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Collection
2018 Mid Atlantic Section Fall Meeting
Authors
Alexander John De Rosa, Stevens Institute of Technology (School of Engineering and Science); Maxine Fontaine, Stevens Institute of Technology (School of Engineering and Science)
Tagged Topics
Diversity
. Table 1: Fall 2016 incentive plan for spatial skills component Spatial Novice (0 pts) Spatial Intermediate (3 pts) Spatial Master (5 pts) Test score < 60% Test score 60% - 69% Test score > 70%Following assessment using the PSVT:R, all students were invited to attend the workshop althoughspecial emphasis was placed on students in the lower two categories attending for a chance to earnmore points and improve their spatial skills. These students then completed a four week workshopsession and those who attended all four sessions had the opportunity to re-take the PSVT:R.Students were again placed in one of the three categories based on their new test scores. Studentsin the first two categories
Collection
2018 Mid Atlantic Section Fall Meeting
Authors
Yasser R Salem, Graduate student; Paul Cotae, University of the District of Columbia
undergrad in electrical engineering from Yanbu Industrial College.He worked in Saudi Aramco as instrumentation and communications engineer at King AbdullahUniversity of Science and Technology (KAUST) in water plan project. He worked asinstrumentation and control engineering at Marafiq Company in Technical service Department.Today, he is continuing his master degree in electrical Engineering at University of the Districtof Columbia in communication track. His interesting in cybersecurity.Auther2 Dr. Paul CotaeDr. Paul Cotae, Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering is the Director of the PhDProgram at SEAS and Director of the SEAS Research Center. His research is in DigitalCommunication, Information theory, Statistics and Applied Mathematics
Collection
2018 Mid Atlantic Section Fall Meeting
Authors
Ashwin Satyanarayana, New York City College of Technology; Radhika Tulasi Natarajan; Lior Baron, CUNY Graduate Center
been part of modern society for more than 50 years. There are several softwaredevelopment methodologies in use today. Traditional methodologies use comprehensiveplanning, detailed documentation, and expansive designs for developing software. Since 2001,more recent methodologies such as agile modeling, have gained significant attention from thesoftware engineering community. Some of the characteristics of agile modeling are (a) shortdevelopment cycles, (b) incremental planning, (c) continuous feedback, (d) reliance oncommunication, and (e) evolutionary design7. Thus, agile software development is an approachto software development under which requirements and solutions evolve through thecollaborative effort of self-organizing and cross