending the
to the globalenvironment is the international senior capstone project introduced at the Purdue PolytechnicInstitute and is fully described elsewhere12. This new approach to increase the awareness inengineering students of the challenges of global teams has already resulted in multi-national teamsinvolving students from Peru, Germany, Poland, and the Netherlands and coming in the nearfuture, teams including Denmark, Russia, Australia and Dubai. This mixing of students fromdifferent nationalities stimulated this interest in learning motivation so that project topics for theseteam can be selected that would appeal to a mixed nationality team.MotivationMotivation is a crosscutting element of personality. Motivation reflects the level of identity
form of workshops were delivered to the team duringweekly meetings to develop and enhance skills in team development, communications, projectmanagement, business development, brainstorming, and ideation. In addition, engineeringstudents collaborated with business students during the business management course to providetechnical expertise during market research and analysis and students presented to one another ontopics related to their particular disciplines. This paper describes the workshops that weredelivered, student reflections and feedback, and lessons learned throughout the experience basedon faculty observations and student performance.IntroductionMany engineering programs today include opportunities to work in multi-disciplinary
the cross-disciplinary practice model wereapplicable in the undergraduate context. The pilot study also confirmed that collecting dataduring the team process would provide a deeper, more detailed picture of how undergraduatesdevelop as cross-disciplinary team members compared to a retrospective approach. Therefore,my dissertation work uses a real-time approach to collecting data—that is, I utilized weeklyobservations of the team, regular, written reflections by each team member, and periodicindividual interviews with student team members throughout one semester. This real-timemethod, common in ethnographic research,4 provides a rich understanding of how undergraduatestudents develop as cross-disciplinary team members during a cross
context. This requiredchanging the course to reflect discipline-based engineering assignments.To assist with assignment reconfiguration, the instructor of the course recruited the help of seniorstudents in civil, environmental and biological engineering to create new assignments.Assignment were created specific to the disciplines of civil, environmental and biologicalengineering. In addition, a Ph.D. student with teaching experience in the CAD course was usedto oversee the entire process.Since the students in the course consist of civil, environmental or biological engineering majors,the new assignments cater to their needs. Funding support for the course changes are from theHuntsman Environment Research Center (HERC) at Utah State University
toaccount for labor rates, retainage, overhead, bonding, and rentals to determine whether or not hemust use credit or cash to purchase the pre-arranged material order for the following month.Traditionally, the winner for each project of the K’NEXercise was the group that has the lowest“construction costs” from the event, which directly relates to the minimal use of credit,accurately ordering materials, minimizing the use of labor and equipment, and not being fined byOSHA for unsafe working conditions. Teams that did not win the K’NEXercise had todeliberate on their results in a reflective essay.As is likely to happen when young adults are allowed to compete, and additional homework isthe price of failure, there are always those that cry foul when
activities tends to promote the storage of course material into long-term memory. Being able to explain the basic principles behind class demonstrationsimmediately after participating in the demonstrations may reflect their ability tounderstand and apply those principles. Being able to explain the same information afteran extended period of time, however, may reflect the student’s confidence in how closethey are to attaining true mastery of the material.It is, arguably, intuitive that one might expect that the confidence a student feels in theirability to explain demonstration concepts would decrease over time. Therefore one mayexpect that the percentage of students that agree that they can explain topics in a semesterfrom now would be less than
into the Metro Deaf School science club made use of SquishyCircuits ©, MaKey MaKey ©, and incorporated other electronic design challenges such as an e-textiles workshop. The team was able to reflect on the initial Creative Circuitry program and itsreception with the middle school students in order to build more engaging programs in the future.A fall 2014 program was also run and involved a concentration on individual engineeringdisciplines with each week focusing on a different discipline. This curriculum was built tointroduce and expose the deaf students to six different disciplines in enjoyable ways. During thedevelopment of this after-school program, several goals were built into each module of theengineering curriculum. The main goal was
a resource, how resources are modified by academics and where ina program they might be used 1. For the purposes of this paper, we are looking at resourcesdesigned to assist in the learning and teaching of engineering mechanics.This paper presents the results of a workshop held as part of a project, funded by the AustralianCouncil of Engineering Deans (ACED), to promote curriculum sharing across the 35 universitiesin Australia that teach engineering. It includes a description and analysis of the activities, ananalysis of the workshop evaluation as well as one participant’s reflection on the process.Investigating resource useThe preliminary project investigations mapped the local known in terms of the national andinternational literature and
mesh.window is synchronized to reflect the current state of the entire network. The internal frames inENoCS show various levels of detail: • Network Topology: Illustrates the routers and links and shows the movement of packets/flits through the chosen topology. • Router Information: Shows the microarchitecture of the router. The buffers in the router fill with color-coded packets (colors match the packets/flits in the topology window). The router stages are also shown and color-coded appropriately. • Network Flow: Tracks each packet from injection to ejection in a text window. • Statistics: Gives run-time statistical analysis of network behavior. This includes per hop latency, total latency, network bandwidth, and bi-section
materials in a timely manner, fabricating parts, strengtheningteamwork and communication skills, managing funding/schedules and developing rocketscapable of stable flight. Once a school achieves success at the Tsiolkovsky step, it moves to theOberth step. At this step, the curriculum focuses on incorporating all the knowledge andexperience from the first year, while students work toward achieving a greater understanding ofmass fractions and aerodynamic loads. Students also develop skills needed to design andconstruct the rocket vehicle. The curriculum at the Goddard step focuses on understanding whatis needed to develop high altitude flight time as well as reflecting on the entire process and thelearning it took to get there. SystemsGo charges
that engineering ethics instruction shouldchallenge students to question social structures of power and authority.5 Her courses thusincorporate readings from a wide range of disciplines and call on students to lead classdiscussions and write reflective papers about their learning process. Herkert also calls for newcourse materials to be developed and published, such as case studies related to macroethicsissues.3In answer to these calls for increased instruction in macroethics issues, this paper describes myendeavor to incorporate a case study approach into a macroethics unit in an advanced writingcourse for engineers. In this unit, I use a case study to introduce and discuss the macroethicsimplications of the 2015 Volkswagen diesel scandal, in
ideally should have a greater interest in the topics covered. 4) Enthusiasm: Enthusiasm is often positively correlated to attitude and motivation however; the former is often better defined as enjoyment while the latter reflects more on their reasoning and behaviors. 5) Creativity: This item is more abstract and its assessment will be discussed in another section. However, the intended gains in this area include develop a greater sense to design something unique and original. 6) Self-Efficacy: Self-efficacy has many of the above focus areas wrapped into it, but with a stronger connection to the students’ confidence and anxiety to take on and complete specific objectives in the field of sustainability
classification; Intra, Inter and Trans to investigate how first year calculusstudents construct the concept of chain rule. Their attempt to use the APOS theory resulted ininsufficiency by itself therefore they included the schema development idea of Piaget et al. (1989).Clark et al. (1997) used triad classification after realization of not being able to apply the APOStheory. Similar to Clark et al. (1997) APOS theory appears to be inappropriate for evaluating theresearch question in this work because students' responses didn't reflect a proper setting to applythe APOS theory; therefore, participating students' responses are analyzed by using the schemadevelopment idea. The Triad classification in this setting is as follows:• Intra Stage: Students
light.Source: http://9-4fordham.wikispaces.com/file/view/em_spectrum.jpg/244287321/em_spectrum.jpgReveals DifferencesFigure 4. Two identical mugs in the visible spectrum.Figure 5. The two mugs viewed in the infrared spectrum.Figures 4 and 5 illustrate how infrared imaging can be used to see things that areotherwise impossible to see. Figure 4 shows two seemingly identical mugs. However,as shown in Figure 5, the mug on the left has been filled with cold water, and the mugon the right has been filled with hot water. One really interesting aspect of this image isthat we can see the reflection of the heat, the infrared radiation, from the hot mug on thecold mug and on the table.Shows Hot Spots Figure 6: Phone chargersThe picture in Figure 6 is
of the literature that I was reading and how I felt like I forgot all that I read immediately after I put the paper away. Through practice, I was able to learn to read articles differently and more quickly, looking for the main points.” “Seminars at the beginning of the research project were very informative; I learned a multitude of things about research in general….. I, throughout the summer, learned many valuable things about myself. This experienced opened my eyes to my strengths, weaknesses, likes, dislikes, and much more. I discovered things about myself I had not known or reflected upon before.”Concluding RemarksThis paper has reported the most recent results of our ongoing REU Site program that focuses
factory workers in Hutchinson’sErr project described above, our students’ impulse was to use their making skills to conceive anddesign an object that: 1) identified a problem; 2) solved that problem; and 3) did so in a way thatwas easy and enjoyable for the user. In contrast, the critical design project forced the students: 1)to identify a problem; 2) to design an artifact that made that problem more evident; and 3) todesign the artifact in a way that forced its users to reflect about the process of using the design,rather than having the use be intuitive and, hence, transparent. Furthermore, instead of having theSenior Project students write up either a thesis or a traditional professional design report, studentteams were required to write a
that allow students to understand realscenarios, or creating scenarios for practitioners to reflect upon their required application is very complicated;however using Lego based physical simulations increase the effectiveness 6. Creating these simulations allowsthe concepts of Lean to be thought in a “game” based scenario called Gamification7. The concept ofGamification is applied in order to use a set of games in a series of contexts to transmit knowledge moreeffectively to any type of audience, from kids to technical experts in specific areas. Here, the authors explore on the comparison of teaching effectiveness in Lean principles using physicalhands-on simulation and computer based simulation. Both the techniques used are based on Lean
werealso included. Where possible, questions integrated concepts from multiple disciplines. Allquestions could be answered using multiple references in the database, relaxing the dependencyon particular institutional subscriptions and better reflecting actual usage of the database. (21)Adopting a common game design element , questions progressively increased in difficulty.The “beginner” stage required the definition of a keyword, while the “intermediate” stagerequired a lookup of a single equation with perhaps a simple calculation or a material property.The “advanced” stage would constitute a calculation question with multiple steps involved orqualitative understanding of a