and an incumbent graduate student for the 2020-2021 year. He works on the project titled ”CAREER: Actualizing Latent Diversity: Building Innovation through Engineering Students’ Identity Development,” assisting with narrative analysis and interviews, helping to understand the identity trajectories of latently diverse students. He received his Bachelor of Science in Psychology at Harding University with honors, where he participated in the Beyond Professional Identity (BPI) research group, studying frustration in first- and second-year undergraduate engineering students. He also served as the BPI lab manager during 2017-2018. He is also a Society of Personality and Social Psychology Undergraduate Research Fellow
College of Physicians and Surgeons of Columbia University. In 2000, he joined New York City College of Technology, City University of New York (CUNY) where he is a Professor in the Department of Computer Systems Technology. Since 2005, he has been a member of the doctoral faculty at the CUNY Graduate Center. His research interests include computer science and engineering education and the use of computational models to understand and solve problems in biology. Page 24.1334.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2014 Using Interdisciplinary Game-based Learning to
Tribhuvan University, a postgraduate diploma in En- vironmental Education and Sustainable Development from Kathmandu University, a master’s in Biosys- tems Engineering from Michigan State University and a dual-major doctorate in Biosystems Engineering and Environmental Engineering from Michigan State. Dr. Aryal’s research interests are in water qual- ity, hydrology, phytoremediation, agricultural conservation practices, urban best-management practices (BMPs), and ecological engineering. Pertaining to education, his interests are in innovative instructional techniques to enhance student motivation and learning.Dr. Gautam Biswas, Vanderbilt University Gautam Biswas is a Cornelius Vanderbilt Professor of Computer Science
College ofEngineering, an institution which promised integrated project work in all four years of itscurriculum.3 Before and since, and in many places besides Olin, promising engineering studentshave been enticed to attend a variety of innovative technical education programs that promisereal-world experience, training in widely applicable communications skills, and an impeccablefoundation in the principles of design and professional standards of practice.For example, WPI placed project-based learning at the core of its academic program in the early1970’s when it redesigned its graduation requirements to include two major projects.4 Oneproject undertaken within the student’s major field of study is usually completed during thesenior year. Another
among engineering undergraduate students, EEI aims to assist students tobegin consciously developing their emotional intelligence, and to be more fully prepared for theirprofessional and personal lives. One of our main goals is to help students to bring awareness oftheir own emotions to their life experiences, and to develop the skills to recognize and work withthe emotions of others.As current research on emotional intelligence (EI) has demonstrated, EI is a significant indicatorof personal and professional success. Further, both industry and academia recognize that the bestengineering students will have well-developed inter- and intrapersonal skills in addition to theirtechnical skills. This paper provides a brief outline of the concept of
consortium of engineering education).Nupur Kulkarni, Cares for the environment - I am a Certified Leed Green Associate. I enjoy spending my hobby time in Photography, painting and traveling. Ardent faith in ethical behavior and a strong desire to make a career in ’spaces and local mediums’ Graduating in June 2017 from Savannah School of Art and Design – Geor- gia (USA) in Architecture after B. Arch from S.P. Pune University. Technical Skills such as AutoCAD, Google SketchUp, Photoshop, InDesign, Coral Draw, Illustrator, Premiere Pro, V-Ray, and Microsoft of- fice. Participated in several competitions viz. Essay writing ’Pune, People, and Places’, Green School Competition by Ethos ’In Big Tree Paradigm’ - focused on
-register arenot random; rather, “they are typically connected by an organizing theme, which givesmeaning to their linkage. The point of the theme is to engender coherentinterdisciplinary…learning that is not easily attainable through enrollment in unrelated,stand-alone courses” (p. 2). Despite the age of many learning community programs, Tintoreports that current perceptions of learning communities have been based largely onanecdotal evidence and institutional reports or assessments described at conferences ornational meetings. Recently, however, a study was conducted for the National Center ofTeaching, Learning, and Assessment that suggests learning communities impact studentlearning in several ways
-lead design competition, and scholarships for study abroad. Inaddition, the student-led groups run week-long activities for September orientation. Facultymembers take on a collaborative role rather than one of supervisor-subordinate.Giving students responsibility in and out of the classroom has led to significant participation inthe educational process, as well as innovative, responsible, and well-rounded students ready toaccept challenges and overcome adversity.IntroductionMcMaster University is a comprehensive research-intensive university located in Hamilton,Ontario. It prides itself on being student-centered and focused on both undergraduate andgraduate education. The Faculty of Engineering was founded 50 years ago and has anenrollment of
that has flight path correction.Subhasish Mitra, Philip H. S. Wong, “Nanotechnology-Carbon Nanotube (CNT)Electronics,” Stanford Nanofabrication Lab25-26This research effort epitomizes some of the best practices in nanoelectronics as it leveragesfundamental research in CNT science into useful nano-chip technology for high speedcomputing based on quarter-size CNT chips. CNTs are highly electrically conductive, andtheir small, nanometer size allows for wafer scale, smaller circuits than the conventionalsilicon circuits. In this, CNT instead of silicon is grown on quartz wafer facilitated by catalystnanoparticles at 900 oC for 17 hours. This growth process is carried out at optimal conditionsof density, length and uniformity to marginalize the
recently held the position of Assistant Professor of Practice in the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering at Ohio State where she taught a wide variety of engineering courses in First Year Engineering and Mechanical Engineering. In the last several years, she has received four teaching awards including the 2013 Boyer Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching Engineering Innovation and the Charles E. MacQuigg Award for Outstanding Teaching. Page 26.611.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2015 Engineering Ambassador Program Connects High
. As in other disciplines, aproxy is a substitute measure, chosen because it is easier to estimate. For example, the floor areaof a house is usually a very good indicator of the final construction cost, but it may be difficultfor the prospective owner to visualize in advance. The number and relative size of the rooms inthe house is easier to comprehend; if such a proxy can be reliably related to the final floor area,then it can provide a basis for effective estimation. In the initial PSP research, Humphrey foundthat program size, measured in LOC, was a good predictor of the total development time. Hethen developed a proxy based on the number and relative size of classes in a high-levelconceptual design for the software product being estimated
Management. Thefirst one appears in the 3rd year of the course and concerns ‘production’ in the classic sense ofthe word, i.e., production of goods, complemented with inventory management. Specifically,the contents of the Inventory and Production Management included issues like strategy,design of productive systems (including size, location and plant layout), aggregate planning,production scheduling and control and inventory management.The Operations Management course appeared in the 4th year of the graduation with thepurpose of looking at production management from a broader perspective. In other words, theterm production is now applied for both goods and services. However, for the OperationsManagement course the need to establish more ambitious
, and as a Post-Doctoral Research Officer at the Center for Informal Learning and Schools (CILS) at King’s College, University of London. Her graduate training is in Science & Technology Studies and Women’s Studies at Virginia Tech.Ms. Helene Finger P.E., California Polytechnic State UniversityAlana Christine Snelling Page 24.1375.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2014 When, Why, How, Who – Recruitment Lessons from First Year Engineering Students in the Millennial GenerationToday, an increasing number of women enter, remain, and succeed within science
government agencies. In 2010, Dr. Lambrinidou co-conceived the graduate level engineering ethics course ”Engi- neering Ethics and the Public,” which she has been co-teaching to students in engineering and science. She is co-Principal Investigator on a National Science Foundation (NSF) research and education project developing an ethnographic approach to engineering ethics education. Page 26.322.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2015 Canons against Cannons? Social Justice and the Engineering Ethics ImaginaryAbstractWhat if social
expressly devoted to the first-year Engineering Program at Northeastern University. Recently, she has joined the expanding Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering at NU to continue teaching Simulation, Facilities Planning, and Human-Machine Systems. She also serves as a Technical Advisor for Senior Capstone Design and graduate-level Challenge Projects in Northeastern’s Gordon Engineering Leadership Program. Dr. Jaeger has been the recipient of numerous awards in engineering education for both teaching and mentoring and has been involved in several engineering educational research initiatives through ASEE and beyond.Dr. Courtney Pfluger, Northeastern University Dr. Courtney Pfluger received her Doctoral degree
Charlotte. She was the first woman PhD graduate from the Lee College of Engineering, with a research emphasis in microelectronic devices and solid state materials. She has served in numerous mentoring and educational roles for undergraduates, high school and middle school students. Page 11.1177.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2006 Summer Camps in Engineering Technology: Lessons LearnedAbstractThere is mounting evidence that a nationwide shortage of qualified high-tech workers willjeopardize the economic future of the United States. It is also well established that a moreproactive approach must be
. 1999. Refinement of a Community Service Attitude Scale. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Southwest Educational Research Association. 35 pp.18. Wilde, Douglass J. 2004. Team Creativity. Education that Works: The NCIIA 8th Annual Meeting. March 18- 20. p. 77-80.19. Wilde, Douglass J. 2007. Team Dynamics Panel, Handouts. National Capstone Design Course Conference. June 13-15, Boulder, CO.20. Bielefeldt, A.R. 2007. Community Service Attitudes of First-Year Students and Senior Students Working on Service Learning Design Projects. Association for Environmental Engineering and Science Professors (AEESP) Biennial Conference - Interactions at the Interface: Making the Connections Between Environments, Disciplines and
student performance and attitudes," Journal of Engineering Education, vol. 91, pp. 3, 2002.[13] C. Johnston, "Let Me Learn website," Center for Advancement of Learning www.letmelearn.org. [Accessed January 10, 2006].[14] R. A. Guzzo and M. W. Dickson, "Teams in organizations: recent research on performance and effectiveness," Annual Review of Psychology, vol. 47, pp. 307, 1996.[15] J. R. Katzenbach and D. K. Smith, The Wisdom of Teams: Creating the High Performance Organization. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Press, 1993.[16] J. S. Byrd and J. L. Hudgkins, "Teaming in the design laboratory," Journal of Engineering Education, vol. 84, pp. 335, 1995.[17] E. Seat and S. M. Lord
Development from the Tech- nological Institute of Merida. His areas of interest are innovation practices in organizations, ICT and knowledge management.Dr. Jennifer Jill Kidd, Old Dominion University Dr. Jennifer Kidd is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Teaching and Learning at Old Dominion Uni- versity. Her research interests include engineering education, computational thinking, student-authored digital content, classroom assessment, especially peer review, and diversity issues. She currently has sup- port from the National Science Foundation for two projects related to engineering education for preservice teachers.Dr. Stacie I Ringleb, Old Dominion University Stacie Ringleb is an associate professor in the
research projects that otherwise would not be discussed in a typical officehour or classroom session.One of the innovations of the ETS-IMPRESS program was requiring participation in the HonorsPathway Program, which generally emphasizes intrinsic motivation (and does not use GPA inadmissions or awarding of credentials). The honors program consists of three seminar classesand four experiential components; for all of these, students write reflections designed to promotetheir development of self-authorship. Preliminary survey results show no difference betweenETS and other honors students in the areas of student motivation, intention to persist, andprofessional skill development. ETS students see a closer link between their current major andtheir
students with diverse characteristics in e-learning environments. Pass/fail policies should be carefully designed and implemented tominimize negative impacts on motivation. Employers should expand orientation and mentoringprograms for entry-level employees, particularly for laboratory-based tasks. Research is neededto improve the delivery of STEM laboratory e-learning experiences. Findings inform futureresearch, as well as best practices for improved institutional adaptability and resiliency. Thesewill minimize disruptions to student functioning and performance, reduce attrition, andstrengthen progression into the STEM workforce during high-risk conditions such as pandemics.With caution, findings may be extended to non-STEM and non-student
components for an Op-Amp class; o Design and build a multistage BJT amplifier.9. Leaning Management System (LMS)LMSs such as Canvas®, aTutor®, Blackboard®, Desire2Learn®, Moodle®, eCollege®, amongothers can be of great aid in active learning as it can be used to guide students to take a moreactive role in their learning. LMSs have a large number of functionality including: course contentdelivery (for self-service and self-guided services), portability, content personalization,reporting, tracking, grading, etc. It is a key mechanism for e-learning in colleges and universitiesworldwide. The practicability to allow course material delivery to be accessed by students at anyplace and time makes LMS strategically useful in active learning. LMS
linkedby relationships – lines that connect the concepts. Relationships include terms like occurs,fosters learning in, and leads to.Figure 8 is the Cmap parking lot and placing them into the Cmap tool in a hierarchical fashionand then linking them yields the concept map shown in figure 9. Figure 8 - Cmap Parking Lot Technical Entrepreneurship in the Federal Government Systems Management and Evaluation Best Engineering Management Practices Civil Engineering Information Management Leading Innovation Being Entrepreneurial Rewards/recognition Work design Intrinsic motivation Formal education Life experience Natural ability Life-long learning Academic
Paper ID #32926Kindness in Engineering EducationDr. Angela R. Bielefeldt, University of Colorado Boulder Angela Bielefeldt is a professor at the University of Colorado Boulder in the Department of Civil, Envi- ronmental, and Architectural Engineering (CEAE) and Director for the Engineering Plus program. She has served as the Associate Chair for Undergraduate Education in the CEAE Department, as well as the ABET assessment coordinator. Professor Bielefeldt was also the faculty director of the Sustainable By Design Residential Academic Program, a living-learning community where students learned about and practice
Paper ID #39795Learning Concrete in Construction Management Course through BowlingBallProjectProf. Pranshoo Solanki, Illinois State University Dr. Pranshoo Solanki is a full professor in the Construction Management program of Department of Technology at Illinois State University. He received his doctorate in civil engineering from the University of Oklahoma in 2010. The overall theme of Dr. Solanki’s research is innovative construction materials and methodologies which can be used for building a sustainable civil engineering infrastructure. Dr. Solanki mainly teach courses in the area of construction materials and design
embedded within our research design.Because engineering education researchers are also educators, the asymmetric relationshipbetween teacher and student can impact the quality of the interview data. For instance, there issomething potentially problematic about having faculty members interview students about thedifficulty they have speaking with faculty. While there may be other methods for facilitatingaccess, having students interview other students enabled us to tap more directly into studentexperiences.1 We also realized, through the course of this pilot study, that we were inviting ourstudent researchers to engage in a practice that was contiguous with a mode of interactionfamiliar to students—talking to friends about the challenges they were
Certificates from Virginia Tech in Engineering Education and Future Professoriate and from USFQ in Structures for Construction Professionals. MiguelAndres’s research includes Architectural and Civil Engineering Project Management, Sustainable and Resilient Urban Infrastructure, and the development of engineers who not only have strong technical and practical knowledge but the social awareness and agency to address global humanitarian, environmental, and social justice challenges. For him, social justice is a concept that should always be involved in discussions on infrastructure. Related to STEM education, Miguel Andres develops disruptive pedagogies for STEM courses as a tool for innovation, and assessing engineering
how each space was usedin different locations, and saw differences in how the spaces operated versus who used them. Forexample, the Izmir space was supported by the local government and presented itself as a “craftand vocational factory” primarily for small-scale manufacturing, whereas the Dortmund spacewas privately owned and whose “purpose was oriented to provide active and participatorycitizens in research studies, practices and projects.”4 These spaces show how maker spaces arebecoming increasingly popular around the world, and ER is likely to follow soon.3.5.3 LEGO Mindstorms and ArduinosThe reviewed literature indicated that Arduinos and LEGO Mindstorms are facing significantchallenges in terms of their longevity as popular platforms
problem solving techniques in methods that will achieve synergy between technical andsocial systems.Sternberg introduces the “triarchic theory of human cognition,” involving a three-part modelcorresponding to analytical, creative, and practical cognitive skills5,6,7,8,9,10. Interestingly, theNAE’s three main attributes for the Engineer of 2020 coincide with the three attributes thatSternberg claims will help students achieve “successful intelligence”6,7. According to Sternberg,intelligence is demonstrated when one is capable of balancing one’s skills in adapting to,shaping, and selecting the environment that best matches one’s strongest skills, values, anddesires7,8. Success is ultimately achieved through harmonizing three aspects of
Energieversorgungstechnik (ISET)12, research solar center of University of Kassel.This trip was extremely beneficial to all. It developed in the students a great interest in suchtechnologies and an eagerness to raise awareness of global warming and climate change as soonas they go back to the UAE. The students were amazed of the German government’s initiativesto promote such technologies even though the amount of sunshine is much smaller than that ofthe UAE. One of the students developed a much greater interest and requested to join Lahmeyerin July for a six month internship to learn ways of employing these technologies in the UAE.IV. Impact of such experienceAfter their return, some students decided to go to schools to raise