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- 2019 ASEE PNW Section Conference
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Aaron Scher, Oregon Institute of Technology; Eve Klopf, Oregon Institute of Technology
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- 2019 ASEE PNW Section Conference
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Jen Symons, University of Portland; Heather Dillon, University of Portland; Joseph P Hoffbeck, University of Portland
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Diversity
Professor in Mechanical Engineering at the University of Portland. Her teaching focuses on thermodynamics, heat transfer, renewable energy, and optimization of energy systems. She currently leads a research team working on energy efficiency, renewable energy, and fundamental heat transfer. Before joining the university, Heather Dillon worked for the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) as a senior research engineer.Dr. Joseph P Hoffbeck, University of Portland Joseph P. Hoffbeck is a Professor of Electrical Engineering at the University of Portland in Portland, Oregon. He has a Ph.D. from Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana. He previously worked with digital cell phone systems at Lucent Technologies
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- 2019 ASEE PNW Section Conference
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Eve Klopf, Oregon Institute of Technology; Aaron Scher, Oregon Institute of Technology
Implementation of a Lab Section for Electricity and Magnetism with Transmission LinesEve Klopf and Aaron ScherDepartment of Electrical Engineering and Renewable Energy, Oregon Institute of TechnologyAbstract:This paper focuses on the implementation of a laboratory section for an undergraduate coursein engineering electromagnetics. In Fall 2018, both Klamath Falls and Portland-Metro campusesof the Oregon Institute of Technology adopted a laboratory section for EE 341: Electricity &Magnetism with Transmission lines, which is a required class for all electrical engineeringstudents. This paper will discuss the laboratory activities, outline the challenges we faced whenaltering a well-established class to include a laboratory section, and
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- 2019 ASEE PNW Section Conference
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Cara J Poor P.E., University of Portland; Abigail Chase, Stantec; Mehmet Inan, University of Portland
Flow Design Laboratory Figure 1. Progression of ethics instruction in UP Civil Engineering Program. White boxes indicate courses where ethics is already covered, and gray boxes indicate courses that were selected for adding ethics. As part of the core curriculum requirements at University of Portland, all students are required to take an ethics course in the Philosophy department (PHL 220). In this course, students receive an introduction to the major theories in classical and/or contemporary moral philosophy. Emphasis is placed on understanding and applying the theories of moral obligation including utilitarianism, deontology, social contract theory, ethics of care, natural law, and virtue
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- 2019 ASEE PNW Section Conference
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bryan james mealy, Cal Poly San Luis Obispo
instructors are to 1) help students learn the course material, and2) assess how well students learned that material. The literature is replete with approaches toenhance teaching3, including recent innovations in content delivery such as studio formats andflipped classrooms. The many aspects of assessment are also a common topic in the literature1,which points out assessment supports student learning only under certain conditions4. Theintention of our work is to enhance these well-documented results by adding student-directedflexibility to the assessment process, and embrace the notion that assessment can have more ofan influence on learning than teaching7.A common theme in modern approaches to teaching is to give students more responsibility fortheir