the M.Sc. and Ph.D. degrees in Electrical Engineering in 1998 and 2004, respectively, from Ohio University, Athens, OH, U.S.A. He is currently an assistant professor in College of Computing and Informatics, Saudi Electronic University, Riyadh, King- dom of Saudi Arabia. His research interests are in remote sensing applications, fiber optics, semiconduc- tor, and in the area of wireless digital communications, especially spread spectrum (SS) communications and its applications such as CDMA, channels, and DSP board applications. Also, his research interests are in engineering education and transfer technology. He attended and participated in many local and international conferences. He has over twenty publications
engineering later in life (senior year in highschool). Historically,African American and other communities of color have not had that same access to the pre-college STEM education as White communities. Yet, members of these communities of colorhave contributed to technological innovations and STEM achievements.Underrepresentation of minority communities in STEM fields is not an accurate representation ofthe contribution of these communities to the field of engineering. In fact, there is a history ofinnovation and engineering ingenuity and display of engineering attributes in the AfricanAmerican community [4]. The historical engineering contributions of African Americans provideevidence that in the Black community, there might be common knowledge or
Fellow of the American So- ciety of Engineering Education, holds membership in a number of organizations and presently serves on the National Advisory Board of the National Society of Black Engineers.Coletta Bey, Old Dominion University Coletta Bey is the Research Associate in the Batten College of Engineering and Technology at Old Do- minion University. Ms. Bey is a summa claude graduate of Norfolk State University, where she earned her BS degree in Electronic Technology, in 1985. In 2000 she was awarded the Master of Science in Busi- ness Administration from the University of Phoenix. Her research focus is engaging PreK-12 graders in STEM. She is the founder and Executive Director of STEMulating Youth, Inc., a 501c3
Paper ID #21469Engaging Engineering Students in Lectures Using Anecdotes, Activities, andGamesDr. 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 and assessing graduate
Polytechnic School in the Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering at Arizona State University. He teaches human-centered engineering design, design thinking, and design innovation project courses. Dr. Lande researches how technical and non-technical people learn and apply design thinking and making processes to their work. He is interested in the intersection of designerly epis- temic identities and vocational pathways. Dr. Lande received his B.S in Engineering (Product Design), M.A. in Education (Learning, Design and Technology) and Ph.D. in Mechanical Engineering (Design Education) from Stanford University.Dr. Ann F. McKenna, Arizona State University, Polytechnic campus Ann F. McKenna is a Professor in the Ira A. Fulton
Paper ID #22401Exploring the Human Dimension of Engineering Through the Built Environ-mentDr. Jeffrey C. Evans P.E., Bucknell University Jeffrey C. Evans, Ph.D., P.E., F. ASCE is Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Bucknell University in Lewisburg, PA. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2018 Exploring the Human Dimension of Engineering through the Built EnvironmentAbstractHumanities and social sciences along with mathematics and natural sciences are at thecore of liberal learning. Further, the proposed ABET student outcome five requiresstudents to
Joseph Derrick, Michael Golub, Dr. Jing Zhang, Vaibhav Shrivastav Purdue School of Engineering & Technology Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis Abstract Design and Methodology BenefitsThe convection heat transfer is explored for a new academiclaboratory experiment to help address the lack of practical Conceptual Design Educational
Professor in the Department of Bioengineering at Florida Gulf Coast University (FGCU). She earned a B.S. in Biomedical Engineering from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI) in 2004 as a Rensselaer Medalist and as a member of the inaugural class of Gates Gates Millennium Scholars. In 2011, she earned a Ph.D. in Bioengineering from Rice University. Before joining FGCU, she was a visiting Assistant Professor of Biotechnology in the Division of Science and Technology at the United International College (UIC) in Zhuhai China. Since her training with ASCE’s Excellence in Civil Engineering Education (ExCEEd) initiative in 2016, she has been exploring and applying evidence-based strategies for instruction. In addition to the
Technical College Jill Davishahl is a faculty member in the engineering department at Bellingham Technical College where she teaches courses ranging from Intro to Engineering Design to Engineering Statics. Outside of teach- ing, Jill is working on the development of a Bachelor of Applied Science in Engineering Technology and is currently PI on the NSF funded ATE project grant in renewable energy as well as PI on an NSF funded S-STEM project. She holds a Master of Science in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Washington.Mr. Eric Davishahl, Whatcom Community College Eric Davishahl is faculty and engineering program coordinator at Whatcom Community College. His teaching and research interests include
designerly epis- temic identities and vocational pathways. Dr. Lande received his B.S in Engineering (Product Design), M.A. in Education (Learning, Design and Technology) and Ph.D. in Mechanical Engineering (Design Education) from Stanford University. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2018 Student Learning Trajectories from Making and Engineering ActivitiesIntroductionThe research objective of this NSF-funded EAGER: MAKER: Student Learning Trajectoriesfrom Making Activities Learning Trajectories project is to explore and understand how open-ended, hands-on Making work and activities can reflect student learning trajectories and learninggains in
. Meg is a board certified coach with experience in developing students’ leadership and professional com- petencies through teaching and one-on-one coaching. She is most interested in developing student knowl- edge of leadership to impact their successful transition to the workplace.Mr. Andrew Michael Erdman, The Pennsylvania State University Andrew M. ”Mike” Erdman received his B.S. in Engineering Science from Penn State and his M.S. from USC. Erdman has also taken courses at RPI, Union, UCLA, UCSB, MIT, and Dartmouth. At Rocket- dyne (Pratt & Whitney), he helped design the Space Shuttle. As manager of Reactor Safety Analysis, Experimental Engineering, and Fluid Dynamics Technology at KAPL (Lockheed Martin), he
Astronautics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 2014, after which he served as a postdoctoral research fellow at the Tufts University Center for Engineering Education and Outreach. Aaron also obtained a master’s degree from MIT in 2010 and a bachelor’s degree from the University of Michigan in 2008, both in aerospace engineering.Dr. Cynthia J. Finelli, University of Michigan Dr. Cynthia Finelli is Associate Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, Associate Professor of Education, and Director and Graduate Chair for Engineering Education Research Programs at University of Michigan (U-M). Dr. Finelli is a fellow in the American Society of Engineering Education, a Deputy Editor of the Journal
yetimplemented at another university have been developed.In an effort to broaden the impact of this project a summer workshop was held with a select groupof invited universities. Results from that summer workshop indicate a range of approaches fornew engineering pathways for pre-service teacher preparation will be required to reflect theparticular culture of the universities. Potential approaches identified include:• The use of a minor in STEM education to complement an existing engineering degree, this reflects additions to existing undergraduate engineering degrees• Post-Baccalaureate degree programs –this minimizes impact to undergraduate engineering degrees• Working with educational technology programs –they tend to have greater flexibility
Paper ID #21529An Evaluation of an Engineering Design Class using Mixed Methods Tech-niquesMs. Martina Margaret Moyne, University College Dublin Martina Moyne is a PhD candidate in the School of Mechanical and Material Engineering, University College Dublin (UCD) and a Lecturer in Product Design in the Institute of Technology Carlow. She received her BDes in Industrial Design and MSc in Medical Device Design in the National College of Art and Design (NCAD) and ME in Management in UCD. She is also a part time lecturer in UCD and prior to pursuing her PhD, she worked for six years in Nypro Healthcare as a Senior Product
Paper ID #22876Panel: Embedding Technical Writing with Experiential Learning Compo-nents into Engineering CurriculaDr. Lindsay Corneal, Grand Valley State University Lindsay Corneal is an Associate Professor in the Padnos College of Engineering and Computing at Grand Valley State University. She received her B.A.Sc. in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Windsor, a M.B.A. from Lawrence Technological University, and a Ph.D. from Michigan State University in Materials Science and Engineering.Ms. Debbie Morrow, Grand Valley State University Debbie Morrow currently serves as Liaison Librarian to the School of
engineering.Prof. Jacek Uziak, University of Botswana Jacek Uziak is a Professor in the Department of Mechanical Engineering of the University of Botswana. He received his MSc in Mechanical Engineering from the AGH University of Technology in Krakow, Poland and his PhD in Technical Sciences from the University of Life Sciences in Lublin, Poland. For the past 35 years he has been working at universities mainly in Poland and Botswana; his career includes teaching and research assignments also in Canada, Czech Republic, Norway, UK, Netherlands, France, Germany and USA. He specializes in engineering mechanics and teaches courses in this area. He has particular interest in engineering education.Mr. Andreas Febrian, Utah State
: Improving learning opportunities for low-achieving, low- income youth.” Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, vol. 19, no. 4, pp. 325-338, 1997.[5] C. Papadopoulos, and J. R. Reisel. “Do students in summer bridge programs successfully improve math placement and persist? A meta-analysis,” in Proceedings of the 2008 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition. Pittsburgh, PA, USA: ASEE, June 22-25, 2008.[6] J. R. Reisel, M. Jablonski, H. Hosseini, and E. Munson. “Assessment of factors impacting success for incoming college engineering students in a summer bridge program.” International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology, vol. 43, no
communications is a fundamental skill for most engineers.Typical engineering documents are visual, however simply seeing the document is not enough tobe able to interpret, reason, and communicate with it. The engineer must be able to internalizethe information into a mental map of some sort and appropriately interpret the features.This case study examines how a blind mechanical engineering student was taught and learnedbasic concepts of engineering graphical representation. Assistive technologies replaced theubiquitous computer and paper visual interfaces. The course was intended to enable the studentto develop basic mental imagery capability in engineering graphics. These capabilities provideda foundation for engineering thinking for the student and
Paper ID #22256From Toys to Tools: UAVs in Middle-school Engineering Education (RTP)Miss Srinjita Bhaduri, University of Colorado, Boulder Srinjita Bhaduri is a PhD student in Computer and Cognitive Science at University of Colorado Boulder. Her research examines how educational technology can improve student engagement and student learning, often focusing on underserved populations.Katie Van HorneMr. John Daniel Ristvey Jr., UCAR Center for Science Education John Ristvey, M.S., (UCAR, Principal Investigator), is development lead for Engineering Experiences in collaboration with Dr. Tammy Sumner, Srinjita Bhaduri, and Dr
Paper ID #21115Strategies for Developing, Expanding, and Strengthening Community Col-lege Engineering Transfer Programs ˜Dr. Amelito G. Enriquez, Canada College Amelito Enriquez is a professor of Engineering and Mathematics at Ca˜nada College in Redwood City, CA. He received a BS in Geodetic Engineering from the University of the Philippines, his MS in Geode- tic Science from the Ohio State University, and his PhD in Mechanical Engineering from the University of California, Irvine. His research interests include technology-enhanced instruction and increasing the representation of female, minority
University of Tennessee,Knoxville. Cornell Engineering offers a more in-depth program starting with an Introduction toEntrepreneurship for Engineers course at the sophomore level. The minor requires 18 credits andincludes courses on Ethics, History of Capitalism and Technology, Accounting and Finance,Ideation and Design Thinking and a capstone entrepreneurship project. An experiential learningexperience through a summer internship or coop program is encouraged but not required.The engineering entrepreneurship minor at the University of Virginia is comprised of threerequired courses and one elective. The three required courses are Business Fundamentals,Engineers as Entrepreneurs, and Entrepreneurial Finance. An elective course is also requiredwhich
Methods Faculty Apprentice Award in 2014. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2018 Student Perceptions of Engineering Based Upon Participation in a Board Game (RTP)In the past decade the demand for science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM)professionals has increased significantly [1], thus creating a demand for improved STEMeducation. Often young students are not engaged by science and mathematics in the classroomthrough traditional teaching techniques (i.e. lectures) [2], as their learning styles are not alwaysconsidered. Felder and Silverman [3] summarized the different learning styles which includevisual/auditory, sensory/intuitive, inductive/deductive
Paper ID #21710Data Visualization for Time-Resolved Real-Time Engineering Writing Pro-cessesDr. Catherine G.P. Berdanier, Pennsylvania State University, University Park Catherine G.P. Berdanier is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Mechanical and Nuclear Engi- neering at Pennsylvania State University. She earned her B.S. in Chemistry from The University of South Dakota, her M.S. in Aeronautical and Astronautical Engineering and Ph.D. in Engineering Education from Purdue University. Her research interests include graduate-level engineering education, including inter- and multidisciplinary graduate education
Paper ID #21837Measuring Broader Impact of NSF-funded Project on Software EngineeringEducationDr. Sushil Acharya, Robert Morris University Sushil Acharya, D.Eng. (Asian Institute of Technology) is the Assistant Provost for Research and Gradu- ate Studies. A Professor of Software Engineering, Dr. Acharya joined Robert Morris University in Spring 2005 after serving 15 years in the Software Industry. His teaching involvement and research interest are in the area of Software Engineering education, Software Verification & Validation, Software Security, Data Mining, Neural Networks, and Enterprise Resource Planning. He also
technology the engineering schools must be focused on providing a strongeducation to students in technical fields. Our college takes this issue seriously by providingstudents with a very strong foundation of engineering education that allows them to transfersuccessfully to any four-year engineering programs. Engineering students in an academic setting do not have the environment, theresponsibilities, the demands, or the interactions with other members of an engineering team, nordo they face the real-life situations and challenges that a practicing engineer faces every day.Therefore, our program decided that our mentorship initiative must have as many professionalengineering aspects as academic ones. We built the mentoring role to be part coach
Paper ID #21764Developing Metacognitive Skills in PBL Undergraduate EngineeringProf. Rose M. Marra, University of Missouri Rose M. Marra is a Professor of Learning Technologies at the University of Missouri. She is PI of the NSF-funded Supporting Collaboration in Engineering Education, and has studied and published on engineering education, women and minorities in STEM, online learning and assessment. Marra holds a PhD. in Educational Leadership and Innovation and worked as a software engineer before entering academe.Dr. Carolyn Plumb, Montana State University Carolyn Plumb is the recently retired Director of Educational
Paper ID #21584Examining the Engineering Attitudes and Experiences of URM Summer CampParticipantsMiss Jessica Symone Whipple, Kennesaw State University Jessica Whipple is a student that majors in Industrial Engineering Technology at Kennesaw State Uni- versity. Her research focuses on examining STEM experiences in mentoring-intervention and academic- intervention programs from high school to higher education.Shelbie P. Prater, University of Michigan Undergraduate student studying Civil Engineering at the University of Michigan, Ann ArborDr. Joi-Lynn Mondisa, University of Michigan Joi Mondisa is an Assistant Professor in the
2015Figure 2: A sample Reddit post as stored by the web-scraper bot.The scraped threads related to graduate attrition were gathered from the bot, which outputs as atext file that can then be analyzed through qualitative analysis techniques, such as content analysis.For our purposes, this initial corpus was then sorted by hand to remove any post not related tograduate student attrition, in case any keywords returned unrelated items.We then were able to analyze the resulting corpus through traditional qualitative and textualanalysis techniques. First, we sorted the corpus into posts related to engineering, STM (science,technology and mathematics) and non-STM. Of these, there were 28 discussions explicitly relatedto engineering graduate school
Paper ID #21244Case Study: Industry-sponsored Mechanical Engineering Capstone SeniorDesign ProjectsDr. Hosni I. Abu-Mulaweh, Purdue University, Fort Wayne Hosni I. Abu-Mulaweh received his BS, MS, and PhD degrees in mechanical engineering from the Missouri-University of Science and Technology in 1984, 1987, and 1992, respectively. Currently, he is a professor of mechanical engineering at Purdue University Fort Wayne. He is also the mechanical engi- neering capstone senior design coordinator. His research interests include heat transfer, thermodynamics, and fluid mechanics.Nusaybah Abu-Mulaweh, Purdue University, West
demographics and outcomes in civil engineering in the United States.” Journal of Professional Issues in Engineering Education and Practice, 141(4), 2015.[9] T.Y. Smith, “Science, mathematics, engineering and technology retention database.” Research News on Graduate Education, 2(2), 2000.[10] W. Bastalich, S. Franzway, J. Gill, J. Mills, and R. Sharp, “Disrupting masculinities: Women engineers and engineering workplace culture.” Australian Feminist Studies, 22(54), pp. 385-400, 2007.[11] National Science Foundation, National