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Displaying results 481 - 510 of 552 in total
Conference Session
Teaching Engineers to Teach
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Neil S. Grigg; Darrell G. Fontane; Marvin Criswell; Thomas Siller
the work processesof civil engineers, the allocation of work, educational requirements and career paths, andbusiness opportunities for civil engineering firms are also changing. These changes are leadingto new paradigms for intelligent transportation, smart buildings, SCADA, monitoring andcontrol, disaster management, and intelligent construction.Most observations and conclusions of the IT study will have applicability for civil engineeringprograms in general, even though some specific plans for implementation within our curriculumwill center on the core courses. IT certainly has many applications outside of the core courses,including in simulations, virtual labs, formulation and analysis of design options, demonstrationsand illustrations of
Conference Session
Outreach: Future Women in Engineering I
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Elizabeth Parry; Laura Bottomley
. Page 9.981.1 Proceedings of the 2004 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition Copyright @ 2004, American Society for Engineering EducationUniversities and K12 institutions share the burden of adequate preparation for students who maychoose technical careers. Indeed, universities “have a crucial role to play in the important stridesbeing made to transform K12 science and math education.”1 Weaknesses in the preparation ofK12 students in science and mathematics are well recognized. The academic performance ofU.S. students in mathematics and science slips from near the top of the list of 48 countries at theelementary level to near the bottom during the high school years
Conference Session
Best Zone Papers
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Joseph Betz
and encourage their successful students withspecific aptitudes to enter Technology Education careers, and this acts like a form of institutionalinbreeding. This is significant because these students fit a profile, with an inclination andorientation toward practical hands-on, non-traditional academic work.Creative Crane Competition as a ModelThere were two main reasons for developing the Creative Crane Competition.15 The first reasonwas marketing in nature; promoting interest, rewarding excellence, inspiring students, etc.Although this is not central to the theme of this paper, it provides a justifiably pragmatic reasonfor the College, technology educators, and corporate sponsors to support the effort. The secondreason was pedagogical in
Conference Session
Design Throughout the ChE Curriculum
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Timokleia Togkalidou; Rudiyanto Gunawan; Mitsuko Fujiwara; Jr., J. Carl Pirkle; Eric Hukkanen; Richard Braatz
learn theory applied to a real-world situation.”These comments suggest that they seemed to realize the importance of the skills they learnedin the class and how they are related to their career goals. Exceptionally Exceptionally High LowRate the instructor’s overall teaching 35% 59% 6% 0% 0%effectiveness Excellent Very poorHow would you characterize the 47% 47% 6%instructor’s ability to explain
Conference Session
Women in Engineering: Faculty/Curriculum
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Alice Pawley
may have studied much of our Proceedings of the 2004 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition Copyright © 2004, American Society for Engineering Educationadult lives, which we have been questioned and challenged on through our undergraduate,graduate and professional careers, and which has taken up so much of our time, money, energy,and other personal resources, is potentially damaging to the social position of women in theworld can be a shock. At least, it was for me, at the beginning of my studies in feminist theoriesof science. After all, I had been learning that the ultimate aim of my work in engineering was tostay objective in my relationship to my subject of study (itself
Conference Session
Minorities in Engineering/Technology
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Andre Sayles
Session 3470 Diversity: An Engineering Process Andre H. Sayles United States Military Academy West Point, NY 10996AbstractEngineers often prefer to work with processes, particularly those that allow for assumptions,inputs, and outputs. Unfortunately, engineers seldom pursue diversity management as perhaps asecondary career field. In this paper, organizational diversity is represented by an engineering-like process having three primary phases and a supporting phase. The Leading Diversity ProcessModel (LDPM) is
Conference Session
Service Learning in Engineering
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Patti Clayton; Steven Peretti; Lisa Bullard
& Exposition Copyright © 2004, American Society for Engineering"Appendix CSyllabus for Service-learning ModuleDEPARTMENT OF CHEMICAL ENGINEERINGNORTH CAROLINA STATE UNIVERSITYDraft SyllabusCHE 451P, Chemical Engineering Design II – Spring 2003M 1:30-3:20, Riddick 242Instructor: Dr. Steven Peretti (peretti@eos.ncsu.edu) 221 Riddick Labs, 515-6397 Dr. Lisa Bullard (lisa_bullard@ncsu.edu) 206 Riddick Labs, 515-7455Contact: Jennifer King (jlking2@unity.ncsu.edu) 835-4368Objectives: • To assist in providing an understanding of engineering in a broader, community-based context • To discuss issues of diversity and the implications upon the career of engineers • To define and assist in understanding
Conference Session
IE Outreach and Advancement
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
David Wyrick
foreign companies to sell their goods and products in theUnited States, just as it makes it easier for American companies to sell their goods and productsin foreign markets. Manufacturing facilities are increasingly relocated overseas to takeadvantage of lower production costs, access to raw materials, less stringent regulations, ortaxation considerations.IE students should have an opportunity to understand how their professional careers may leadthem to many different assignments around the globe. In the case of the University of MinnesotaDuluth, many students come from rural settings and have not traveled extensively, especiallyoverseas, and a good appreciation of international opportunities and challenges can be difficult todevelop. This
Conference Session
DEED Poster Session
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Sig Lillevik
, web site, changecontrol, prototyping, and final presentations. Each activity includes a team goal, individual roles,uses interpersonal skills, and team-student accountability.Assessment data indicate the students feel the course is valuable but one that requires asignificant time commitment. Also, students do not like to follow a process or write technicaldocuments. But these are skills that must be mastered for a successful career in professionalpractice. Likewise, faculty advisors report that the course demands a fair amount of their timewith possibly little to no reward or recognition. They report improvement in student writing,presentation, interpersonal, professional, and higher-level thinking skills. Finally, the industryrepresentatives
Conference Session
Emerging Trends in Engineering Education
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Maria M. Larrondo Petrie
, high-performance Organizational competency management teams developed Team-based practices Team building Mentoring 3 – Defined Competency-based workforce Participatory culture practices Competency-based practices Career development Competency development Workforce planning Knowledge and skills analysis 2 – Repeatable Management takes
Conference Session
NSF Grantees Poster Session
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Nicole DeJong Okamoto; Tai-Ran Hsu
different lab groups willsupplement different sets of information. If the lab experiments are increasing studentunderstanding of heat transfer on the topics they cover, a statistical difference should be clear. AT-test will be performed to analyze both the pre- and post-test results and the exam scores todetermine statistical significance.Also in the third year, similar pre- and post-tests will be developed for the new elective todetermine the effect that the class has on likeliness to pursue a career in thermal management ofelectronics and knowledge of basic electronics cooling subjects. The syllabus for the course willbe sent to members of industry for their review and suggestions. All results for both ME 114 andthe elective will be used to
Conference Session
Nontraditional Ways to Engage Students
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Thomas O'Neal; Thomas Jacobius; Joseph Steig; Arnold Heggestad; Abigail Barrow; Phil Weilerstein; David Barbe
ventures.Attendance, averaging over two hundred per workshop, was higher than expected at all of theevents. The attendee mix at the workshops varied from a majority of students to a broad mix offaculty, students, and community members. The attendance numbers and survey responsesconfirm that the I2V workshop fills a distinct need in university communities.At the time of registration and at the end of each event, attendees were asked to fill out surveysresponding to questions about their background, education and career stage, previous exposure toand experiences with entrepreneurship and business, and views on the workshop experience.Survey response rates were good (over 40%), providing an interesting and useful insightconcerning the profile of the audience
Conference Session
Trends in ME Education Poster Session
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Ramana Pidaparti; Hasan Akay
American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition Copyright © 2004, American Society for Engineering EducationIndustrial Advisory Board SurveyIn spring 2002, the Industrial Advisory Board was also asked to rate the importance of theprogram outcomes a-k in adopted by the program. This survey showed that the industryconsidered the importance of outcomes a2, a3, i, h, j, and k3 considerably lower than all others.Changes ImplementedTwo major changes were implemented in the area of student services. We established a newstudent advising process (the student is required to meet his/her advisor at least once a semesterto discuss program plan of study, career goals, and any other academic support as needed
Conference Session
Design and Manufacturing Experiences II
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
David Richie; Timothy Lawrence; Jerry Sellers; Kenneth Siegenthaler
military career. The space aspect of the programprepares them to join the cadre of space professionals who have enabled the United StatesAir Force to dominate the globe in terms of air and space power.X. AcknowledgementsThe authors would like to acknowledge the contributions to the success of this programby all of the cadets and mentors who have been involved in the program. In particular,the dedicated hard work of Mr. Jim White, Mr. John Clark, Master Sergeant Phil Maes,Technical Sergeant Chad Bruce, and Technical Sergeant Benjamin Hazen is greatly Page 9.1128.11appreciated. If you enjoyed reading this paper, credit our editors, Dr. Fred Kiley and
Conference Session
Emerging Trends in Engineering Education
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
James Bowen
has always included computerprogramming is a reflection of the value attributed to the instruction by the faculty. Even thoughthe faculty recognize that few Civil Engineers go on to careers in programming, they nonethelessbelieve that teaching programming provides tangible benefits in improving the students’ logicalreasoning and problem solving skills. Up until recently the programming language taught wasFortran, but since the beginning of the 2001-2002 academic year we have taught Civil Engineersprogramming as part of instruction in the MATLAB5 modeling language. Adoption ofMATLAB as a high-level language for teaching programming has occurred at a number ofschools lately6,7. In each case MATLAB is valued for its ease of use, its powerful set
Conference Session
Curriculum Development in Computer Engineering Technology
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Marvin Needler; Ken Jr. Jannotta; William Lin; Richard Pfile
today’s industry even more.Traditional disciplinary curricular design approach may not provide enough of the type ofexperiences students will encounter in the industry. Seeking an ingenious approach incurricular design seems to be a never-ending process. In this paper, we report our initialattempt to assimilate the two different network infrastructures from the curriculumaspect. The addition of lectures and labs in industrial networks into a computernetworking course does not necessarily address the integration issue completely.However, it is an initial step in better preparing students in their undergraduate ComputerEngineering Technology program for careers in industry, business, and commerce.V. Appendix Course
Conference Session
Unique Courses & Services for Freshmen
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Audeen Fentiman; John Demel; Richard Freuler
a degree in Engineering is up from 38percent in 1988 to more than 60 percent in 2003.The FEH program has drawn the Engineering, Physics and Mathematics faculty closer. Thefuture will be focused on continuous improvement of the teaching teams and student learning, onmaking and keeping ties to industry, and incorporating new technology and new methodologyfor more effective and efficient instructional delivery. Faculty development is a key componentof the program, and the program staff will continue to plan and carry out workshops and weeklytraining to improve the learning environment.The Career Services office in the College of Engineering allows FEH students to register andinterview with companies after one quarter. Non-honors students may
Conference Session
Curriculums in Transition
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Nathan Klingbeil
the National Science Foundation,Division of Engineering Education and Centers, under program solicitation NSF-03-562,"Department Level Reform of Undergraduate Engineering Education," Grant Number EEC-0343214. This work has also been supported by the College of Engineering & ComputerScience and the Department of Mathematics & Statistics at Wright State University.Bibliography1. Adelman, Clifford, 1998, "Women and Men of the Engineering Path: A Model for Analyses of Undergraduate Careers," U.S. Department of Education Report, May, 1998.2. Pomalaza-Raez, C. and Henry Groff, B., 2003, "Retention 101: Where Robots Go... Students Follow," Journal of Engineering Education, Vol. 92, No. 1, 85-90.3. Arenaz, P., Fisher, W., Della
Conference Session
Multimedia Engineering Education: Distance & Service Learning, Web-based Projects
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Koichi Iwasaki; Kazuo Morita; Chi Thai
course survey was given at the end of the first7 week-period, and so far only 2 students completed the survey, making us wondering about howmany of them will come back for class in April. However the responses from these 2 studentswere encouraging:1) Class lengths were just right or a little short.2) The difficulty level and pace were just right.3) One "strongly agreed" or the other "agreed" that what they are learning in this class isrelevant to their future careers as engineers.4) During group work and doing homework with a partner were found to be useful.5) The activities that help them learn best were the lectures and homework assignments. ConclusionsWe have shown that the
Conference Session
Materials and Manufacturing Processes
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Scott Danielson; Al Post; Bradley Rogers
expertise in allfields related to fuel cells. At the same time, a broad based understanding of the fundamentalprinciples of fuel cell systems is important for two reasons. First, the progress of the fuel cellteam will be maximized through improved communication and understanding betweenspecialists working toward a common goal. Second, as the careers of graduates progress andexpand into management or entrepreneurial endeavors, a knowledge of the challenges andlimitations facing individual specialists is important.After mastery of fuel cell fundamentals, students are encouraged to specialize in specific topicsrelated to fuel cells. For example, in the MMET Department, students may pursue further studyand research in aspects of manufacturing, as
Conference Session
Teamwork and Assessment
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Dana Knox; Robert Barat
with the skills needed for success in their careers and abreast of moderndevelopments in the field of chemical engineering.There was clear consistency among the responses from the various constituencies. With thisconsensus of opinion, the department set about redeveloping its curriculum. Page 9.1346.2 “Proceedings of the 2004 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition Copyright  2004, American Society for Engineering Education”Curricular ReformCharged with overseeing the effort was the department curriculum committee. The committee,however, did not work on the task in a vacuum
Conference Session
Tricks of the Trade: The Tenure Process
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Robin Gill; William Haering
that will help document teaching strategies, successes and challenges, in much the sameway one documents research publications. This recommendation paraphrases that made inreference [2] where the author stated, “It is recommended that faculty think of their portfolios as“special inserts” in their curriculum vitae under the heading of “Teaching.” Additional advicecan be found in Baume4 where the author states, “It takes years, even decades, to build a goodresearch career, but it is a record of achievement that is easy enough to document.” Reference[4] also provides the following advice to avoid creating a portfolio which seems soulless, “If youwant to achieve this richer portfolio, you will need to produce analysis of and reflection on
Conference Session
Design Throughout the ChE Curriculum
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Pamela Dautenhahn
careers because of the small classsizes in engineering at McNeese; therefore, the selection of team members does not seem toaffect the performance of the team.To help the students learn more about effective teamwork, advantages and disadvantages ofteams are developed by the students. The students also develop what they feel are importantqualities for teams to be successful. The students are required to buy The Team MemoryJogger A Pocket Guide to Team Members 1. Different aspects of the guide are discussed inclass and each team develops specific goals for their team.Before each team receives its project, the professor emphasizes that the information provided bythe companies may be confidential and each student needs to treat all of it as
Conference Session
Emerging Trends in Engineering Education
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Peter Wiesner; Karen Miu
the very top is the standard IEEE menu bar. Version 1 of thePathfinder includes 350 sites organized under eleven categories: • International Perspectives (33) • Major Resources on energy and Power (31) • Associations (48) • Regulation and Deregulation (21) • Education and Careers (20) • Publishers and Databases (27) • Conferences (30) • Environmental Issues, Conservation, and Sustainability (41) • Glossaries (28) • Sites for Students and Teachers (36) • Sites with Links (31) • Communities and Discussion Groups (12) Page 9.1266.6 • Power Quality and Reliability (12
Conference Session
NSF Grantees Poster Session
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Chetan Sankar; P.K. Raju
journals and conference proceedings. Dr. Raju has received many awards throughouthis career including NSF Novel and Expedited Research Award (1989), NASA InnovativeResearch award (1991), Auburn University Outstanding Faculty Award (1993), United NationsExpert Assignment (1995-1996), Birdsong Merit Award for Excellence in Teaching (1996), theThomas C. Evans Instructional Award for the Outstanding paper in Engineering Education fromthe ASEE Southeastern Section (1997), the ASME Distinguished Service award (1997), PremierAward for Excellence in Engineering Education Courseware (1998), and the Birdsong SuperiorTeaching Award for Innovation in Classroom Teaching (1999). He is a member of the ASME,ASEE, INCE, ASA, ASNT, INCE. He served on the executive
Conference Session
Assessment & Quality Accredition in Engineering Education
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
John Rowe; Tim Mulroy
Teaching Fellow in the School of Engineering at Sheffield Hallam University. Afteruniversity and industrial experience as initially a computer systems design engineer at Plessey and latterly as anintegrated circuit applications engineer at Marconi he joined the university as a lecturer in electronics. Johncurrently is responsible for the coordination of learning, teaching and assessment strategy in the School ofEngineering.Tim Mulroy is a Lecturer in the School of Engineering at Sheffield Hallam University and provides academicoversight of the engineering industrial placement program for undergraduates. He is also academic coordinator forjoint programs between the university and its partner college in Malaysia. Tim started his career
Conference Session
Opportunities in Environmental Engineering Curriculum
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Zuhdi Aljobeh; Aaron Jennings
all of these might be thought of as disadvantages, overcoming these challenges helps to build commitment. The required administrative details will be finalized at the Department Chairman level, which, in addition to implementing specific program details, helps to reinforce the academic relationship necessary to sustain the program in subsequent years. PUIs are a largely untapped source of high quality undergraduate students who are less likelyto appreciate the impact that advanced scholarship can have on their careers. Offering researchcourses at PUIs helps to introduce students to research and provides the expertise they need toparticipate in advance REU activities at research universities. This also extends the
Conference Session
Recruiting, Retention & Advising
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Kay C. Dee; Glen Livesay
schooľ I haven’t gotten to do any real engineering, ¯ My ideal career I’m tired of waiting to learn something cool. ¯ Other: ______________________̌ I don’t like engineering. ̌ I will get better grades in my new major, anď Engineering is OK, but I like my new major that will help me get subject better. ¯ into medical schooľ I don’t really understand what engineers do for ¯ into graduate school a living. ¯ into law school ¯ into business school
Conference Session
NSF Grantees Poster Session
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Jack Leifer; Jamey Jacob
amount of time the groupspends together in face-to-face meetings [2]. Since face-to-face meetings involving all members of geographically distributed teams areinfrequent at best, other methods of communication must be used as work progresses. These cantake the form of either synchronous (interactive video, text-based chat, telephone), orasynchronous (e-mail, facsimile) communications. Having multiple modes of communicationsavailable is important, as the best mode of communication often depends upon the type ofinformation to be conveyed [2]. While many engineers will work as members of geographically-distributed teams, and nearlyall will have to use remote communications methods at some point early in their careers, only afew efforts have
Conference Session
Lighting the Fire: REU
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Mark Evans; Ronald Welch
projects here. ‚ How to think outside of the box. ‚ That real-world problems require in-depth thinking and problem solving and that the skills I have learned earlier in my student career are actually applicable. ‚ There are so many points in a project to get stopped or distracted. I learned how to anticipate them and react to them. ‚ I enjoyed learning how to “sell” an idea. Page 9.1334.16 Proceedings of the 2004 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference& Exposition Copyright © 2004, American Society for Engineering