frequency spectrum of 120 Hz to 12 MHz Four kilobyte data sample depthAt a list price of $295 each (quantity and educational discounts were available), this appeared to bean attractive solution. The PCSGU250 and a screen image are shown below in Figure 1.11 It has been pointed out that newer instruments provide similar or better features at a lower cost. The instruments wechose to use were based on what was available in 2009 and were available for use for this project after they were nolonger needed as equipment for our on-site undergraduate labs.Figure1. Velleman PCSGU250 dual-channel oscilloscope and function generator. The picture on the right is a screenshot of the user interface. Photos courtesy of Velleman, Inc©Next, we purchased a
for over 28 years as a commissioned officer in the U.S Army Field Artillery in a variety of leadership positions in the U.S., Europe, and East Asia. He retired at the rank of Colonel. During his military career, Dr. Lenox spent 15 years on the engineering faculty of USMA – including five years as the Director of the Civil Engineering Division. Upon his retirement from the U.S. Army in 1998, he joined the staff of the American Soci- ety of Civil Engineers (ASCE). In his position as educational staff leader of ASCE, he managed several new educational initiatives – collectively labeled as Project ExCEEd (Excellence in Civil Engineering Education). As ASCE’s Executive Vice President, Dr. Lenox led several educational
University 2014-present: Assistant Director of Diversity and Inclusion: Charles E. Schmidt College of Medicine, Florida Atlantic Univer- sity 2010-2012 Vice President of Strategic Initiatives and Research: Workforce Central Florida/USDOL 2008-2010 Director or STEM and New and Emerging Industries Special Projects: Workforce Central Florida/USDOL 2007-2008 Education Special Project Manager: Workforce Central Florida/USDOL 2005- 2007 Science Department Chairperson: Orange County Public Schools; Orlando Florida 2002-2007 Physics and Biology Teacher: Orange County Public Schools; Orlando Florida Selected Publications 2013 American Society of Engineering Education. Dagley, M., Ramlakhan,N., Georgiopoulos, M., Young, C
InitialPublic Offering (IPO): In the 10th year of the company, you are doing $70 million in sales and project that you will reach $100 million within a year. At this time, you see 2 possible directions for the company: 1) Take the company public. Your accountants suggest that you should offer 2 million (of your total 12 million shares) at $30 per share. 2) Disney, which has been trying to get into the educational software market, offers you $420 million for your entire company.Students often gave clear answers that analyzed their personal interests, long term career goals,and assessments of value. However, close to half of the students (16 of 40) also struggled withthe exact mechanisms at play when
Paper ID #17743Exploring nontraditional characteristics of students in a freshman engineer-ing courseMr. William B. Corley, University of Louisville William B. Corley, M.S., is the graduate research assistant on this project. He is an experimental psychol- ogy graduate student with the Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences at University of Louisville. He has a bachelor’s degree in psychology and a master’s degree in experimental psychology with a cogni- tive psychology concentration. His background includes several educational research projects and training in statistical methods.Dr. J C McNeil, University of
Paper ID #19771First-Year Engineering Students’ Perceptions of their Abilities to SucceedDr. Tanya Dugat Wickliff, Texas A&M University Delivering significant results in pivotal roles such as Sr. Consultant to high-profile clients, Sr. Project Manager directing teams, and Executive Leader of initiatives and programs that boost organizational effectiveness and optimize operations have been hallmarks of Dr. Wickliff’s career spanning more than 24 years with leaders in the oil & gas and semiconductor industries. As an expert in the areas of Executive Leadership and Team Development, Strategy Design & Execution
]. Peer-assessmentenvironments have also been designed for pedagogical code reviews [7] and exampractice questions [8]. A frequent use of peer assessment is for design projects [9],including user-interface design [9]. In group projects, peer assessment is often used torate contributions of team members to the artifacts produced by the team [11].The main objective of peer feedback is to provide specific and timely feedback to authorson how to improve their work. Unfortunately, most students, left to their own devices,provide a paucity of feedback that is not focused on helping the student author to improve.Most instructors have limited experience in teaching students how to review. It is one ofthe critical-thinking skills that is important for all
projects for researchers to explore with K-12 teachers and students.Third, there are extensive references to K-12 teachers encouraging use of CS in curriculum andinstruction (Basu, Dickes, Kinnebrew, Sengupta, & Biswas, 2013; Blikstein, 2013; Borgman,Abelson, Dirks, Johnson, Koedinger, Linn, … & Smith, 2008; Chiu & Wu, 2009; Clark, Nelson,Sengupta, & D’Angelo, 2009; Dalke, Cassidy, Grobstein, & Blank, 2007; Donnelly, Linn, &Ludvigsen, 2014; Grover & Pea, 2013; Hashem & Mioduser, 2011; Jacobson & Wilensky, 2006;Klašnja-Milićević, Vesin, Ivanovic, & Budimac, 2011; Levy & Wilensky, 2009; Maroulis,Guimera, Petry, Stringer, Gomez, Amaral, & Wilensky, 2010; Pea & Collins, 2008; Pathak, Kim,Jacobson
Paper ID #19517Using WebGL in Developing Interactive Virtual Laboratories for DistanceEngineering EducationDr. Mert Bal, Miami University Mert Bal received his PhD degree in Mechanical Engineering from the Eastern Mediterranean Univer- sity, North Cyprus in 2008. He was a Post-Doctoral Fellow in the University of Western Ontario, and a Visiting Researcher at the National Research Council Canada in London, Ontario, Canada between 2008 and 2010. He was involved in various research projects in the areas of collaborative intelligence, localiza- tion and collaborative information processing in wireless sensor networks
Engineering at Kettering University. Her research interests include the educational pathways of returning graduate students, those who work in industry prior to pursuing graduate studies. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2017 Engineering Technology Graduate Students: Role Professional Societies Have in Their Formation In recent years, there have been several research projects focused on returning graduatestudents in engineering, those who have significant industry experience before beginning theirgraduate studies. These projects have focused on both the masters and doctoral levels and havelooked at research, coursework, benefits of attending graduate school, and
Moderate level of interest Highest level of interest Figure 1 – Participant Thread ChoiceThe pre-assessment survey also asked questions about STEM faculty development issues, facultyexpectations from the workshop, and information they would like to share with the workshopattendees. Following the workshop, the project team and external evaluator administered a post-assessment to all workshop participants. The post-assessment asked participants to rate workshoplogistics such as ease of travel, transitions throughout each day, and accommodations. In addition, thepost-assessment asked participants to describe how the workshop changed their views on holistic STEMfaculty development and how they might go
outreach, educational and support systems that have the potential to form ”resource-rich” networks in which students receive in- formation and resources in routine exchanges. Dr. Martin’s current projects evolve her prior research on social and cultural capital away from a normative state that requires students to conform to the main- stream institution of engineering education in an effort to promote experiences and systems that affirm/are inclusive of people from diverse backgrounds. In addition to research, she is deeply interested in STEM education policy, and held a Science and Technology Policy Fellowship with the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in 2012-2013. Dr. Martin has held a
Institute launched a project to enhance engineeringdepartments’ existing practices for meeting the SARI requirements and educatinggraduate students in ethics. The lead author of this paper interviewed graduate program coordinators from nineengineering departments to explore the following topics:1 1) The department’s current approach to educating graduate students in ethics; 2) The types of ethical issues graduate students in the program should be able to address; 3) Major challenges and perceived needs for enhancing graduate ethics education in the program.Interviews were conducted in the Spring semester of 2015. The interviews lasted between30 and 45 minutes. With IRB approval, the interviews were recorded and transcribed.Results
struggle to make theconcomitant adjustments to their curricular culture. For example, an instructor might adoptclickers but ask superficial questions (e.g., where answers reflect varying numerical calculationsrather than underlying conceptual models) and find that student outcomes do not improve as theyhad hoped. Schein’s depiction of organizational culture differentiates surface-level features fromdeeper values and assumptions [3]. In the example above, the clicker was a surface-level artifactthat the instructor tried to duplicate, but the underlying curricular culture was missing.Thus, major changes to curriculum, such as the adoption of project-based learning or movingfrom lecture to studio formats, often involve cultural shifts. Faculty
to the development of academic programs, several other educational options werealso created as part of this partnership. The first of these is to provide stand-alone, non-creditworkshops to train and certify students from other institutions, industry representatives, anddisplaced workers. Workshops have also been created to train educators at both the K-12 andpostsecondary levels on the use of robotic arms and the role the field of robotics plays in science,technology, engineering, and math (STEM) education. This activity is aimed at broadening thescope of the project beyond just Bay College and Michigan Tech University through improvingthe quality of industrial robotics education at other area institutions. Thanks to the attainment
funded research projects focus on the development nonlinear dynamics approaches for the detection of faults in bearing and gear systems at the Villanova Center for Analytics of Dynamic Systems (VCADS) in PA. He graduated from the University of Yaounde 1 in Cameroon and then completed a Certificate in Teaching Engineering in Higher Education at Villanova University. Dr. Kwuimy is interested in vibration analysis and in the use of nonlinear dynamics tools to improve the early detection of fault in complex nonlinear systems. In the latest, his focus is on engineering systems (gear systems, bearings) and biological systems (vibration in human-arm, human diseases). In vibration analysis, his focus is on the conversion
positively impacted their content learning.Survey Comments Thermodynamics: The anonymous survey included a request and space for comments.Twelve students in the control group and fifteen students in the experimental group providedcomments. Below, parts of some of the comments are reproduced. Except where mistakes greatlyimpeded understanding, these quotes are provided verbatim. As the purpose is to provide 11evidence of student feelings about the collaboration project and not to point out errors in thesecomments, [sic] is not used. Ten of the twelve students in the control group expressed a wish they had been included inthe collaboration group. The other two felt taking group
Kinematics CourseAbstractThe proper application of lean management techniques to manufacturing processes typicallyresults in process improvements. Many of the principles of lean thinking can also be applied tothe educational process. This paper examines the implementation of lean management principlesin the design and delivery of a traditional lecture-based engineering course – Kinematics ofMachines.The format of a typical kinematics course relies on lectures, homework, exams, and perhaps adesign project as a means for transferring knowledge from the instructor to the students. In thispaper, lean thinking principles are applied to redesign the kinematics course format to increasethe effectiveness and efficiency of the knowledge transfer process
need for instructional resources and strategies to teachcommunication skills, engineering faculty at the University of New Haven have beencollaborating to develop technical communication curriculum, including a series of onlinemodules. The present study is a pilot study intended to evaluate the implementation of selectedinstructional resources and strategies integrated into a chemical engineering laboratory course,where students were required to write bi-weekly technical memos based on the results ofexperimental work.One innovative aspect of this pilot project was the team-taught approach to instruction. In thislaboratory course, the engineering instructor collaborated with a writing instructor to plan anddeliver instruction. Although team
professor in the science, technology & society program in the De- partment of Engineering and Society at the University of Virginia. He is the principal investigator at University of Virginia on the ’4C Project’ on Cultivating Cultures of Ethical STEM education with col- leagues from Notre Dame, Xavier University and St. Mary’s College. He is also the co-leader of the ’Nano and the City’ thematic research cluster for the Center for Nanotechnology in Society at Arizona State University. Rider is a Research Collaborator with the Sustainability Science Education program at the Biodesign Institute. His research focuses on wicked problems that arise at the intersection of society and technology. Rider holds a Ph.D. in
underserved elementary schools to promote STEM literacy, and provided in school STEM training for both teachers and students. She began her career at Rice in 2010 as a post-doctoral research fellow and then project manager in the Colvin labs. She joined the office of STEM engagement at the beginning of 2015 as Director of Programs and Operations. In her role Carolina is responsible for overseeing the program operations and the research efforts for the RSTEM group. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2017 Nanotechnology Research Experience for Teachers Enhancing STEM EducationAbstractTeachers serve a vital role in improving the nation’s STEM education and
propellants for the characterization of an optimal propulsive system. The optimal system is determined by the specific impulse and propellant flow rate. The one with the highest specific impulse and the lowest flow rate is the desired propulsive system. Although my primary focus is with this, I participate in many projects related to controls and heat transfer. Aside from my research, I focus heavily on the advancement of engineering education at the collegiate level. I work on revising and updating laboratory experiments to help improve student understanding of how concepts are applied and utilized. I also spend time writing design optimization MATLAB codes for various applications. c American
(MEMS) with a focus on effect of space charges on micro- to nano-scale electrostatic actuation. Upon receiving her Ph.D., she worked as a Postdoctoral Research Associate in the Department of Mechanical Science and Engineering in the University of Illi- nois, Urbana-Champaign, where worked in multiple projects using scanning probe microscopy to study material properties. In 2009, Yan Wu joined the faculty of the Department of Engineering Physics at the University of Wisconsin, Platteville. From fall 2015 to summer 2016, Yan Wu completed one year of sabbatical as a visiting scholar in the Department of Biomedical Engineering at University of Wisconsin – Madison.Dr. Theodorus Evan de Groot, University of Wisconsin
research, relate thisknowledge to each teacher’s independent project, and translate this knowledge and experienceinto a new lesson plan for their high school classroom. These lesson plans were disseminatedbroadly through the web (http://agpa.uakron.edu/p16/ret.php), workshops to local K-12educators, and national conference symposia.The targeted participants were high school science teachers (e.g. chemistry, physics, biology) inthe Akron hub of the Ohio STEM Learning Network within a one hour drive of the University ofAkron.1 This encompasses Summit county and four surrounding counties (Portage, Stark,Wayne, and Medina counties).The intellectual focus of this site was polymeric films and interfaces, but branched out after itsinception to encompass
in higher education. Online homework has been a readily used resourcein many institutions for various subjects including mathematics, physics, chemistry, andengineering. The authors’ institution, Louisiana Tech University, has had plenty of experiencewith the open-source, freely available homework delivery tool WeBWorK. Currently,WeBWorK has been used as a homework tool in mathematics and engineering courses, includingstatics and mechanics of materials and circuits.This work is part of a funded National Science Foundation (NSF DUE #1244833) project withthe aim of expanding the use of WeBWorK into the engineering fields. Specifically, the projectlooked into the implementation of WeBWorK into three semester-long, sophomore-level, corecourses
experience evaluating programs that fall under the umbrella of educational evaluation, including K-12 educational curricula, K-12 STEM programs after-school programs, and comprehensive school reform initiatives. She received her Ph.D. in Research, Measurement and Statistics from the Department of Education Policy at Georgia State University (GSU).Dr. Jessica D. Gale, Georgia Institute of Technology, Center for Education Integrating Science, Mathematics,and Computing Dr. Jessica Gale is a Research Scientist II at Georgia Tech’s Center for education Integrating Science, Mathematics, and Computing (CEISMC). Her research focuses on project-based learning, STEM inte- gration at the elementary and middle grades levels, design
,analyses of award winning products, and a case study of a long-term design project, DesignHeuristics capture the cognitive “rules of thumb” used by designers to intentionally vary their setof candidate designs[23]. These strategies appear to be ones that expert designers employautomatically, without consciously deciding to do so[24]. The heuristics were individuallyextracted across multiple concepts from multiple designers to reflect a useful level of abstractionin describing how to alter design characteristics to create new ones[25]. The resulting set of DesignHeuristics capture 77 different strategies, each of which can be applied independently or in tocreate new designs[26].The set of Design Heuristics is packaged as an instructional tool for
Nieswandt, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Martina Nieswandt is an Associate Professor of Science Education and Interim Associate Dean for Re- search and Engagement in the College of Education at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. Her research focuses on the relationship between motivation, affects and learning associated with K-16 sci- ence concepts and various instructional contexts (e.g., small groups, project-based learning) utilizing mixed-methods approaches. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2017 The Critical Role of Group Affect in Engineering Design Tasks in High School Biology1
change, and to denote measures of technical competence. Thesteady rise starting around 1980 coincides with the time that personal computers became bothpopular and affordable; for example the IBM PC was introduced in 1981. The accessibilityof technology to all age groups has only grown since then (Mawson, 2007). The 1980’s wasalso the decade technological literacy began to come under increasing consideration in highereducation by policy makers (The Committee to Idenfity Critical Issues in Federal Support forScience and Technology, 1986), foundations such as Sloan (Florman, 1987), and the AAASthrough Project 2061 (Rutherford, 1989).The 1990’s saw increasing interest in technological literacy at the policy level (The Board forEngineering Education
the host country and chosen theme, while maintaining consistency of thecourse from year-to-year. The learning goals generally used for each of the offerings over theperiod under study are:1. Develop a historic perspective on the development of [COUNTRY] from [appropriate historical period] times to the present.2. Understand the limitations of technology and how today’s engineering solutions can become tomorrow’s societal problems.3. Understand how language, traditions, customs, and culture impact engineering projects and products.4. Understand how projects in one country can be affected by policies, laws, and customs of other countries.5. Understand how political, financial, and environmental constraints affect the design and