Distance Education at Nova Southeastern Education, and an Ed D in Instructional Design and Technology at Nova Southeastern University. If you want to learn more about my work, go to http://www.lilisteiner.com/ c American Society for Engineering Education, 2020 Dynamics Online Course: A Challenge content delivered with best teaching practices keeps students engagedAbstractDynamics is a core course in the mechanical and civil engineering programs; and, because of itscomplexity, this course continues to represent one of the main challenges facing our students.Historically, faculty were resistant to deliver the content of this course online. In order to offer anequivalent, or
challenges to the design of blended learning: A systematic literature review. Educational Research Review, 22(1), 1–18.[7] Jamieson, L. H., & Lohmann, J. R. (2012). Innovation with Impact. Washington, D.C.[8] Jesiek, B. K., Borrego, M., & Beddoes, K. (2010). Advancing global capacity for engineering education research: relating research to practice, policy and industry. European Journal of Engineering Education, 35(2), 117–134.[9] Litzinger, T. A., & Lattuca, L. R. (2014). Translating research to widespread practice in engineering education. In A. Johri & B. M. Olds (Eds.), Cambridge Handbook of Engineering Education Research. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.[10] Rhoads, J. F., Nauman, E., Holloway, B., &
predict the mechanical behavior of novel materials such as nanocomposites, computational modeling of soft tissue and power sources such as lithium-ion battery and fuel cells. Sheidaei is a member of the American Society for Composite (ASC), Society for Engineering Education (ASEE), Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE) and Society of Women Engi- neers (SWE). Sheidaei has received several research and educational grants from NSF, CAAT (Center for Advanced Automotive Technology) and KEEN (The Kern Entrepreneurial Engineering Network). Shei- daei is a recipient of the Zonta International Amelia Earhart Fellowship, which is presented to women pursuing a doctoral degree who demonstrate a superior academic record in the
Mississippi State, he worked at NASA Marshall.Anthony Vizzini, Western Michigan University Anthony Vizzini is Dean of the College of Engineering at Western Michigan University. He previously served as Head of Aerospace Engineering at Mississippi State University. His areas of teaching and research are focused on the mechanics and damage tolerance assessment of polymer-matrix composite materials. Page 15.456.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2010 Emporium Based Redesign of Statics: An Innovative Approach to Enhance Learning and Reduce CostsAbstractThis paper describes a new
University of Colorado Boulder in the Department of Civil, Envi- ronmental, and Architectural Engineering (CEAE). She serves as the Associate Chair for Undergraduate Education in the CEAE Department, as well as the ABET assessment coordinator. Professor Bielefeldt is the faculty director of the Sustainable By Design Residential Academic Program, a living-learning community where interdisciplinary students learn about and practice sustainability. Bielefeldt is also a licensed P.E. Professor Bielefeldt’s research interests in engineering education include service-learning, sustainable engineering, social responsibility, ethics, and diversity
thinkingand communication skills2,8. The projects are designed to solved by student teams, who are toldthey are acting as consultants on the project posed. The projects are all centered on different realcivil engineering systems and present a discussion of how to create a simple model for thatsystem. Particular emphasis is paid to the assumptions made in the modeling process.MATLAB is then used as the framework within which the numerical solution will be achieved.The students are given template MATLAB scripts that must be customized to their particularproblem. A co-requisite for this course is a numerical methods coursed where MATLAB is alsoused, exposing our students to the necessary skills to use this tool. The student teams arerequired to evaluate
Innovative Intervention to Infuse Diversity and Inclusion in a Statics CourseAbstractEngineering educators strive to prepare their students for success in the engineering workforce.Increasingly, many career paths will require engineering graduates to work in multidisciplinaryteams with individuals possessing a diversity of skill sets, backgrounds, and identities. Therefore,it is important not only for future engineers to have the opportunity to work in teams as students,but also to have specific instruction that teaches them about teamwork skills and the valuediversity and inclusion bring to engineering practice. Furthermore, it is important that thisinstruction occurs throughout their engineering coursework, giving
and learning styles, and (2) technology use ineducation.1. Learning stylesLearning styles is a well-researched topic in the field of education. It is well-established thatstudents have different preferred learning styles that directly impact the assimilation and retentionof course content, and thus overall student achievement. There are many benefits for either astudent or an instructor to understand learning styles, as instructors can develop teaching strategiesto cover differents mode of input, while students could be more effective learners by adjustingtheir study habits and the way they take notes to accommodate their modality preferences. Thesefacts lead to challenging implications on the instructors in terms of awareness of the
role of non-cognitive and affective factors in student academic outcomes and overall success.Prof. Jeffrey F. Rhoads, Purdue University, West Lafayette (College of Engineering) Jeffrey F. Rhoads is a Professor in the School of Mechanical Engineering at Purdue University and is affiliated with both the Birck Nanotechnology Center and Ray W. Herrick Laboratories at the same insti- tution. He received his B.S., M.S., and Ph.D. degrees, each in mechanical engineering, from Michigan State University in 2002, 2004, and 2007, respectively. Dr. Rhoads’ current research interests include the predictive design, analysis, and implementation of resonant micro/nanoelectromechanical systems (MEMS/NEMS) for use in chemical and
associate professor of electrical engineering at Kettering University. Dr. Finelli’s current research interests include student resistance to active learning, faculty adoption of evidence-based teaching practices, the use of technology and innovative pedagogies on student learning and success, and the impact of a flexible classroom space on faculty teaching and student learning. She also led a project to develop a taxonomy for the field of engineering education research, and she was part of a team that studied ethical decision-making in engineering students. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2018 Incorporating IMU Technology to Demonstrate Concepts in
Student Inquiry," in 2017 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Columbus, Ohio, 2017.[2] J. C. Bruhl, J. L. Klosky, T. Mainwaring, and J. P. Hanus, "Accelerating the Development of Engineering Judgment in Students through Inquiry-Based Learning Activities," presented at the 2017 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Columbus, Ohio, 2017.[3] Indiana University Center for Postsecondary Research. (2017). Carnegie Classification of Institutions of Higher Education. Available: http://carnegieclassifications.iu.edu/[4] R. W. Welch, S. J. Ressler, and A. C. Estes, "A Model for Instructional Design," Journal of Professional Issues in Engineering Education and Practice, vol. 131, July 2005 2005.[5] T
Paper ID #30515Implementation and Evaluation of Active Learning Techniques: AdaptableActivities for A Variety of Engineering CoursesDr. Jillian Schmidt, Missouri University of Science and Technology Dr. Jillian Schmidt is an Assistant Teaching Professor in the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering at Missouri University of Science and Technology. She teaches primarily first and second- year engineering design courses, and her research interests include technology incorporation and team dynamics in project based courses.Dr. Nicolas Ali Libre, Missouri University of Science and Technology Nicolas Ali Libre, PhD
AC 2008-565: STATICS AND DYNAMICS PROJECTS EMPHASIZINGINTRODUCTORY DESIGN AND MANUFACTURINGMichael Hennessey, University of St. Thomas DR. MICHAEL P. HENNESSEY is a tenured Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering within the School of Engineering. He has taught over 15 different courses in mechanical engineering at the undergraduate and graduate level and has written 33 papers in research (kinematics, dynamics and control of mechanical systems and related areas of applied mathematics) and mechanical engineering education, including the presentation of 10 papers at ASEE conferences (National (3), along with North Midwest (6) and St. Lawrence (1) sections
resultof a multi-year process involving a Delphi study, student focus groups, and extensive betatesting3,5. The test itself is designed to address 11 distinct concepts and is comprised of 29questions, four of which were taken from the pre-existing Force Concept Inventory3. It wasdeveloped, like many CIs, with the intention of providing a valid and reliable instrument, capableof evaluating the effects of innovative or experimental instructional practices upon studentlearning3,4.Instructors at Purdue decided to supplant the existing conceptual questions on their final examwith DCI questions. An abbreviated version of the DCI had to be developed and utilizedbecause the 29-question version was considered too long for the time dedicated to
Paper ID #16325Pre- and Post-Class Student Viewing Behaviors for Recorded Videos in anInverted Sophomore Mechanics CourseDr. Shawn P. Gross, Villanova University Dr. Shawn P. Gross is an associate professor in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Villanova University. He has as M.S.E. and Ph.D. degrees in Civil Engineering from the University of Texas at Austin, and a B.S.E. degree from Tulane University. He teaches undergraduate and graduate courses on mechanics and structural design (reinforced concrete, structural steel, masonry, and wood).Dr. David W Dinehart, Villanova University Professor and Chairman
Paper ID #8918Using a ”Flipped Classroom” Model in Undergraduate Newtonian DynamicsProf. Susan B Swithenbank, US Coast Guard Academy Dr. Swithenbank is an Assistant Professor at the US Coast Guard Academy in Naval Architecture and Marine Engineering. Prior to working at the USCGA, she was a researcher at the Naval Surface Warfare Center, Carderock Division, and the Norwegian University of Science and Technology in Trondheim Norway. She has a PhD from MIT in Ocean Engineering.Prof. Thomas William DeNucci, U.S. Coast Guard Academy Thomas DeNucci is an Assistant Professor of Ship Design at the U.S. Coast Guard Academy in New
adjunct faculty member at University of Texas, Austin. He has received numerous professional awards including a NASA Post-Doctorial Fellowship, ASEE Best Paper Awards, the ASME Most Innovative Curriculum Award, the Ernest L. Boyer - International Award for Excellence in Teach- ing, the US Air Force Academy Seiler Award for Excellence in Engineering Research and the Outstanding Academy Educator Award. He has published over 100 technical articles and generated approximately $3.5 million of research; all at institutions with no graduate program. His research includes development of innovative design methodologies and enhancement of engineering education. The design methodology re- search focuses on development and testing
Higdon Distinguished Educator Award.Prof. Jeffrey F Rhoads, Purdue University at West Lafayette Jeffrey F. Rhoads is a Professor in the School of Mechanical Engineering at Purdue University and is affiliated with both the Birck Nanotechnology Center and Ray W. Herrick Laboratories at the same insti- tution. He received his B.S., M.S., and Ph.D. degrees, each in mechanical engineering, from Michigan State University in 2002, 2004, and 2007, respectively. Dr. Rhoads’ current research interests include the predictive design, analysis, and implementation of resonant micro/nanoelectromechanical systems (MEMS/NEMS) for use in chemical and biological sensing, electromechanical signal processing, and computing; the
Engineering, faculty Page 26.1394.3must ask themselves what an exceptionally competent engineer ought to know about a widerange of topics in order to be able to practice or pursue graduate work in a specific engineeringdiscipline. In such a general program, students take only one required introductory course thataddresses “mechanics” topics (as well as one course each in the fundamentals of materialsscience; electrical engineering; experimental engineering; chemical engineeringthermodynamics; and computer engineering). These are scaffolded by a sequence of courses insystems and controls theory, and four semesters of design projects permit application
Instructional Design from Drexel University and a Bachelor of Science degree in Chemistry from Lebanon Valley College.Dr. Kimberly LeChasseur, Worcester Polytechnic Institute Dr. Kimberly LeChasseur is a researcher and evaluator with the Worcester Polytechnic Institute. She holds a dual appointment with the Center for Project-Based Learning and the Morgan Teaching and Learning Center. She holds a PhD in Educational Leadership and Policy Studies from Temple University and has more than ten years of experience researching professional learning of educators and evaluating efforts to improve students’ opportunities to learn. American c Society for Engineering
, the course instructor recruited anengineering education doctoral student who was researching the Freeform environment forassistance on the project. The brainstorming blossomed into a partnership with both the facultymember and the graduate student sharing in the design, development, and implementation of theactivities. The partnership showcased the value of interdisciplinary and cross-level (faculty andgraduate students) collaborations for pedagogical innovations. In total, the instructor andgraduate student designed six active learning activities, targeting the concepts of: Poisson’s ratio,shear strain, strain in indeterminate rods, beam deflection, states of stress for combined loading,and Mohr’s circle.Theoretical FoundationsAll of the six
of Mechanical Engineering at Stanford University. Besides teaching both undergraduate and graduate design and education related classes at Stanford University, she conducts research on engineering education and work-practices, and applied finite element analysis. From 1999-2008 she served as a Senior Scholar at the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, leading the Foundation’s engineering study (as reported in Educating Engineers: Designing for the Future of the Field). In addition, in 2003 Dr. Sheppard was named co-principal investigator on a National Science Foundation (NSF) grant to form the Center for the Advancement of Engineering Education (CAEE), along with faculty at the University of
. These improvements to student learning are due, inpart, to the development of metacognitive and critical process skills. When coupled with masteryof technical content, engineers with stronger metacognitive and critical process skills can morecreatively apply knowledge. Creativity is a foundational requirement for innovation and recentliterature suggests that while engineering programs may be improving in developing creativity inengineering curricula, additional focus is needed to ensure graduates are properly equipped fortheir careers7,8. Innovative, creative, design thinking has been identified as one of four categoriesof engineering competence in the Transforming Undergraduate Education in Engineering(TUEE) initiative sponsored by ASEE9
developing a process and assessing graduate attributes at the department to target areas for improvement in the curriculum. This resulted in several publications in this educational research areas. Dr. Al-Hammoud won the ”Ameet and Meena Chakma award for exceptional teaching by a student” in 2014 and the ”Engineering Society Teaching Award” in 2016 from University of Waterloo. Her students regard her as an innovative teacher who continuously introduces new ideas to the classroom that increases their engagement. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2017 Helping Students to Feel MechanicsAbstractThis paper assesses the use of physical models as teaching tools in
Paper ID #22303Standardizing the Statics Curriculum Across Multiple InstructorsDr. Kimberly B. Demoret P.E., Florida Institute of Technology Kimberly B. Demoret, Ph.D., P.E., teaches Statics and Aerospace Engineering Capstone Design at the Florida Institute of Technology. Prior to joining Florida Tech in 2015, she worked for eight years at Kennedy Space Center on development of launch systems in support of NASA’s space exploration goals. Before that she was a US Air Force officer for 20 years, supporting several aerospace programs as a developmental engineer and manager.Dr. Jennifer Schlegel, Florida Institute of
Engineering at the University of South- ern California (USC) and his Master of Science in the same field at Stanford University. He is currently exploring the field of data science as his potential career path.Dr. Helen L. Chen, Stanford University Helen L. Chen is a research scientist in the Designing Education Lab in the Department of Mechanical Engineering and the Director of ePortfolio Initiatives in the Office of the Registrar at Stanford University. She is also a member of the research team in the National Center for Engineering Pathways to Innovation (Epicenter). Chen earned her undergraduate degree from UCLA and her Ph.D. in Communication with a minor in Psychology from Stanford University in 1998. Her current
AC 2008-2537: ASSESSING COGNITIVE REASONING AND LEARNING INMECHANICSChris Papadopoulos, University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee Chris Papadopoulos earned BS degrees in Civil Engineering and Mathematics from Carnegie Mellon University, and a PhD in Theoretical and Applied Mechanics, Cornell University. He previously served on the faculty of Engineering at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, where he is currently a research associate, grant writer, lecturer, and director of educational programs. His research interests include biomechanics, nonlinear structural mechanics, computational mechanics, engineering education, and engineering ethics. He is an active member of American Society for