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Displaying results 811 - 840 of 1208 in total
Conference Session
Engineering Education in Muslim Worlds: Introductory Workshop
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Sedki Riad; Mostafa Kamel
Conference Session
Entrepreneurial/Innovative Communication
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Roxanne Spray; Lori Donath; Nancy Thompson; Theresa McGarry; Elisabeth Alford
communication in educationalsettings promises considerable insights into the learning process.The Research Communications StudioThe Research Communications Studio (RCS) is a research and education project in threeengineering departments at the University of South Carolina(http://www.che.sc.edu/centers/rcs/rcsmain.htm). The project focuses on language andcommunications as tools for conducting research, as well as the written and oral means of Page 9.869.1disseminating the results of research. Supported in part by a grant from the National ScienceFoundation, the project investigates the effect of the Research Communications Studio conceptin improving
Conference Session
Interdisciplinary Approaches
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Jessica Matson; David Elizandro
. Proceedings of the 2004 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition Copyright © 2004, American Society for Engineering Education c. Develop the cash flow diagram for a project. Sunk cost; nonrecurring cost; salvage value; revenues and expenses. d. Perform an economic analysis. Sensitivity analysis of alternative projects using cost of capital/minimum annual rate of return. Alternatives with equal and unequal project lives as well as with and without project replacement; additional techniques including benefit/cost analysis, incremental internal rate of return, and payback period. e. Determine the effect of taxes and inflation on profitability of projects
Conference Session
Computers in Education Poster Session
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Nicholas Krouglicof
control,analog and digital electronics, microcontroller technology, interface electronics and real-time programming. The laboratory sessions focus on small, hands-on interdisciplinarydesign projects in which small teams of students configure, design, and implement asuccession of mechatronic subsystems, leading to system integration in a final project.For example, as an introduction to digital design, students apply the fundamentalprincipals of combinatorial and sequential logic to the design of a quadraturedecoder/counter circuit that is used to interface an incremental optical encoder to amicrocontroller. The design is implemented using the appropriate software development
Conference Session
ERM Potpourri
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
David Mukai
Session #3630 Effectiveness of Various Components in a Mechanics of Materials Course David J. Mukai University of Wyoming Civil and Architectural EngineeringIntroductionThe pressures on undergraduate Science, Math, Engineering, and Technology (SME&T)education are well documented (1). Some of these problems include: undergraduateSME&T courses tend to filter out students, leaving only a few highly-qualified graduates;low retention in SME&T courses because students find them boring; and an increasedamount of knowledge that needs to be transmitted. This project modifies materialsdeveloped by Gregory Miller at the
Conference Session
Curriculum Development in Information Technology
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Lunt Barry; C. Richard Helps; Joseph Ekstrom
team projects in most of the courses, including the sophomore level Page 9.496.5 course, and continuing the application-oriented labs in all IT courses. Proceedings of the 2004 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & 5 Exposition Copyright © 2004, American Society for Engineering Education 8. Including the use of state of the art tools through educational copies and the use of the 30 day free trial of the software. (Vendors who allow free academic use of their products get a big advertising bonus here.) 9. Providing deeper coverage of enterprise systems deployment in the
Conference Session
Electrical & Computer Engineering Poster Session
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
James Corr
! Somethinghe had not been able to do before being exposed to AWIM. The remainder of classroom B was taken on a trip to classroom A and wasastounded to see what was happening. They saw graphs; diagrams and posters of thedifferent companies the students had produced and listened to them explain what theywere doing. On return to their classroom the teacher was impressed enough to set thingsin motion. They were behind everyone else but they were able to become excited andmotivated enough to finish the project in an appropriate way. Even though theirpresentations were weak in comparison, they were able to do it. The Middle School In the Middle school we introduced Challenge III, the principles of flight. In thisthe students formed
Conference Session
Teaching Innovations in Architectural Engineering
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Stan Guidera
techniques and conventions, taught through a sequence of orthographicdrawing exercises. The exercises were followed by a design project structured to requirestudents to synthesize course material as well as to introduce them to design problems and thedesign process. The academic majors declared by students enrolled in the course includedarchitecture, interior design, construction, education, and mechanical design. Page 9.231.3 Proceedings of the 2004 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition Copyright © 2004, American Society for Engineering Education
Conference Session
Tricks of the Trade: Inside the Class
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Lori M. Bruce; J.W. Bruce
students work together on Proceedings of the 2004 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition Copyright ©2004, American Society for Engineering Educationhomework sets, lab experiments, course projects, and team-based exam questions. In short,cooperative learning is similar to team-based course projects common in many engineeringcourses, but cooperative learning is more formalized and structured to reinforce positive teamingand learning skills while avoiding common teaming problems [13], [15]. Cooperative learningmust meet five criteria [18]:• positive interdependence Team members must rely on each other to achieve the group’s goals.• individual accountability Members are held
Conference Session
Leadership in the Curriculum
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Doug Schmucker, Trine University
Proceedings of the 2004 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition Copyright © 2004, American Society for Engineering Educationtechnical problems and team dysfunction. An alumna of the university summarized the teamproblems with: I thought that by doing well in my coursework at Vale, I was preparing myself for my career. However, it obviously wasn't enough. The whole project was a disaster; we were perpetually behind, constantly duplicating or overlooking important tasks, and even when we finished, none of us were satisfied with the design. A few of us slaved over this project, but it is obvious that the amount of "effort" did not ensure
Conference Session
Innovative Teaching in Engineering/Technology I
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Obadiah Ritchey; John Clark; Jim White; Tim White; David Barnhart; Jerry Sellers
, andExcellence in all we do). To support that mission, we firmly believe in “learning space by doingspace.” Every student graduating with an Astronautical Engineering degree completes acapstone design project, either a satellite design (FalconSAT) or rocket design(FalconLAUNCH) effort.FalconSAT provides students an opportunity to participate in the design, build, test, and/ormission execution of real microsatellites that perform DoD missions. FalconLAUNCH providesan opportunity for students to design, build, test and launch payload-capable sounding rockets.Before students can participate in either of these capstone engineering design courses, spacesystems and rocket design issues must be well understood through prerequisite classroomexperiences. The
Conference Session
Maintaining the Engineering Workforce
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Tim Ward; Richard Howell; Debby Knotts; Deborah Fisher; Jerald Rounds; Jennifer Scott
), AlbuquerqueTechnical Vocational Institute (TVI) and several industry associations, including the NewMexico Building Branch – Associated General Contractors (AGC), the Mechanical ContractorsAssociation of New Mexico (MCA), and the New Mexico chapter of the National ElectricalContractors Association (NECA). Based on the results of a CAI funded research project todetermine needs and solutions, the certificate program was designed so that practicingprofessionals could take ten core construction courses offered at TVI and UNM and receive thecertificate. In the fall of 2001, the New Media and Extended Learning (NMEL) unit at UNMidentified the Certificate program as a priority program to disseminate across the state of NewMexico and offered to participate with the
Conference Session
International Engineering Education II
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Kanagaratnam Baskaran; John Long
, Page 9.546.4delivery of courses, and assessment. The students are usually enrolled full-time. The local “Proceedings of the 2004 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition Copyright 2004, American Society for Engineering Education”college provides local administrative and academic support. In their final year, BE students inthese programs attend a two-week residential school on-campus to complete laboratoryrequirements, give oral presentations for their final projects, and gain exposure to Australianprofessional engineering practice by means of industry site visits and guest lectures. Students inthese programs are often employed in industry, and their final-year projects are often
Conference Session
International Case Studies, Interactive Learning, Student Design
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Vera Galishnikova; Thomas Maleck; Paul Streng; Jason Merrill; David Prestel; Darren Mason; Ronald Harichandran
-city summer study-abroad program. Thiseffort led to the signing of exchange agreements with institutions in Kiev, Taganrog, andMoscow for a study-abroad program primarily targeted to electrical engineering students.The program was launched in summer 1993 with students earning credits for engineeringdesign projects. A visit to Volgograd in 1992 led to a cooperative agreement between theMSU Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering (CEE) and the VolgogradState University of Architecture and Civil Engineering (VSUACE). Following periodicfaculty exchanges between CEE and VSUACE, the study-abroad program described inthis article was formally launched in 1998 for civil engineering students. Through theintroduction of lower-level classes in
Conference Session
Curriculums in Transition
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Nathan Klingbeil
Integration as Area Under a Curve (2 hours)Concept of Integration as an Antiderivative (2 hours)Lab:Numerical Integration Using MatlabWeek 10Lecture:Application of Integration to Centroids and Centers of Mass (3 hours)Course Summary and Review (1 hour)Lab:Make-up lab session In order to address the feasibility of EGR 101, lecture notes and supporting laboratorymaterial have been developed for what is arguably the most ambitious topic: DifferentialEquations for Transient Response of Engineering Systems (Week 8 in the tentative courseoutline). Note that the proposed lecture material is pre-empted by a laboratory project in Week 7(Transient Response of a Leaking Water Bucket), and is reinforced by an additional laboratoryproject in Week 8
Conference Session
Multidisciplinary Courses and Issues
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
John Mingle; Tom Roberts
basic question remains; will the professors teaching design courses teach the required infor-mation with considerable added knowledge? Further, does the professor perform knowledging? Page 9.1177.8The capstone course involving design analysis generally has a team of students working on a pro- Proceedings of the 2004 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition Copyright  2004, American Society for Engineering Educationject, and the class has a number of projects going simultaneously, each with a different set ofspecifications. The knowledge involved in these classes occurs in at
Conference Session
IS and IT Education
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Taz Daughtrey; Edgar Sibley; Anne Marchant
Session Number: 2558 Building an Undergraduate Security Curriculum Anne Marchant, Edgar H Sibley, Hugh Tazewell (Taz) Daughtrey Jr. George Mason University/ James Madison UniversityAbstractFaculty at George Mason University (GMU) and James Madison University (JMU) in Virginiaare collaborating on a project to develop a model for an undergraduate Information Securitycurriculum to be implemented beginning in the fall of 2004 at both institutions. The curriculumwill include coursework in programming, operating systems, and networking as a basis for themajor courses in security. Security coursework will
Conference Session
NSF Grantees Poster Session
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Chetan Sankar; P.K. Raju
of a professional problem solver and engineer through the use of casestudies. The evaluators of the project state that the students' efforts lend credence to the notionthat engagement in case studies enhances problem solving and higher cognitive skills. Given the success of case studies in achieving the objectives, we decided to develop acase study that shows the use of information technologies in engineering. Therefore, wecontacted a cell phone company, Powertel (now part of T-Mobile) and obtained cooperationfrom the engineering managers in developing the case study. This paper describes the case studyand provides details from an evaluation of the use of the case study in classrooms. It concludes
Conference Session
Engineering Ethics Papers Session
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Margaret P. Battin; Gordon B. Mower; Angela R. Harris; JoAnn Lighty
communication skills. In addition, part of the goalfor getting students to participate in the project of exploring an ethical dilemma and arguing forone course of action over another was to prepare them for the kinds of experiences they arelikely to encounter when they go to work as an engineer, and the grading criteria were intendedto promote the skills they will need when faced with difficult situations. During the course of Page 9.550.4their career they will almost certainly find themselves in situations where they disagree with the Proceedings of the 2004 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition
Conference Session
Retention: Keeping the Women Students
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Rose Marra; Cherith Moore; Mieke Schuurman; Barbara Bogue
engineering studies. Such assessment results can provide the basis for thedevelopment and revamping of effective activities designed to meet program objectives andmissions.This paper reports the development and early results of a survey undertaken as part of theNational Science Foundation-funded Assessing Women in Engineering (AWE) project. Theinstrument is designed to measure undergraduate women students’ self-efficacy in studyingengineering. Self-efficacy is “belief in one’s capabilities to organize and execute the sources ofaction necessary to manage prospective situations" 2. Prior work from Blaisdell3 has shown thatfeelings of efficaciousness can be an important predictor in the success of women studyingengineering. In our project, we developed
Conference Session
Engineering Education Research
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Turns Jennifer; Atman Cindy; Angela Linse; Karl Smith
, and interdependence – within a project managementframework.More recent change research appears to blend the two approaches. For example, Gosling andMintzberg (2003) note the “dominant model of managing change is Cartesian: Action resultsfrom deliberate strategies, carefully planned, that unfold as systematically managed sequences ofdecisions.” However, they counter, “change, to be successful, cannot follow some mechanisticschedule of steps, of formulation followed by implementation. Action and reflection have toblend in a natural flow.”These two primary categories of change, staged and complexity, provide us with a usefulframework for organizing the various models of change.In the subsequent section, we further constrain our investigation of
Conference Session
Understanding Students: Cognition
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Steven Beyerlein; Denny Davis
thinking in pursuing innovative designsolutions. Teams are first asked to list as many methods as they can to generate creative ideasfor design solutions. Next they are given the listing of Cognitive Domain learning skills andasked to analyze the skills under the creativity cluster. They are then challenged to apply each ofthe creative thinking skills to generate one or more ideas for the problem of fastening two piecesof paper together. Table 2 gives a result from this task. Next, students are asked to select adifficult area of their design project calling for creativity and to apply each of the creativethinking skills to generate a design alternative. Finally, they are asked to discuss how they mightsystematically add creativity to their design
Conference Session
Innovative Curriculum Development in BAE
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
David Fisher; Anthony Ellertson; Steven Mickelson; Thomas Brumm
help students see that “real world”work experiences are not neatly bound by the schedule of the syllabus, and that learning is notconfined to the lecture hall or lab. What we did with this approach, in the parlance of operationsmanagement, was to create a “pull” system in which students were responsible to a certaindegree for pulling the materials they needed from the online case environment and from thetextbook. We wanted the students to experience the excitement, uncertainty, and dissonance ofhaving dynamic and long-term projects that require them to think “outside of the box,” and to seetheir actions as having consequences beyond simply handing a project into a teacher. We wantedour students to see that the decisions that they make (design
Conference Session
Emerging Trends in Engineering Education
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Kay Howell; Ann Wittbrodt; Alfred Moye
tutoring. A recent National Academy of Science analysis of student assessments, forexample, emphasizes that the challenge of continuously gathering and evaluatingcomplex information about students probably cannot be achieved without newinformation technology. The report notes that “New capabilities enabled by technologyinclude directly assessing problem-solving skills, making visible sequences of actionstaken by learners in solving problems, and modeling and simulating complex reasoningtasks.”3New communication tools allow students to collaborate on complex projects and ask forhelp from teachers and experts from around the world. Learning systems can be designedto adapt to differences in student interests, backgrounds, learning styles and
Conference Session
Multidisciplinary Programs: Look Ahead
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Doanh Van
first ABET onsitevisit later that year. The design and startup of the Union Engineering program is itself anengineering project as described in this paper.III. The Design Process1. Identify the NeedsUnion was presented with the need of the community for engineering skills. Through theChamber of Commerce, it was determined that there was a need to educate engineers who would Page 9.379.1be willing to stay in the area to support economic growth of the region. The area consists ofProceedings of the 2004 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & ExpositionCopyright © 2004, American Society for Engineeringnearly 400,000
Conference Session
Curricular Change Issues
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Linda Katehi; Leah Jamieson; Katherine Banks; Kamyar Haghighi; John Gaunt; Heidi Diefes-Dux; Robert Montgomery; William Oakes; P.K. Imbrie; Deborah Follman; Phillip Wankat
faculty’s skepticism of engineering education as a scholarly activity has created anenvironment at many institutions that make the pursuit of deeply focused and productiveengineering education research program anywhere from difficult to impossible. In someinstances, engineering faculty with a high level of interest in engineering education carry aboveaverage teaching loads and are advised to develop and maintain traditional engineering researchprograms to ensure tenure. These faculty pursue engineering education projects as a sidelineactivity that often must be accomplished with little resources (e.g. time, funding, or graduatestudents). Alternatively, engineering faculty pursuing engineering education are relegated tonon-tenure track positions
Conference Session
TC2K and Assessment
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Timothy Skvarenina
project presentationWho evaluates: Faculty & Industry AdvisorsHow evaluated: Completion of presentation evaluation form for each presentation by faculty, peers, and/or industry advisorsStandard: Delivers well-organized presentation within specified time, displays confident manner, maintains audience contact, minimal distracting mannerismsWho assemblesdata: Department Assessment CoordinatorSpecifics:Senior design presentations occur in ECET 497 for the EET students and in ECET 396C for students inthe EET Program with CpET Option. The 497 projects and presentations are individual efforts, whilethe 396C projects and presentations are
Conference Session
Innovative Graduate Programs & Methods
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Linda Katehi; Kamyar Haghighi; Heidi Diefes-Dux; Katherine Banks; John Gaunt; Robert Montgomery; William Oakes; P.K. Imbrie; Deborah Follman; Phillip Wankat
EducationThe call for engineering education reform is driving the need for the establishment of the field ofengineering education as a scholarly endeavor. This call for reform is exemplified in the 1994joint project report on Engineering Education for a Changing World by the Engineering DeansCouncil and Corporate Roundtable of the American Society for Engineering Education1, the1995 Report by the Board on Engineering Education of the National Research Council2, and therecent call for change by the National Academy of Engineering (NAE) leadership3. The othersignificant development has been the adoption by the Accreditation Board for Engineering andTechnology (ABET) of Engineering Criteria 2000 (EC 2000), a new set of program accreditationstandards that
Conference Session
What's New in Entrepreneurship Education
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Matt O'Connor; Kathleen Simione; Dale Jasinski; Chad Nehrt
knowledge, methods and skills to make complex business decisions hasmotivated colleges and universities to integrate their curriculum (Behrman and Levin 1984).Additionally, AACSB’s commitment to curriculum and pedagogical innovation has led collegesand universities to reexamine their curricula, often resulting in the development of integratedclassroom experiences.Case study data collection The faculty who participated in the project were surveyed using structured interviewquestions to assess their experience in the delivery of this course. In addition, notes from facultymeetings conducted at the end of each semester were used to supplement this data. Studentevaluations conducted at the end of each semester, as well as notes from student
Conference Session
Introduction to Engineering and More
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Craig Gunn; Craig Somerton
and Science Students (ROSES) at Michigan State University was given such anopportunity. The ROSES program at MSU is intended as an enrichment program for the bestand brightest of the pre-engineering majors. To achieve this, ROSES students are clustered inthe dormitories as well as their pre-engineering classes (such as calculus, physics, andengineering graphics). They also attend a weekly, one and a half hour seminar class during thefirst semester of their freshman year, which is intended to provide an introduction to engineeringand assist in the transition from high school. Enrichment is provided during this seminar throughseveral activities including talks from practicing engineers, personality testing, impromptudesign projects, and