Planning, Developing Research Report, and Understanding School Culture. During these years, he has taught construction courses in several technical schools. Mr. Beigpourian currently works in the CATME project, which is NSF funding project, on optimizing team- work skills and assessing the quality of Peer Evaluations.Dr. Matthew W. Ohland, Purdue University-Main Campus, West Lafayette (College of Engineering) Matthew W. Ohland is Professor of Engineering Education at Purdue University. He has degrees from Swarthmore College, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, and the University of Florida. His research on the longitudinal study of engineering students, team assignment, peer evaluation, and active and collaborative
) program. The project’s overall aim is to support aculture of pedagogical risk-taking and realize an additive innovation mindset to promote faculty-teaching innovations at a large, southwestern public university. A specific research sub-goal ofthe project is to further understand how faculty development programs and initiatives caninfluence faculty-teaching practices. A modified version of the Business Model Canvas (BMC)[1] is employed to document the emergent activities of innovation driven, self-formed facultygroups over time. The Business Model Canvas is an organizational tool for capturing andcommunicating the critical elements of an evolving project’s ecosystem. Borrowed fromentrepreneurship practices, it is used to identify the necessary
Paper ID #27655Work in Progress: Education Beyond Borders – Efforts of a Student Chapterto Foster Education and Promote Academic Excellence in STEM FieldsMiss Keyshlan Karinn´e Aybar Mart´ınez, University of Puerto Rico, Mayaguez Campus Keyshlan K. Aybar Mart´ınez is a 6th year Mechanical Engineering Student. Pursuing also, a minor in Project Management and Aerospace Engineering. Also, this year she is the President of the American Society of Engineering Education (ASEE) increasing the membership by 33%. The last year she was the fundraising leader of the ASEE. Had experience in the industry as Test Engineering in UTC Aerospace
, student motivation, and their learning experiences. His projects involve the study of student perceptions, beliefs and attitudes towards becoming engineers, their problem solving processes, and cultural fit. His education includes a B.S. in Biomedical Engineering from Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology, a M.S. in Bioengineering and Ph.D. in Engineer- ing and Science Education from Clemson University. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2019 WIP: How Traumatic Events Help Shape Social Exclusion in Engineering TeamsAbstractThis Work In Progress (WIP) research paper explores the impact of traumatic events on studentlearning alongside the emergence of team
years. She worked as project manager, engineering manager, utility manager, maintenance manager, and finally as the Resident Engineer managing all technical areas of the facility. During her tenure, the brewery saw dramatic increases in productivity improvement, increased use of automation systems, and significant cost reductions in all areas including utilities where they received the internal award for having the best utility usage reduction for 2014. Since joining Ohio State, Aimee has joined the American Society of Engineering Educators and serves as the treasurer of the Engineering Economics division.Ms. Kathryn Kelley, Ohio State University Kathryn Kelley serves as executive director of OMI; she has more than
include keeping the fundamental topics (e.g.,soil classification, seepage, mechanical behavior) but limiting the theoretical derivations to allowtime to cover additional topics and incorporate active learning into the classroom. The overallgoal of the small group activities created as part of this project are to expose students to realworld concepts in geotechnical engineering and enhance student learning.The authors have both taught geology for engineers courses at their respective universities andutilized the extensive resources available for geoscience educators through the ScienceEducation Research Center (SERC website https://serc.carleton.edu/highered/index.html). Inaddition, the authors have used materials from the National Center for Case
research interests include novel assessments of educational efficacy, the molecular basis of cell movement, and the mitigation of infectious diseases. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2019Creativity activities in a design course fail to elicit gains in creativity over and above those elicited by the design course itselfEngineering educators often look to imbue students with qualities beyond purely cognitive skills.Among these are self-efficacy, a psychological construct, and creativity, a pseudo-cognitiveconstruct. We showed previously that a project-based design course is associated withimprovements in both of these constructs without overt training in either. We sought todetermine
. This project focuses on the National Society of Black Engineers (NSBE)'s SummerEngineering Experiences for Kids (SEEK) program. This multi-partner project allows us toexpand and strengthen the experience, conduct research on the impact of the program, andconduct research on how such outreach programs might grow in sustainable manners. Our posterwill present a summary of the large-scale data collection that occurred during the summer of2018 at all 16 sites located across the US. We administered a variety of instruments to identifychanges in the children's STEM-related outcomes over the course of the SEEK experience. Tofurther operationalize the variation in organizational contexts across sites, we collected data fromparents and mentors. In the
of Mechatronics and Digital Manufacturing Lab at ODU and a lead of Area of Specialization Mecha- tronics Systems Design. She worked as a Visiting Researcher at Commonwealth Center for Advanced Manufacturing in Disputanta, VA on projects focusing on digital thread and cyber security of manufactur- ing systems. She has funded research in broadening participation efforts of underrepresented students in STEM funded by Office of Naval Research, focusing on mechatronic pathways. She is part of the ONR project related to the additive manufacturing training of active military. She is also part of the research team that leads the summer camp to nine graders that focus on broadening participation of underrepre- sented
communication and management acumen (e.g., technicalwriting, technical presentations, and project management). Such an approach is essential topreparing future engineers for the workplace [1]. The challenge becomes providing studentswith effective exposure to both kinds of skills within engineering programs.Traditionally, the development of such skills has been a matter of content-specific courseworkintegrated into a school’s engineering program(s). (A classic example is the technical writingcourse often offer by English or communication departments and required of engineeringundergraduates.) As institutional resources shrink and student demand increases, the need tofind alternative methods for offering training in these “soft-skill” areas grows
last twenty years the company performed many private and government projects. Dr. Fathizadeh has published numerous journal, conference and technical articles. He has been instrumental figure in establishing mechatronic engineering technology at Purdue University Calumet. His areas of interests are, control systems, power systems, power electronics, energy, and system integration. Dr. Fathizadeh is a registered professional engineer in the State of Illinois. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2019 Paper ID #21597Students’ Participation to Improve Formula SAE CarDr. Masoud Fathizadeh P.E
Center in the College of Engineering at Iowa State Uni- versity I work with faculty, undergraduate and graduate students as well as diverse power industries to develop research projects of common interest. The Center started in 1963, and strong collaborations among faculty and industry have been key to our success. Members of the EPRC include Investor Owned Utilities, Municipal Utilities, Rural Electric Cooperatives and an ISO. Prior to joining Iowa State Uni- versity in 2014 I worked for 14 years with Iowa municipal electric, gas and water utilities through the Iowa Association of Municipal Utilities (IAMU). The goal was to manage risk and increase long term sustainability through wide-ranging projects ranging from
undergraduate students through research projects and honor thesis, the majority in the areas of mobile computing and mHealth. Her efforts over the last several years have led to several papers published in top ACM and IEEE conferences with undergraduate co-authors. Her field of interest encompasses Security, Trust and Privacy in Pervasive Computing, Internet of Things (IoT), Mobile Computing, CS education, and Mobile Healthcare Privacy. She has ben very active in broadening participation of women and underrepresented minority in computer science. She has also been working as an active member of various international conference technical program and journal review boards. She Additionally, she has served as Co Chair of IEEE
journals, storyboards, and traditional assessments, in situ videorecordings captured decisions and evolution of projects differently. To further investigate thepotential of ongoing interactions as spaces for demonstrating engineering thinking and ideas, aframework was created to analyze in situ video clips. An epistemic frame [2-6] was developedto capture skills, knowledge, identity, values, and epistemologies of engineering relative to K-12formal and informal spaces. First, this paper will describe the development of an engineeringepistemic frame for K-12 students and its synthesis using literature, local contexts, and nationalpolicy directives and its application to one pilot set of data as a case study. The context of thecase study was final
), GEARS has investigated factors that contributeto first-year retention as well as the effectiveness of various interventions in the first semester.GEARS follows an interdisciplinary Faculty Learning Community (FLC) structure; membersmeet monthly and review all ongoing projects, develop new projects, and gather interdisciplinaryfeedback. Due to the unique team and meeting structure, GEARS has produced many novelresearch projects. While the GEARS mission of improving engineering student retention andsuccess has not changed over time, the collaboration and sharing of expertise has caused newresearch questions and ways of studying retention to emerge. This paper discusses the progressof our collaboration and highlights the insights of a variety of
, and Understanding School Culture. During these years, he has taught construction courses in several technical schools. Mr. Beigpourian currently works in the CATME project, which is NSF funding project, on optimizing team- work skills and assessing the quality of Peer Evaluations.Mr. Frank Luchini, Frank Luchini has five years experience in industry working as a Process/Design/Project Engineer. He recently returned to academia to earn a PhD in Engineering Education at Purdue University. He will be completing a Master in Engineering Education in May and starting as a Assistant Professor at Trine University in August 2019. He earned a BS in Mechanical Engineering and a BA in Arts and Humanities from Michigan
provide insight into the ways in which individuals can have new and evolving forms ofimpact within the field. The work performed as part of this project explores our early transitionexperiences, as six early career engineering education faculty, and the ways in which we are ableto exercise agency as influenced by factors at the individual, institutional, field, and societallevels. Each of us contributes our lived experience from our varying position and institutiontypes.Project OverviewThis two-phase project focuses on the study of early career engineering education faculty’sagency to facilitate change within different institutional contexts. In Phase I of this project, weare exploring our own experiences as early career engineering education
Paper ID #25412Board 21: Work in Progress: Expanding Program Reach through WineProf. Alka R Harriger, Purdue University-Main Campus, West Lafayette (College of Engineering) Alka Harriger joined the faculty of the Computer and Information Technology Department (CIT) in 1982 and is currently a Professor of CIT. For the majority of that time, she taught software development courses. From 2008-2014, she led the NSF-ITEST funded SPIRIT (Surprising Possibilities Imagined and Real- ized through Information Technology) project. From 2013-2018, she co-led with Prof. Brad Harriger the NSF-ITEST funded TECHFIT (Teaching Engineering
engineering courses as well as advanced courses in civil engineering for over 38 years. Dr. Thompson has also been involved with projects introducing engineering into K-12 education for over 15 years.Dr. AnnaMarie ConnerDr. ChanMin Kim, Penn State University ChanMin Kim, Ph.D. is Associate Professor of Education (Learning, Design, and Technology and Ed- ucational Psychology) at Penn State University. Dr. Kim studies methods to help early childhood and elementary teachers learn to integrate robotics and computer science into classrooms. Her current work includes research on methods to help preservice, early childhood education teachers learn to use block- based programming within culturally responsive teaching using
controller selection, 4) installation, and 5) cost analysis. Priorto departing, students participate in designing, prototyping and installing the system. These efforts haveproduced an open-source set of plans. The “Appalachian Street Lamp,” is an inexpensive system thatcan be deployed to remote locales that can access a cellular network but do not have grid power.These field courses emphasize key learning outcomes including: 1) use essential math and science skillsto solve applied science problems, 2) formulate, design, or develop a system, process, or program tomeet desired needs, 3) demonstrate the capacity to function in project teams, and 4) use thetechniques, skills, and technical tools necessary for professional practice in the discipline.A
) 1different teachers, a common syllabus is used for Frames and Machines 2calculating grades and communication of course Centroids 2expectations, and common standardized exams are Beams/ Shear Force and 2 Bending Momentused for all sections. Instructors have some Graphing Shear Force andfreedom to determine how projects may be graded Bending Moment 2and how quizzes (if any) are administered
skills have been widely studied withinengineering ethics, often as components of a larger project of ethics enculturation or thedevelopment of moral literacy within a student’s discipline. Yet little is known about whetherand to what extent ethics enculturation is linked to the moral foundations that describe theimplicit values through which individuals orient themselves to problems. In this work-in-progress paper, we report preliminary findings regarding the extent to which members ofengineering subdisciplines at one large research university share moral foundations. In fall 2018,the Moral Foundations Questionnaire (MFQ), a validated survey instrument, was administered tostakeholders across engineering subdisciplines. The survey of faculty
different impacts that were associated with differentformats of international learning experiences.Literature ReviewEngineers’ training has experienced an increasing call for the development of globalcompetencies, particularly from the demand of fast technological advance andincreasingly global engineering practice. Against this context, multiple internationallearning experiences were proposed to create opportunities for students to fosterglobal competencies. Such learning experiences include study-abroad programs,international service learning projects [6], global internships [7], courses with a globalfocus, second language course [8], and many others.To prepare engineering students for globalization, many universities have establishedmultiple
Paper ID #27493Construction Curriculum of the Future: Changes and ChallengesDr. Ihab Mohammad Hamdi Saad P.E., Northern Kentucky University Dr. Ihab Saad is Professor of Construction Management and an alumnus of the University of Kentucky in Lexington where he received his Ph.D. in 1996 from the department of Civil Engineering and Construc- tion. He has over 25 years of experience in the construction industry primarily in the civil/construction project management area. Dr. Saad received his Bachelor of Science and Master’s degrees in Civil En- gineering from Cairo University in his native country Egypt in 1984, and 1993
the College of Arts and Sciences. Over the course of this grant, he advised over 500 individual calculus students on their course projects. He was given an Outstanding Advising Award by USF and has been the recipient of numerous teaching awards at the department, college, university (Jerome Krivanek Distinguished Teaching Award) and state (TIP award) levels. Scott is also a co-PI of a Helios-funded Middle School Residency Program for Science and Math (for which he teaches the capstone course) and is on the leadership committee for an NSF IUSE grant to transform STEM Education at USF. His research is in the areas of solution thermodynamics and environmental monitoring and modeling.Ms. Manopriya Devisetty Subramanyam
Paper ID #25804Developing Photovoltaics Curriculum for Middle and Upper Grades: UsingSolar to Engineer Our Energy Future (P12 Resource Exchange)Dr. Michelle Jordan , Arizona State University Michelle Jordan is as associate professor in the Mary Lou Fulton Teachers College at Arizona State Uni- versity. She also serves as the Education Director for the QESST Engineering Research Center. Michelle’s program of research focuses on social interactions in collaborative learning contexts. She is particularly interested in how students navigate communication challenges as they negotiate complex engineering design projects. Her
physiological studies and general use In time, the laboratory soon was equipped for molecular biology work, mechanical testing,hand tools (hammers, drills, etc.), electronics and test equipment, human and animalphysiological study supplies, chemicals and chemistry work, and laser cutters and 3D printers(Figure 2 and Figure 3). This breadth allowed us to create modules for our lab classes whichcould, for example, have students grow cells with specific characteristics, and measure theconcentration of these cells using their own custom-built spectrophotometer. Figure 2: Part of the lab’s “Projects Room”. This side houses electronic components, hand tools (such as drills and hammers
Research in Science Teaching (NARST). In addition, he is one of two scholarship recipients awarded by NARST to attend the ESERA summer re- ˇ e Budˇejovice, Czech Republic in 2016. He can be reached at iyeter@purdue.edu. search program in Cesk´Ms. Hoda Ehsan, Purdue University, West Lafayette Hoda is a Ph.D. student in the School of Engineering Education, Purdue. She received her B.S. in me- chanical engineering in Iran, and obtained her M.S. in Childhood Education and New York teaching certification from City College of New York (CUNY-CCNY). She is now a graduate research assistant on STEM+C project. Her research interests include designing informal setting for engineering learning, and promoting
(manufacturing and service industry) & Process Improve- ment.Ms. Silvia Guzman I am currently a research assistant with the Engineering Dep., Universidad ICESI, Cali - Colombia. It also develops consulting projects to business growth and science, technology and innovation. Prior to this I was a project management and estructuring executive of Innovation and Business Development area, Innpulsa - Colombia, Colombian Ministry of Industry, Trade and Tourism; Projects Coordinator Strength- ening of Higher Education, Universidad UNAB, Mutis University Network and Colombian Ministry of National Education. My professional experience related to education projects management (quality and pertinence), business quality, supply
spaceshad a positive impact on many attributes vital to engineering, such as design and analyticalabilities, design self-efficacy, communication skills, management skills, and working effectivelyas a team [6], [8], [9], [10].About the MakerspaceThe makerspace being studied is relatively new, having only opened in 2016. The space isapproximately 1700 sq. ft. and is divided into several distinct areas. The front of the room closeto the entrance has a dual-function whiteboard/table, a couch, and a 60” monitor. It is setup formeetings, training for new users, lectures, planning, and if desired, relaxing. The middle of theroom has several large tables and is designed for testing out ideas and assembling small tomedium sized projects. The area can also