-1Abstract:Model Based Systems Engineering (MBSE) is transforming how systems engineering ispracticed. System modeling with SysML (the Systems Modeling Language) drives rigor andcrispness into the formulation of system behavior, structure, and parametrics. The author hasintroduced MBSE into the Systems Architecture and Systems Engineering courses that are partof the MS Product Development (MPD) program at the University of Detroit Mercy. Thispresentation will discuss lessons learned over the course of several years, culminating in thecapstone project from the Spring 2016 Systems Engineering course.In that course, students were required to model a polar exploration submarine, starting from ahandful of system elements provided by the instructor. Over the
-of-school environments, including museums, science centers, afterschool programs, preschools, and everyday settings.Dr. Monae Verbeke, Institute for Learning Innovation Dr. Verbeke is an interdisciplinary researcher in the informal science learning. She has worked inter- nationally on projects incorporating a wide range of science learning institutions. As senior research associate for the Institute for Learning Innovation, she leads research and development of learning tools in the areas of science literacy. science interest and self-efficacy.Marcie Benne, Oregon Museum of Science and IndustryPam Greenough Corrie MS, Mt. Hood Community College Pam Greenough Corrie is the Head Start/Early Head Start Director for Mt
platformfor courses on computer science and engineering. Appropriate guidance from theplatform regarding the different objectives of five project stages enabled groupmembers to communicate, exchange, and interact, and the students graduallydeveloped their thinking from divergent to convergent. Through deep analysis of thestudents’ learning portfolios, the effects of cognitive concepts, personal motivations,and personal characteristics on creativity were investigated. Moreover, this studyfurther explored three issues regarding the differences between highly and lowlycreative students so that teachers could employ appropriate teaching resources orassistance. The findings of this study can help teachers provide timely guidance andresponses to students
eitherlanguage. Many students struggled with understanding the C programming language. They alsostruggled to switch to the lower-level of abstraction when assembly programming wasintroduced. Since the instruction set was introduced in the latter portion of the course, it alignedwith the more complex projects, which made these projects particularly tedious since they had tobe implemented in assembly.To address these issues, the outline of the course was modified to begin with an introduction tothe instruction set architecture (ISA) and assembly programming, and later introduceprogramming in C. There were several intended benefits to this switch. By starting with theISA, students would have a better understanding of data storage on the device and how
of a single course. It’s a bit likeinvestigating dark matter; one can hypothesize without seeing it that it exists because of radiationsignals observed when particles collide, but not really understand what it’s composed of or howit holds galaxies in the universe together. Our goal in this project is to provide student writerswith a means to jumpstart their understanding of writing as compositional decision-making byequipping them with the means to quickly, and literally, “see” their composing decisions.To help students notice and reflect on composition decisions in their writing, our team of writingresearchers, educators, and statisticians is piloting use of a suite of computer-aided learning toolsfor corpus-based text analysis in core
development program, and a local technology training company. It details thegeneralized struggles and successes of the students, the lessons learned, and a second curriculumand class structure based on those findings. Finally it presents unanswered questions and presentsrecommendations for future courses presented by University/community/businesspartnerships.1 IntroductionAccording to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, between 2014 and 2024, the job market for SoftwareDevelopers will grow by 17% 1 which is ”much faster than average”. In Florida, Application andSystem Software Developers will grow by approximately 31% and 24%, respectively 2 . Theserates are 1.8 and 1.3 times the national projection. In order to fill these job openings, recruiters
Paper ID #18508Environmental Monitoring Robotic SystemDr. Asad Yousuf, Savannah State University Asad Yousuf is the Coordinator and Professor of Electronics Engineering Technology at Savannah State UniversityMr. William Lehman, Bill’s Robotic Solutions William Lehman is President of Bill’s Robotic Solutions which he started in July of 2013. He has had over twenty years of experience in software and hardware development. He has worked on numerous projects in digital communication systems, robotics, and aerospace applications. Mr. Lehman received his Bachelor of Science degree in Electrical Engineering in 1979 from
Breakers Course, a course targeted to take the students out of the books and into applying their core competences and the scientific methods to put urban legends to the test and understand all sorts of phenomena.Mr. Maurice Forget, Aalto University c American Society for Engineering Education, 2017 Geographically Distributed Teams in Engineering Design: Best Practices and Issues in Cases of International Teams Working from Opposite HemispheresAbstractIt is not rare to have engineering design teams in companies, working from different parts of the worldon a shared project. This new addition to the working context has been triggered by advances incommunication technologies and the knowledge economy. This begs
human condition. Engineering service learning and biomedicalprojects are presented to pique the interest of a broad population of students. ENGR 102 HSallows students to try hands-on, design and build projects while still in high school where therisk is low and teacher scaffolding and contact time is high. This broad approach to anintroduction to engineering course at the high school level is important to attracting the mostdiverse, brightest, and creative problem-solvers into the profession.This paper will briefly describe the ENGR 102 HS course curriculum. Five years of studentcourse evaluation survey data (2011-2012 to 2015-2016) for 1469 students both female (N= 289)and male (N=1180) were explored. Statistically significant differences were
are people with common traits of human nature.Our research questions are as follows: How do team members describe manifestations of trust as a key factor in team success? How can faculty remove barriers to the development of trust among members of student teams?End-of-semester surveys revealed that teams that exhibited a high level of trust often stated thatthe choice of design project did not affect the ability of the team to be successful, while teamswith a low level of trust often blamed the choice of project for their difficulties factors.Successful teams also seem to exhibit a type of “team chemistry” whereby they enjoyedsocializing as well as working together. The trust reinforces this type of
- St. Louis Section. He has eight years of formal experience with K-12 engineering education.Dr. Shannon M. Sipes, Indiana University Shannon M. Sipes is an instructional consultant in the Center for Innovative Teaching and Learning at IU. In this role she provides professional development and individual consultation services for faculty with questions regarding their own teaching and student learning. Prior to her current role, she has served as the director of assessment helping faculty members with SOTL projects and classroom assessment. Shannon holds B.S. and M.A. degrees in psychology and a Ph.D. in curriculum and instruction with a focus on higher education.Mr. Jacob W. Benton, Primoris Services Corporation
innovative freeform modeling capabilities.The multidisciplinary teams include students, mostly seniors, from systems engineering anddesign, mechanical engineering, bioengineering and industrial design. The design projectsconsist of biomedical products and devices, and each project includes a sponsor from thehealthcare industry. The instructors include faculty from systems engineering and design,industrial design, and bioengineering.Using this testbed, a graduate student conducted research on reflective practice, design thinking,and how students engage in and use digital tools for design and collaboration. The initialresearch was conducted in the fall of 2015. Project results include a five-minute video thatdescribes student impressions of their
senior design teams have been able to work with NASA engineers on projects that are relevant to NASA’s mission. In April 2011, Dr. Carmen was selected as a Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE) Ralph R. Teetor Educational Award recipient.Ms. Deborah Lynn Fraley, Women in Defense, TN Valley Chapter Deborah Fraley is an Aerospace Engineer from Auburn University with 38 years experience as a defense contractor. She is employed as the Business Development Manager for Quantum Research International, Inc., a small company headquartered in Huntsville, AL. She is also the STEM Director for the TN Valley Chapter (TVC) of Women In Defense (WID), a national security organization dedicated to the advance- ment of women in
Paper ID #18987Development and Implementation of an Introduction to Research Winter In-ternship Program for Underrepresented Community College StudentsProf. Nicholas Patrick Langhoff, Skyline College Nicholas Langhoff is an associate professor of engineering and computer science at Skyline College in San Bruno, California. He is also a co-investigator for multiple grant projects at Ca˜nada College in Redwood City, California. He received his M.S. degree from San Francisco State University in embedded electri- cal engineering and computer systems. His educational research interests include technology-enhanced instruction
Describe assemblies rules and behaviors that Create proper patterns contribute to engineering drawings effective to communicate a teamwork design Identify the “Explode” an relevance of assembly and to professional animate the explosion ethics in to show the intended project work
Paper ID #19040Career Navigation Initiatives for Women STEM Faculty in Support of Insti-tutional TransformationProf. Elizabeth Dell, Rochester Institute of Technology (COE) Professor Dell is an associate professor in the Manufacturing & Mechanical Engineering Technology department at RIT. She serves as the Faculty Associate to the Provost for Women Faculty and is co-PI for RIT’s NSF ADVANCE project. Her research interests include: characterization of biodegradable plastics and environmental consideration in materials selection for production design, the impact of technology paired with active learning pedagogies on
engineers but is notaddressed in studies focusing on math and science identity. This gap in the literaturepresents a unique opportunity to make an important contribution to the literature byexplicitly examining how students’ affect towards key elements of engineering practicepredict their engineering identities. The first step towards narrowing this gap isestablishing a measure of affect towards key elements of engineering practice. In abroader project, we seek to understand how an individual’s affect toward elements ofengineering practice, i.e., the extent to which one likes these elements, predicts theirattraction to and retention within engineering education and the engineering profession,via its effects on identification with the engineering
lead of Area of Specializa- tion Mechatronics Systems Design. She worked as a Visiting Researcher at Commonwealth Center for Advanced Manufacturing in Disputanta, VA on projects focusing on digital thread and cyber security of manufacturing systems. She has funded research in broadening participation efforts of underrepresented students in STEM funded by Office of Naval Research, focusing on mechatronic pathways. She is part of the ONR project related to the additive manufacturing training of active military. She is also part of the research team that leads the summer camp to nine graders that focus on broadening participation of underrepresented students into STEM (ODU BLAST).Dr. Denise Tombolato-Terzic
collaborates with faculty on the Scholarship of Teach- ing and Learning through various research projects. Particular current areas of collaboration include instructional design, evaluation, engineering education and learner support. In addition, Dr. Jackson is an Affiliate Faculty in Penn State’s Higher Education Department.Prof. Karl R Haapala, Oregon State University Dr. Karl R. Haapala is an Associate Professor in the School of Mechanical, Industrial, and Manufacturing Engineering at Oregon State University, where he directs the Industrial Sustainability Laboratory and is Assistant Director of the OSU Industrial Assessment Center. He received his B.S. (2001) and M.S. (2003) in Mechanical Engineering, and his Ph.D. in
School of Communication at Purdue University pursuing a PhD in Organizational Communication with a minor in data analysis and research methodol- ogy. His research interests reside at the intersection of organizational communication, identity, design, and organizational ethics c American Society for Engineering Education, 2017 Development of Perceptions of Technical and Ethical Expertise In Teams Over TimeAbstractThis study considers a social network analysis conducted with design teams in an engineeringeducation program at a major Midwestern university. We conducted a longitudinal socialnetwork analysis with two classes, which each contained 2-5 project teams
paper describes how Makerspaces help cultivate students’ communities ofpractice (CoP). We interviewed 19 engineering students with different participation levels in theMakerspace, from different engineering disciplines to understand how they became participantsin the makers’ community of practice at the Richard L’Abbé Makerspace. We found that theMakerspace provided engineering students with a platform for forming a CoP that shares acommon interest in making, by providing them with access to equipment, workshops,competitions, and by connecting engineering students from various disciplines to work on hands-on engineering projects that allowed them to translate theories learned in classroom to practice.The paper also describes the lessons learned
classroom where the students learn with one method(visually with gates and structures) and in labs or projects where they are asked to implementdesigns using text descriptors. Often times a student's frustration with HDLs leads to them beingdisinterested in digital systems or even computer engineering as a major. This paper will describethe transition of an introductory Computer Engineering course from primarily using Verilog forits assignments to instead using a combination of schematic capture (which is very similar to whatthey see in class) and Verilog. With this course's redesign, the author saw the student's self-reportedconfidence in their design skills improve by 44% (from 41% to 85%) and their interest in takingadditional computer
, Transportation Research Part D: Transport and the Environment and Transportation Research Record Journal of the Transportation Research Board. Dr. Bhavsar was pre- viously a postdoctoral fellow in a connected vehicle research program in the Glenn Department of Civil Engineering at Clemson University, where he worked on several connected vehicle technology research projects. Dr. Bhavsar received his Ph.D. degree in 2013 and his M.S. degree in 2006 from Clemson University. His Ph.D. dissertation focused on development of an evaluation framework for connected vehicle technology supported alternative fuel vehicles. Dr. Bhavsar also has three years of experience in the private sector in developing transportation engineering and
-based sensors for determining the concen- tration, composition, and spatial distribution of atmospheric aerosols. In August 2015, Cathy completed a nineteen-month Congressional Fellowship with the U.S. Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Re- sources and returned to UAF to join ACUASI’s leadership team.Dr. John Monahan, University of Alaska, Fairbanks John Monahan is currently the Director of University of Alaska Fairbanks, Upward Bound and Princi- pal Investigator of the National Science Foundations EPSCoR Track 3 ”Modern Blanket Toss” project investigating the use of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles in K12 classrooms. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2017 Low-Cost Fixed
compares an innovative approach to teaching an introductory C programming course to atraditional C programming course for electrical engineering students. Students who pass eithercourse must subsequently take a traditional intermediate C programming course. The novel courseutilizes hardware-based projects to motivate students to master language syntax and implement keyprogramming concepts and best practices. In addition to comparing the attitudes and self-perceptions of the students in each of the introductory courses, we also look at success rates foreach cohort in the intermediate programming class as well as their progress toward their degrees.The electrical engineering students who took either introductory class on average had identicalGPAs
project began in 2012 with a single email from a professor asking if the Librarywould be open to checking out tools. The professor had tools to loan to students but no systemfor tracking the items. The Library was eager to add this new service and set up procedures anda loan policy. (Full policy and procedures can be found at http://www.lib.uiowa.edu/eng/tool-library/.)The Tool Library started out with thirty-eight items available for checkout and items have beenadded ever since. News of the new Tool Library spread by word of mouth, triggering severaldifferent groups to donate tools.At the beginning of 2016, it became apparent there was a need for items more geared towardcreating and hands-on learning with a strong emphasis on technology. It also
, Sustainable Energy in Buildings and Roads and Construction Project Management. Currently, he is teaching Civil and Construction Engineering at Pennsylvania State University at Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.Dr. Fazil T. Najafi, University of Florida Dr. Fazil T. Najafi For more than forty years, Dr. Fazil T. Najafi has worked in government, industry and education. He earned a BSCE in 1963 from the American College of Engineering, in his place of birth, Kabul, Afghanistan, and since then came to the United States with a Fulbright scholarship earning his MS in civil engineering in 1972 and a Ph.D. degree in transportation in 1977. His experience in industry includes work as a highway, structural, mechanical, and
statistical signal processing for wireless sensor network applications and secure communications in wireless networks.Prof. Todd D. Morton, Western Washington University Todd Morton has been teaching the upper level embedded systems and senior project courses for Western Washington University’s Electronics Engineering Technology(EET) program for 25 years. He has been the EET program coordinator since 2005 and also served as department chair from 2008-2012. He is the author of the text ’Embedded Microcontrollers’, which covers assembly and C programming in small real-time embedded systems and has worked as a design engineer at Physio Control Corporation and at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory as an ASEE-NASA Summer Faculty
Medical Center, and Columbia Technology Ventures that facilitates commercialization of clinical solutions driven by teams of engineers, clinicians, scientists, students and others, with the end goal of moving promising biomedical technologies to clinical application and market-based healthcare solutions.Ms. Lorna Helen Begg, Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health Ms. Lorna Begg is a MPH student at Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health. She works part-time as a Project Coordinator at the Columbia-Coulter Translational Research Partnership.John D. O’Neill, Columbia University, Department of Biomedical EngineeringAhmet-Hamdi Cavusoglu, Columbia University Ahmet-Hamdi Cavusoglu is a Chemical
appointment in the Department of Mathematics. Her past research accomplishments include the development of light-weight methods for language translation on mobile phones, food anal- ysis tools for the treatment of the inherited metabolic disease phenylketonuria, and improved document processing methods for the printing industry. Her current areas of research include signal processing, big data, and various applied mathematics problems motivated by engineering applications. In particular, she is interested in high-dimensional machine learning problems that stem from applications, including data analysis issues related to STEM education research. She created ”Project Rhea,” a student-driven online learning project at