Paper ID #19349Films, Foams and Powders: Using Food to Introduce First Year Students toChemical EngineeringDr. Polly R. Piergiovanni, Lafayette College Polly R. Piergiovanni is a Professor of Chemical Engineering at Lafayette College. Besides chemical engineering courses, she teaches an engineering course to nonengineering students. Her current research interests include critical thinking evident in student writing and assessing learning in experiential learning activities. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2017 Films, Foams and Powders: Using Food to Introduce
Paper ID #19665Impact of biomechanics-based activities on situational and individual interestamong K-12 studentsProf. Carrie A Francis, University of Northwestern-St. Paul Carrie Francis is an Assistant Professor of Engineering at the University of Northwestern-St. Paul. She received her Ph.D. in Biomedical Engineering from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. She has pre- viously received degrees in biomedical engineering from Washington University in St. Louis (B.S.) and the University of Wisconsin-Madison (M.S.). Her teaching interests include general physics, statics & dynamics, and mechanics of materials. Her
Devices laboratory at MIT before moving to Boston University’s Biomedical Engineer- ing department where she received a NIH NRSA postdoctoral fellowship to work with Dr. Catherine Klapperich developing molecular diagnostics for point-of-care pathogen detection. Dr. Linnes’s current research bridges innovations in basic science and translational diagnostic techniques in order to develop non-invasive, rapid detection technologies that efficiently diagnose and monitor diseases at the point of care. Her teaching focuses experiential learning and co-creation of devices and technologies via user- centered design.Prof. Chi Hwan Lee, Purdue University Chi Hwan Lee is an Assistant Professor at Purdue University, with
Paper ID #19627Resolving Epistemological Tension in Project-Based Introductory Engineer-ingBernard David, University of Texas, Austin Bernard David is currently pursuing a Ph.D. in STEM Education at the University of Texas at Austin, where he holds an appointment as a Graduate Research Assistant and serves as a Teaching Assistant in the UTeach program. In 2011, he received his B.S. in Physics, and in 2012, he received his M.Ed. in Secondary Teaching in Physics, both from Boston College. During his M.Ed. program, Bernard was awarded the Science Educators for Urban Schools Scholarship funded by the NSF Robert Noyce
students," Journal of Professional Issues in Engineering Education & Practice,137(4), pp. 176-182.[3] Chenard, J. S., Zilic, Z., and Prokic, M., 2008, "A laboratory setup and teaching methodologyfor wireless and mobile embedded systems," IEEE Transactions on Education, 51(3), pp. 378-384.[4] Dyer, S. A., and Schmalzel, J. L., 1998, "Macroelectronics: A gateway to electronics andinstrumentation education," IEEE Transactions on Instrumentation and Measurement, 47(6), pp.1507-1511.[5] Guardiola, I. G., Dagli, C., and Corns, S., 2013, "Using university-funded research projects toteach system design processes and tools," IEEE Transactions on Education, 56(4), pp. 377-384.[6] Jonassen, D., Strobel, J., and Lee, C. B., 2006, "Everyday problem solving
Paper ID #19707Early Predicting of Student Struggles Using Body LanguageMr. Matthew L Dering, Penn State University Matthew Dering is a PhD student at Penn State University studying computer vision and deep learning.Dr. Conrad Tucker, Pennsylvania State University, University Park Dr. Tucker holds a joint appointment as Assistant Professor in Engineering Design and Industrial En- gineering at The Pennsylvania State University. He is also affiliate faculty in Computer Science and Engineering. He teaches Introduction to Engineering Design (EDSGN 100) at the undergraduate level and developed and taught a graduate-level course
. Rickli received his B.S. and M.S. Degrees in Mechanical Engineering from Michigan Tech- nological University in 2006 and 2008 and received his Ph.D. in Industrial and Systems Engineering from Virginia Tech prior to joining Wayne State in 2013. At Wayne State, he has created the Manufacturing and Remanufacturing Systems Laboratory (MaRSLab). MaRSLab targets fundamental and applied research in manufacturing and remanufacturing processes and systems while encouraging considerations for sus- tainability and life-cycle thinking in design, manufacturing, use, and recovery. Specific research thrusts include: transforming manufacturing quality monitoring and remanufacturing core condition assessment via automated laser line
Paper ID #18140Toward a Process-Centered Approach for Systems Engineering EducationMr. Mohammed BOUGAA, CentraleSupelec and EISTI Mohammed Bougaa, is a PhD candidate at CentraleSup´elec engineering school, in France. He is exercis- ing his research and teaching activities at EISTI, a computer science and mathematics engineering school. He got graduated as a computer sciences engineer in 2011 from the Higher National School of Computer Sciences ESI ex. INI, in Algiers, Algeria, and received his master degree in virtual reality and smart sys- tems from the French Evry Val d’Essonne University, in 2013. He is the main
Paper ID #20154Comparing the Effectiveness of Semester-long vs. Accelerated-summer CourseOfferingsIlse B. Nava Medina , Texas A&M University Ilse earned her Bachelor’s degree in Chemistry at the Universidad de las Americas Puebla, Mexico. She is currently a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Materials Science & Engineering at Texas A&M University. During her doctoral study, she has been a graduate teaching assistant for General Chem- istry and Organic Chemistry laboratories. She is also currently teaching the Metallic Materials (MMET 207) laboratory, as part of the Manufacturing & Mechanical Engineering
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Colorado State University, where he also is Director of Electromagnetics Laboratory. He received a Ph.D. in elec- trical engineering from the University of Belgrade, Yugoslavia, in 1995. His research publications in computational and applied electromagnetics include more than 150 journal and conference papers. He is the author of textbooks Electromagnetics (2010) and MATLAB-Based Electromagnetics (2013), both with Pearson Prentice Hall. Prof. Notaros served as General Chair of FEM2012, Colorado, USA, and as Guest Editor of the Special Issue on Finite Elements for Microwave Engineering, in Electromagnetics, 2014. He was the recipient of the 1999 Institution of Electrical
2007-2008 Fulbright exchange to Nigeria set the stage for him to receive the Marian Smith Award which was given annually to the most innovative teacher at WSU, and in 2016 he received the inaugural WSU Innovative Teaching Award based on the develop- ment and dissemination of hands-on desktop learning modules and their use in an interactive learning environment.Dr. Paul B. Golter, Ohio University Paul B. Golter obtained an M.S. and Ph.D. from Washington State University. His research area has been engineering education, specifically around the development and assessment of technologies to bring fluid mechanics and heat transfer laboratory experiences into the classroom. He is currently a Lecturer in Mechanical
, Salt Lake City, UT, 2004.5. Telenko, C., Wood, K.L., Frey, D., Dritsas, S., Kaijima, S., Tan, U., Moreno, D., Rajesh, M., Foong,S., and Pey, K.L. (2015). “Designettes: New Approaches to Multidisciplinary Engineering Design Education,” Journal of Mechanical Design (JMD), MD-15-1178.6. Wood, K. L., Jensen, D., Bezdek, J., & Otto, K. N. (2001). “Reverse engineering and redesign: Courses to incrementally and systematically teach design.” Journal of Engineering Education, 90(3), 363.7. Otto, Kevin and Wood, Kristin. (2012). Product Design: Techniques in Reverse Engineering and New Product Development, Prentice Hall, Upper Saddle River, NJ.8. Beaudoin, D. L., and Llis, D. F. O., (1995), “A Product and Process Engineering Laboratory
For- mation (PFE: RIEF) for the project- Using Digital Badging and Design Challenge Modules to Develop Professional Identity. She is a member of the department’s ABET and Undergraduate Curriculum Com- mittee, as well as faculty advisor for several student societies. She is the instructor of several courses in the CBE curriculum including the Material and Energy Balances, junior laboratories and Capstone De- sign courses. She is associated with several professional organizations including the American Institute of Chemical Engineers (AIChE) and American Society of Chemical Engineering Education (ASEE) where she adopts and contributes to innovative pedagogical methods aimed at improving student learning and
Paper ID #18905Building Life Cycle Assessment Skills with GREET and SimaPro to EngageStudents in Analyzing the Sustainability of Biofuel AlternativesDr. Bradley A. Striebig, James Madison University Dr. Striebig is a founding faculty member and first full professor in the Department of Engineering at James Madison University. Dr. Striebig came to the JMU School of from Gonzaga University where he developed the WATER program in cooperation with other faculty members. Dr. Striebig is also the former Head of the Environmental Technology Group at Penn State’s Applied Research Laboratory. In addition to Dr’ Striebig’s
graduating, Caleb joined the United States Marine Corps and served as a Reconnaissance Ma- rine at 3rd Reconnaissance Battallion in Okinawa, Japan from 2006 to 2010. Following his enlistment in the Marine Corps, he worked as a weapons and tactics instructor for M¨obius Industries, in Okinawa, teach- ing Marines and sailors prior to unit deployments. Caleb and his family returned to the United States in January of 2015, when he enrolled at The University of Texas at Tyler and declared mechanical engineer- ing as his major. Currently, he works as a tutor in the University tutoring center for Several engineering courses and is also an undergraduate research assistant in the Mechanical Engineering department.Dr. Chung-Hyun Goh
Center of the City University of New York in 1991. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2017 Incorporating Quantum Technologies into Engineering CurriculumAbstract: This paper first reviews the present status of quantum technologies that are rapidlymaking inroads to various fields of science and engineering. The author then suggests, in light ofthese developments, how one may incorporate the key principles, ideas, and topics of newquantum technologies into undergraduate quantum mechanics courses and laboratories to prepareand equip future engineers. Concrete examples of curriculum changes in modern physics,quantum mechanics, and advanced quantum mechanics courses are presented based on threeyears of
solutions. This process ensures that students take ownership of their project as anengaged team. It allows students to strengthen their problem-solving and collaboration skills.The interdisciplinary teaching team models the teamwork skills the students are learning. Theaim is to promote interdisciplinary learning, foster teamwork, and improve student engagement.Other course objectives are to develop students’ creative problem solving, empathetic designpractices, communication skills, prototyping skills, and ethical reasoning. Students are expectedto become proficient at the empathetic design process as well as interdisciplinary communicationand teamwork. Creative problem solving, ethical reasoning, and realization of a product throughprototyping
, whose background is in Mechanical Engineering and Industrial Design, teaches a Fundamentals ofProduct Design Engineering Laboratory course at Ohio State University in the Department of Mechanical& Aerospace Engineering. The course student body is primarily made up of senior- and graduate-levelstudents who are studying in Mechanical Engineering or Industrial & Systems Engineering, howeverstudents from other various engineering majors also enroll in the course. Enrollment in this course hashistorically been around 100 students each semester. As many readers will know, Ohio State University isa large, public, institution in Columbus, Ohio. OSU’s Department of Mechanical & AerospaceEngineering is a large department within a large school
Paper ID #17784Work in Progress: Afterschool STEM/Literacy Program—A Description ofthe ProcessDr. Margaret Pinnell, University of Dayton Dr. Margaret Pinnell is the Associate Dean for Faculty and Staff Development in the school of engineering and associate professor in the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering at the University of Dayton. She teaches undergraduate and graduate materials related courses including Introduction to Ma- terials, Materials Laboratory, Engineering Innovation, Biomaterials and Engineering Design and Appro- priate Technology (ETHOS). She was director of the (Engineers in Technical
affiliated with CAMRA as a principal investigator. Her lab conducts both computational risk modeling research and fundamental research. Her current work and future interests lie at the intersection of chemical and microbial stressors where under- standing trade-offs, benefits and risks deviate from existing risk paradigms and require new data, tools and frameworks. Her future research goals include applications of risk-based decision making to water infrastructure management, and emerging hazards such as antibiotic resistance. She is managing editor and a developer of the QMRAwiki, an interactive, online tool for the QMRA community. Dr. Mitchell has also been involved in developing and teaching training workshops in QMRA
Paper ID #18541Amplitude Modulation Circuit Implementation for use in a CommunicationCourse for Electrical Engineering StudentsDr. Robert J. Barsanti Jr., The Citadel Robert Barsanti is a Professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at The Citadel where he teaches and does research in the area of target tracking and signal processing. Since 2015, Dr. Barsanti has served as the William States Lee Professor and Department Head. Before joining The Citadel in 2002, he served on the faculty and as a member of the mission analysis design team at the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, CA. Dr. Barsanti is
studying there.Selection of Programs OfferedSystem and partner academic institutions are all eligible to propose degree and certificateprograms to be offered at RELLIS. There is no limit in the number of programs, within theconstraints of space and cost, that a single institution can offer. The proposed programs, howeverare evaluated to ensure the objectives of non-duplication and cost-effectiveness are achieved.When proposing to offer a degree program, the institutions are asked to submit a detaileddescription of the program including opportunities for a minor, the curriculum (broken out bysemester), laboratories and specialized teaching facilities required to offer the degree program,and projected enrollment for the first five year of offering
Paper ID #19371Collaborative Research: From School to Work: Understanding the Transi-tion from Capstone Design to IndustryDr. Marie C Paretti, Virginia Tech Marie C. Paretti is a Professor of Engineering Education at Virginia Tech, where she co-directs the Vir- ginia Tech Engineering Communications Center (VTECC). Her research focuses on communication 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
American Education and Qualitative and Ethnographic Research. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2017 Designing for assets of diverse students enrolled in a freshman- level “Computer Science for All” courseAbstractProficiency in computer science skills is crucial for today’s students to succeed in science,technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) fields and the modern workforce. Despite thisfact, few universities count computer science (CS) classes toward the core curriculum. Ouruniversity, a Hispanic- and minority-serving research-intensive university located in theAmerican Southwest, recently began counting CS towards fulfilling the laboratory sciencerequirement in the
electrical andcomputer engineering (ECE) department. The first, ECE 102, requires the student to solveengineering problems using MATLAB. The follow-on course introduces the C language. Tomake programming less abstract and to establish a real-life connection, we use MATLAB forinterfacing with a data acquisition device called LabJack. Students use MATLAB’s integrateddevelopment environment to write scripts that control the LabJack.This environment has enabled students to participate in some interesting hands-on projects thatcombine problem-solving, programming, and interfacing. Early on, student participation in theECE 102 course consisted of attending lectures, three laboratory exercises related to LabJack andMATLAB interfacing, and participation in
. Ayala spent three years as a Postdoctoral Researcher at University of Delaware where he expanded his knowledge on simulation of multiphase flows while acquiring skills in high performance parallel computing and scientific computation. Before that, Dr. Ayala hold a faculty position at Universidad de Oriente at Mechanical Engineering Department where he taught and developed graduate and undergraduate courses for a number of subjects such as Fluid Mechanics, Heat Transfer, Thermodynamics, Multiphase Flows, Fluid Mechanics and Hydraulic Machinery, as well as Mechanical Engineering Laboratory courses. In addition, Dr. Ayala has had the opportunity to work for a number of engineering consulting companies, which have
Paper ID #20388An Assessment Framework for First-Year Introduction to Engineering CoursesDr. Senay Purzer, Purdue University, West Lafayette (College of Engineering) Senay Purzer is an Associate Professor in the School of Engineering Education. Her research focuses on teaching and assessment associated with key aspects of engineering design such as innovation and decision-making.Dr. Kerrie Anna Douglas, Purdue University, West Lafayette (College of Engineering) Dr. Douglas is an Assistant Professor in the Purdue School of Engineering Education. Her research is focused on methods of assessment and evaluation unique to
at the New Jersey Institute of Technology. He received his Ph.D. in Chemical Engineering from Colorado State University in 2001. His research and teaching interests c American Society for Engineering Education, 2017 Paper ID #19223involve modeling, analysis and control of drug-delivery systems. He is the author of a series of educationaland interactive modules (Laboratory Online), available at http://laurentsimon.com/. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2017 The Long-Term Impact of Including High School Students in an Engineering
Computational modeling and interdisciplinary projects for engineering technology students The advances in nanotechnology, tissue engineering, and robotics has precipitated the need forengineering technology students who can understand and contribute to simulation and development ofcomputer models for complex command, communications, biological and control systems.The engineering faculty at our university is developing multidisciplinary projects/classes, which includehands-on application-oriented laboratory exercises, which can actively engage students. These laboratoryprojects will also be helpful to students who will take capstone senior project coursework.This paper will discuss the new, interesting multidisciplinary projects
Introduction to Digital Logic Design Laboratory Course,” Proceddings of 2015 American Society for Engineering Education, (Zone III). https://www.asee.org/documents/zones/zone3/2015/Active-Learning-in-the-Introduction-to-Digital-Logic- Design-Laboratory-Course.pdf[7] Aws Yousif Fida El-Din and Hasan Krad, “Teaching Computer Architecture and Organization using Simulation and FPGAs,” International Journal of Information and Education Technology, Vol. 1, No. 3, August 2011.[8] Guoping Wang, “Lessons and Experiences of Teaching VHDL,” Proceedings of the 2007 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition[9] Chao Wang and Michael Goryll, "Design and Implementation of an Online Digital