Paper ID #19281Comparing Team Member Effectiveness in Integrated and Non-IntegratedFirst-year Introductory Design CoursesMr. Tejasvi Parupudi, Purdue University Graduate student at Purdue University, pursuing my PhD in Electrical Engineering. I am passionate about curriculum design and design thinking courses for first year engineering technology students. I am also passionate about diversity education and how peer groups work to solve globally relevant grand challenges.Sarah Knapp, Purdue University Master of Architecture, Tulane University, New Orleans, LA PhD Candidate, Purdue University, West Lafayette, INAmelia
Paper ID #19302Internationalization of Project-Based LearningMs. Ayano Ohsaki, Advanced Institute of Industrial Technology Ms Ayano OHSAKI is an assistant professor at Advanced Institute of Industrial Technology. She worked as an assistant professor at the Innovation Center for Engineering Education, Tottori University for 4years. She was in charge of development new engineering education program. The objectives of the program were improvement of creativity, collaboration skills and problem solving skills. Students learn communi- cation skills, project management skills, analysis, etc. by working on design assignments
Paper ID #17900Specific, Generic Performance Indicators and Their Rubrics for the Compre-hensive Measurement of ABET Student OutcomesMr. Wajid Hussain, Wajid Hussain is an enthusiastic, productive Electrical/Computer Engineer with a Master of Science De- gree coupled with more than 15 years Engineering experience and Mass Production expertise of Billion Dollar Microprocessor Manufacture Life Cycle. Over the years Wajid has managed several projects related to streamlining operations with utilization of state of the art technology and digital systems. This has given him significant experience working with ISO standard
from the Revolutionizing Engineering Departments Participatory Action ResearchAbstractThis research paper describes participatory action research with change agents who are engagedin making academic change on their campuses through the NSF REvolutionizing Engineeringand Computer Science Departments (RED) Program, focusing on the first cohort of awardees.Through REDPAR (RED Participatory Action Research), an NSF-funded collaboration betweenRose-Hulman Institute of Technology and the University of Washington, we work with the REDteams to investigate the change process and also provide training and support. This paperaddresses one of the research questions guiding the study, “How do change agents
Paper ID #18504An Innovative Teaching Method to Increase Engagement in the Classroom:A Case Study in Science and EngineeringDr. Rania Al-Hammoud P.Eng., University of Waterloo Dr. Al-Hammoud is a Faculty lecturer (Graduate Attributes) in the department of civil and environmental engineering at the University of Waterloo. Dr. Al-Hammoud has a passion for teaching where she con- tinuously seeks new technologies to involve students in their learning process. She is actively involved in the Ideas Clinic, a major experiential learning initiative at the University of Waterloo. She is also re- sponsible for developing a process
commercialization and launch of the industry’s first 90-second rechargeable flashlight. In addition he is co-inventor on four U.S. patents and has presented numerous times at advanced energy technology conferences in the areas of business and technology development. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2017 Computer Simulations Developed to Improve Understanding of Thermodynamic PrinciplesThis paper describes the design, development and pilot implementation of computer simulationscreated to support student learning in a first semester course on thermodynamics. This projectwas sponsored by the Course Redesign with Technology program through the California StateUniversity
Paper ID #18387Training and Development for Faculty New to Teaching and AcademiaLt. Col. Clint Armani PhD, Unites States Air Force Academy Lt Col Clint Armani is an assistant professor of mathematical sciences at the United States Air Force Academy. In previous assignments, he served as the commander of a test and evaluation squadron, flight test engineer and mechanical engineer. Lt Col Armani received a BS in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Arkansas, a MS in Mechanical Engineering from Purdue University, and a PhD in Aeronautical Engineering from the Air Force Institute of Technology. He is also a graduate of
Pittsburgh at Johnstown. Prior to joining University of Pittsburgh at Johnstown, Dr. Parks’ worked for over seven years at the Alcoa Technical Center focusing on development and commercialization of sustainable wastewater treat- ment and solid waste reuse technologies. She also served as a member of the Alcoa Foundation Board of Directors, providing environmental expertise to support the Foundation’s focus areas of Environment, Em- powerment, and Education, as well as her experience with science, technology, engineering, and mathe- matics (STEM) education for women. Prior to joining Alcoa in 2008, Dr. Parks worked for approximately seven years as a consultant to government agencies, municipalities, and industrial clients
Bioengineering and graduate degrees in Industrial Engineering, all from Arizona State University.Mr. Aisosa Ayela-Uwangue, Arizona State University, Polytechnic campus Aisosa Ayela-Uwangue is a doctoral student in the Engineering Education and Systems Design program at Arizona State University. He received his Bachelor of Science and Masters of Science degrees in Electrical Engineering from Rochester Institute of Technology, Rochester New York. Aisosa is a research assistant for an NSF funded project titled IUSE/RED: Additive Innovation: An Educational Ecosystem of Making and Risk Taking.Dr. Samantha Ruth Brunhaver, Arizona State University Samantha Brunhaver is an Assistant Professor of Engineering in the Ira A. Fulton
research interests include modeling and simulation of high speed circuits, signal and power integrity analysis of electronic packages, and uncertainty quantification of microwave/ RF circuits. Dr. Roy is a recipient of the Vice-Chancellors Gold Medal at the undergraduate level in 2006, the Queen Elizabeth II Graduate Scholarship in Science and Technology in 2012, and the Ontario Graduate Schol- arship in 2012. He currently serves as the reviewer for IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON MICROWAVE THEORY AND TECHNIQUES, IEEEE TRANSACTIONS ON COMPONENTS, PACKAGING AND c American Society for Engineering Education, 2017
Systems Engineering Research and the Fulbright International Science and Technology Award. Dr. Salado holds a BSc/MSc in electrical engineering from Polytechnic University of Valencia, an MSc in project management and a MSc in electronics engineering from Polytechnic University of Catalonia, the SpaceTech MEng in space systems engineering from Delft University of Technology, and a PhD in systems engineering from the Stevens Institute of Technology. He is a member of INCOSE and a senior member of IEEE and IIE.Mr. John Ray Morelock, Virginia Tech John Morelock is a doctoral candidate at Virginia Tech. His research interests include student motivation, game-based learning, and gamified classrooms. He received the NSF
, Assistant Professor in the Department of Engineering and Technology Education at Utah State University, has taught Solid Modeling, CAD, Introductory Electronics, Surveying, Statics, Assessment and Evaluation, and Introductory Engineering courses at Utah State University. Goodridge has been teaching for the Utah State College of Engineering for more than 15 years. He holds dual B.S degrees in industrial technology education and civil engineering from Utah State University, as well as an M.S. and Ph.D. in Civil Engineering from Utah State University. His research interests include entrepreneurship in engineering, spatial thinking and spatial cognition, and professional development for those teaching engineering.Mr. Moe
school. Mrs. Newley coaches the exploratory robotics club for grades K-8, and the competitive high school robotics team, FTC. She contributed to international pub- lished papers, national proceedings, is the process of writing several children’s books, and has presented a workshop on robotics for elementary school students.Mr. Erdogan Kaya, University of Nevada Erdogan Kaya is a PhD student in science education at University of Nevada, Las Vegas. He is work- ing as a graduate assistant and teaching science methods courses. Prior to beginning the PhD program, he received his MS degree in computer science and engineering. He coached robotics teams and was awarded several grants that promote Science, Technology
of Louisville Dr. Patricia A. S. Ralston is Professor and Chair of the Department of Engineering Fundamentals at the University of Louisville. She received her B.S., MEng, and PhD degrees in chemical engineering from the University of Louisville. Dr. Ralston teaches undergraduate engineering mathematics and is currently involved in educational research on the effective use of technology in engineering education, the incorpo- ration of critical thinking in undergraduate engineering education, and retention of engineering students. She leads a research group whose goal is to foster active interdisciplinary research which investigates learning and motivation and whose findings will inform the development of
of the Harvard Biodesign Lab, which brings together re- searchers from the engineering, industrial design, medical and business communities to develop smart medical devices and translate them to industrial partners in collaboration with the Wyss Institute’s Ad- vanced Technology Team. Conor’s research projects focus on wearable robotics to assist the disabled and able-bodied, as well as on tools for minimally invasive diagnosis and treatment of disease. His ed- ucational interest is in the area of medical device innovation where he mentors student design teams on projects with clinicians in Boston and in emerging regions such as India. Conor received his B.A.I and B.A. degrees in Mechanical and Manufacturing
Paper ID #18735Which ”Me” am I Today? The Many Disciplines and Skill Sets of Engineer-ing EducatorsDr. Jennifer Karlin, University of Southern Maine Jennifer Karlin spent the first half of her career at the South Dakota School of Mines and Technology, where she was a professor of industrial engineering and held the Pietz professorship for entrepreneurship and economic development. She is now at the University of Southern Maine where she is a research professor of engineering and the curriculum specialist for the Maine Regulatory Training and Ethics Center.Dr. Donna M. Riley, Virginia Tech Donna Riley is Professor and
flapping flight, mechatronics, robotics, MEMS, virtual reality and haptics, and teaching with technology. He has ongoing research in flapping flight, Frisbee flight dynamics, lift in porous material and brain injury He is an active member of ASEE and ASME and reviewer for several ASME, IEEE and ASEE, FIE conferences and journals. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2017 Mechanical Vibrations Modal Analysis Project with ArduinosAbstractThis paper details a new laboratory project in a senior-level Mechanical Engineering Vibrationscourse. Students are to determine the first four natural frequencies of a 6061 Aluminum free-freebeam in a laboratory using three methods. First, they use the
after completing a postdoctoral/lecturer position split between the General Engineering program and the Engineering & Science Education Department and a Ph.D. in Bioengineering from Clemson University. Before returning to graduate school for her Ph.D., Erin worked for Merge Healthcare as a Technical Support Analyst in Milwaukee, WI after completing her B.S. in Biomedical Engineering from Michigan Technological University. Erin’s research interests include preparing students for their sophomore year, minority student engineering identity development, and providing mentoring relationships to help foster student growth and success. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2017
(2011-2014), she worked in the National Science Foundation’s Division of Undergraduate Education on research and evaluation projects related to the use of technology in STEM education. Dr. London masters mixed methods and computational tools to address complex problems, including: science policy issues surrounding STEM learning in cyberlearning envi- ronments; evaluation and impact analysis of federal investments in R&D; and applications of simulation & modeling tools to evaluate programs.Dr. Edward J. Berger, Purdue University, West Lafayette (College of Engineering) Edward Berger is an Associate Professor of Engineering Education and Mechanical Engineering at Purdue University, joining Purdue in August 2014
Paper ID #19842Selecting and Designing Assessment to Measure Early Engineering Curricu-lum Impact on Application of Engineering Design and Attitudes Toward STEMDr. Kristin Kelly Frady, Clemson University Kris Frady is an Assistant Professor in the Departments of Educational and Organizational Leadership and Development and Engineering and Science Education at Clemson University and Faculty Director for Clemson University Center for Workforce Development (CUCWD) and the National Science Foundation Advanced Technological Education Center for Aviation and Automotive Technological Education using Virtual E-Schools (CA2VES
Paper ID #18627Finite Element Simulation Models for Mechanics of MaterialsDr. Shahnam Navaee, Georgia Southern University Dr. Navaee is currently a Full Professor in the Civil Engineering and Construction Management Depart- ment in the Allen E. Paulson College of Engineering and Information Technology at Georgia Southern University. Dr. Navaee received his B.S. and M.S. degrees in Civil Engineering from Louisiana State University in 1980 and 1983, and his Ph.D. degree from the Department of Civil Engineering at Clemson University in 1989.Dr. Junsuk Kang, Seoul National University Dr. Junsuk Kang earned his Ph.D. degree in
. Jeffrey E. Froyd, Texas A&M University Dr. Jeffrey E. Froyd is a TEES Research Professor in the Office of Engineering Academic and Student Affairs at Texas A&M University, College Station. He received the B.S. degree in mathematics from Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology and the M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in electrical engineering from the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis. He was an Assistant Professor, Associate Professor, and Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology. At Rose-Hulman, he co-created the Integrated, First-Year Curriculum in Science, Engineering and Mathematics, which was recognized in 1997 with a Hesburgh Award Certificate of Excellence. He served
understanding user needs is clear inmost any definition. The Accreditation Board of Engineering and Technology currently definesdesign as “the process of devising a system, component, or process to meet desired needs,” [8].This definition is currently being revised as part of a larger ABET update. Sheppard’s succinctdefinition is that engineers “scope, generate, evaluate, and realize ideas” [9]. Dym, et al., definedesign as “Engineering design is a systematic, intelligent process in which designers generate,evaluate, and specify concepts for devices, systems, or processes whose form and functionachieve clients’ objectives or users’ needs while satisfying a specified set of constraints” whilegoing on to add that a “designer has a client (or customer
methods that utilize real-worldapplications of science and math concepts, are positively related to STEM major choice.Using the National Education Longitudinal Study (NELS), Legewie and DiPrete (2014) similarlyfound that high school context matters—high school STEM curriculum and the level of gendersegregation of extracurricular activities is associated with the diversification of college STEMfields. Yet, all of these studies aggregate STEM disciplines, leaving student selection intoengineering majors still relatively ambiguous. Unlike science, technology, and mathematics,engineering curricula have not been widely adopted in K-12 schools; this means that students haveless exposure to the field during secondary education. Since K-12 exposure to
Engineering Education and Centers (ENG/EEC) division and the Division of Undergraduate Education (EHR/DUE). She also served as Associate Chair and Associate Professor in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at the Florida A&M University - Florida State University College of Engineering. She holds civil and environmental engi- neering degrees from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the University of Virginia and is a licensed professional engineer. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2017 Time Management for Faculty: A Framework for Intentional Productivity and Well-BeingAbstractFaculty work includes a wide range of
context of Next Generation Science Standards.Mr. Erdogan Kaya, University of Nevada Erdogan Kaya is a PhD student in science education at University of Nevada, Las Vegas. He is work- ing as a graduate assistant and teaching science methods courses. Prior to beginning the PhD program, he received his MS degree in computer science and engineering. He coached robotics teams and was awarded several grants that promote Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM). He has been volunteering in many education outreach programs including Science Fair and Robotics pro- grams such as First Robotics competitions. Over the past four years, he published several journal papers and presented at national and international
Paper ID #19071Enhancing Ergonomic Design Skills among Undergraduate Students by Inte-grating Computer Aided Design and Digital Human ModelingDr. Faisal Aqlan, Pennsylvania State University, Erie (Behrend College) Dr. Faisal Aqlan is an assistant professor of industrial engineering at Penn State Behrend. He earned the B.S. and M.S. in industrial engineering from Jordan University of Science and Technology in 2007 and 2010, respectively and the Ph.D. in Industrial and Systems Engineering from the State University of New York at Binghamton in 2013. Prior to joining the faculty at Behrend, Dr. Aqlan was a faculty member in
activities of being an engineer andthe hands-on activities, but they emphasized different aspects of this relationship. Many referredto problem solving, visualization, creativity, and the potential to engage in addressing real-worldproblems. One ambassador described how the best activities “really connect with students” sothat they can see “how they can help develop technology to help other people and also help theworld around them.” Another ambassador provided an example of an activity about biomimicryand stated that it involved students engaging as engineers would by making “armor based off an 8animal that they know.” As engineers, the ambassador
of the College leadership team. The College current has over 2442 undergraduate and over 850 graduate students. For many years, he has served as the Campus Principal Investigator of the NSF funded Greater Philadel- phia Louis Stokes Alliances for Minority Participation (LSAMP) Program and the NSF/AMP Bridges to the Doctorate Program, which focus on the success of students traditionally underrepresented in sci- ence, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) disciplines. In addition, Dean Vaughan is the former Program Director/PI of the EAA/UD Graduate Preparatory Summer Residential Program funded by the Educational Advancement Alliance (EAA). The program includes up to 40 participants, rising juniors or
Engineering Education, 2017 Implementing Design Thinking into Summer Camp Experience for High School Women in Materials EngineeringAbstractAlthough women make up a significant portion of the college educated population, there remainsa sizable gap between the number of men and women pursuing degrees and careers in science,technology, engineering and math (STEM) fields. The gender gap begins at middle school andwidens considerably in later high school years. One major factor for this gap is the lack ofbelonging women can feel towards engineering. As one approach to developing and improvingthis sense of belonging, we focused on improving students’ comprehension of engineering topicsduring a weeklong materials science and