engineering.Dr. Jessica E. S. Swenson, University of Michigan Jessica Swenson is a post doctoral fellow at the University of Michigan. She was awarded her doctorate and masters from Tufts University in mechanical engineering and STEM education respectively. Her current research involves examining different types of homework problems in undergraduate engineering science courses, flexible classroom spaces, active learning, responsive teaching, and elementary school engineering teachers.Mr. Max William Blackburn, University of Michigan Max Blackburn is a fifth year undergraduate Electrical Engineering student at the University of Michi- gan, focusing in Power systems and Energy. He is currently assisting Dr. Cynthia Finelli with
the African American Experience and the Effects of Hip Hop on American Culture in the University’s Ethnic Studies Program. His research interests are in neighborhood displace- ment and Black Migration, especially in the Post-World War II period. He received the Bachelor of Arts degree in History from Morehouse College (Atlanta); the Master of Arts degree from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee in American History; and did further study toward the Ph. D. in American History at Indiana University (Bloomington.) c American Society for Engineering Education, 2019 The NSF S-STEM Program 2010-2014 at Purdue University NorthwestAbstractThe NSF S
Riddle Aeronautical University, and The Ohio StateUniversity. While each university offered its own spin to the field, consistent themes emerged.Instilling sound and healthy business practices, promoting safety in the industry, and cultivatinglogistically aware minds were some of the common practices found within these programs.While the programs strove to instill similar traits in their graduates, each had its own uniquetraits within their plans of study that differentiated it from other programs. Purdue Universityoffered students both a bachelor and a master's in aviation management [19]. The University ofNorth Dakota also offered advanced, master and doctoral degrees along with a four-yearbachelor's, but required that all students, regardless
with a STEM degree [7],pedagogical improvements in STEM related fields are required to increase student participation and success toensure the future of these fields.Often in engineering courses teaching dynamics, such as biomechanics, it is challenging to connect the methodsand theories being taught to practical applications a student may encounter in an engineering job setting. Thismay result in limited motivation for students to study dynamics related topics. Therefore, it is appropriate toimplement innovated teaching approaches to address the limitations students find in mastering corebiomechanics concepts. Pedagogical innovations demonstrating success include active learning as well astechnology-based video-lectures and homework
introduced the concept and where in the curriculum reinforcement was achieved. The next section presents three steps of conceptual connectivity required in the present approach, followed by some results and some new discoveries. Finally select recommendations are presented and concluded. Establishing conceptual connectivity – Step 1 Since ideal flows is an essential topic to be understood by all mechanical engineers who wish to master the fluid mechanics area, this area was selected to implement the methodology. Continuity is tested tracing back to the high school and early college courses in mathematics. The reader may consider these recommendations and implement any remedial strategies
Paper ID #25318Understanding the Effectiveness of Using VR to Support Teaching DrillingTrajectory ConceptsDr. Maryam Mirabolghasemi, Mississippi State UniversityDr. Michael Andre Hamilton, Dr. Michael A. Hamilton is an Associate Director at Mississippi State Institute for System Engineering Research (ISER) in Vicksburg, MS. He received his Doctorate, Master and Bachelor degrees in Industrial and Systems Engineering from Mississippi State University and has a graduate certificate in Modeling, Simulation, and Visualization Engineering from Old Dominion University. Currently, he is the technical lead for Big Data Analytic
system in California was established by the 1960 Donahue HigherEducation Act, better known as California’s Master Plan for Higher Education [1]. The structureof the system is in three tiers- the state-wide University of California (UC), the regionallyorientated California State University (CSU), and the locally focused Community Colleges (CC)[7]. Each of these systems has a different enrollment criterion: the UC system being the mostselective and the CC system open to all students who are at least 18 years old or a high schoolgraduate. As established in the Master Plan, the goal of the UC system is to award bachelor’sdegrees to the top 12.5% of high school graduates and the CSU has a target of 33.3% of thepopulation [7].As largest university
through education and community outreach. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2019 Just a Moment – Classroom Demonstrations for Statics and Solid MechanicsAbstractEngineers, faculty, and administrators in higher education understand that introductory solidmechanics courses such as Statics remain an essential component in most engineering curricula.Undergraduate students also recognize the importance of mastering mechanics courses.However, their enthusiasm is often curbed by their frustration trying to understand many of thecritical, but often abstract, topics presented in the course. Compounded by large class sizes,reduced attention spans, and a heavy
Paper ID #25531Longitudinal Integration of the Same Design Project in Multiple StructuralEngineering CoursesDr. Matthew Swenty P.E., Virginia Military Institute Matthew (Matt) Swenty obtained his Bachelors and Masters degrees in Civil Engineering from Missouri S&T and then worked as a bridge designer at the Missouri Department of Transportation. He returned to school to obtain his Ph.D. in Civil Engineering at Virginia Tech followed by research work at the Turner- Fairbank Highway Research Center on concrete bridges. He is currently an associate professor of Civil Engineering at the Virginia Military Institute (VMI). He
arebecause the potentiometer turns with the motor. The potentiometers only turn 330 degreeshowever. The motors need to be held at midway to sync with the potentiometers. The motors areconnected to the Sabertooth via relay switches which are used to shut off the power if the motorsmalfunction. Figure 3 shows the Master Electrical Schematic. Figure 3: Master Electrical Schematic for the VR Flight Simulator There is a high current going through one part of the relay and a low current goingthrough another part. The relay can be used to switch current streams if necessary. All the relayscan be turned off by a kill switch located in the back of the simulator. Extra wires connected tothe Sabertooth direct the current to the
Paper ID #29181A Phenomenological Exploration of Women’s Lived Experiences and FactorsThat Influence Their Choice and Persistence in EngineeringDr. Shawn Fagan, Temple University Dr. Shawn Fagan is the Assistant Dean for Undergraduate Affairs in the College of Engineering at Temple University. He received his Bachelor of Science in Education from The Pennsylvania State University, Master of Sport Administration from Belmont University, Master of Business Administration from Saint Leo University, and Doctor of Education from Temple University. Dr. Fagan oversees the day-to-day operation of the College of Engineering’s Office
Tandon School of Engineering. She received her Bachelor of Arts in Mathematics and Philosophy from the Uni- versity of Rochester and her Master of Science in Mathematics from NYU Tandon School of Engineering. She manages the FITL Center, which encourages and promotes innovative teaching strategies and tech- nologies for learning. The Center provides faculty with training on new classroom technologies, access to technologies and resources, opportunities for research and design, and collaboration on educational and technological projects. Ms. Jean-Pierre has taught Mathematics, Problem- Solving and Academic Success Seminars at Polytechnic University and Columbia University. In addition to her experience in academia
. Her main research interests includes Machine learning, AI applications in Healthcare, and Deep Learning.Mr. Mohammad Nagahisarchoghaei, University of North Carolina at Charlotte Hey! I am Moe, a Ph.D. student in Computer Science department at the University of North Carolina - Charlotte experienced Graduate Research Assistant with a demonstrated history of working in the higher education industry. Skilled in Machine learning algorithms, Deep Learning, Data Mining, and Text Min- ing. Strong research professional with a Master of Business Administration (MBA) focused on Finance and Organizational Behavior, from Indian Institute of Technology, Madras in 2014. I am also holding a Bachelor’s degree in Electrical
several Virginia Tech awards including a Dean’s Award for Outstanding New Faculty, an Outstanding Teacher Award and a Faculty Fellow Award. She holds a B.S. in Chemical Engineering from Cornell University, an M.S. in Materials Science from the University of Connecticut and a Ph.D. in Engineering Education from Purdue University.Dr. Homero Murzi, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Homero Murzi is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Engineering Education at Virginia Tech. He holds degrees in Industrial Engineering (BS, MS), Master of Business Administration (MBA) and in Engineering Education (PhD). Homero has 15 years of international experience working in industry and academia. His research
revised as part of the co-design year. These teams of faculty usedthe scrum framework, which is commonly used in software development. It is a “framework forcompleting complex projects. Scrum originally was formalized for software developmentprojects, but it works well for any complex, innovative scope of work. The Scrum framework isdeceptively simple.” [18] Examples of such complex work include, for instance, product designand policymaking [19]. (Scrum was also used in the development of a prototype of theinstitution’s course catalogue.)Scrum generally involves a series of week-long sprints, during which team members work ontasks identified during a sprint planning meeting under the facilitation of a scrum master. Thesetasks are tracked on a so
University and a Masters and PhD from Princeton University. Her current research interests include 1) clarifying the effectiveness of video distribution and the use of exit tickets in oral communication instruction for engineers, 2) identifying the mental models engineering students use when creating graphical representations, and 3) learning the trends and themes represented in the communication-related papers across various divisions of ASEE. As part of this effort, Norback is working with Kay Neeley of U of VA to start an ASEE Communication across Divisions Community, now numbering 80 people.Mr. Charlie Bennett, Georgia Tech Charlie Bennett is the Public Engagement Librarian for Georgia Tech, working with Georgia Tech
Paper ID #29175Curriculum Development for Cyber Ethics with a Focus on Law EnforcementDr. Joseph Benin, U.S. Coast Guard Academy CDR Benin is a graduate of the Coast Guard Academy (BSEE), having served as the Regimental Honor Officer and Chairman of the Cadet Standards of Conduct Board. He then served as the Electrical and Elec- tronics Officer aboard the USCGC Healy (WAGB-20) while completing his Engineer-Officer-In-Training (EOIT) qualifications. He began graduate studies at the Georgia Institute of Technology, was selected as an adjunct MacArthur Fellow, and ultimately earned a Master of Science degree in Electrical and
Paper ID #30661Cybersecurity Awareness and Training Through a Multidisciplinary OSINTCourse ProjectAlyssa Mendlein, Temple University Alyssa is a PhD student in the Department of Criminal Justice at Temple University. She earned a Bachelor of Arts in Psychology from Boston University and a Master of Philosophy in Criminological Research from the University of Cambridge. She is now working on an NSF CAREER grant for Dr. Aunshul Rege, exploring adversarial decision-making and cybersecurity education innovation.Ms. Thuy-Trinh Nguyen, Temple University Trinh is a PhD student in the Department of Criminal Justice at Temple
- versity and a B.S. in Professional Aeronautics from Embry-Riddle University. Research interests include: IPv6, IPv6 adoption, wireless sensor networks, and industry-academia partnerships.Mr. Colby Lee Sawyer, East Carolina University Current Computer Science BS Student at East Carolina UnversityMr. Jarvis WoodburnMr. Zachary Ryan Zynda, East Carolina University Eastern Carolina University | College of Engineering & Technology Industrial Technology BS | Industrial Technology Management MinorMr. Dale Drummond, East Carolina University Dale Drummond is a Graduate Student at East Carolina University in the College of Engineering and Technology. He is currently pursuing his Master of Science in Network Technology with a
Paper ID #30058Developing the ESLS - Engineering Students Learning Strategies instrumentDr. Sreyoshi Bhaduri, McGraw-Hill Sreyoshi Bhaduri leads Global People Analytics at McGraw Hill - where she works on projects leveraging employee data to generate data-driven insights for decisions impacting organizational Culture and Talent. Sreyoshi has an interdisciplinary expertise having earned her Ph.D. in Engineering Education from the College of Engineering at Virginia Tech and Masters degrees in Applied Statistics and Mechanical En- gineering. Her research interests include women in technology and industry, studying the impact
organized and delivered by choice of the instructor. This platformalso allows discussion forums, grading tools with feedback to students, among other learning andcommunication tools. Added to all the resources produced by the instructor, the students haveaccess to the required Mastering Engineering learning platform coupled with the e-textbook [12]that offers adaptive learning as part of the reading and problem-solving assignments.The narrated lectures were recorded using the software ExplainEverything (TM) [15], which is asoftware that allows recording voice-over pdf files while doing annotations, and the instructorcan prepare Khan academy style videos.To produce the problem-solving videos, the Instructor used the recording studio with
catch-as-catch-can.AppendicesReferences[1] “Conceptual Design of a Test Bed for Miner Rescue,” R.A.M. Munny, A Project Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements For the Degree of Master of Science In Electrical and Computer Engineering, UNIVERSITY, May 2019[2] “Latching Mechanism Between and UGV Team for Mine Rescue,” S. Hoffman, A Project Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Science in Mechanical Engineering, UNIVERSITY, August 2017[3] “Raspberry Pi 3 Model B,” Raspberry Pi. [Online]. Available: https://www.raspberrypi.org/products/raspberry-pi-3-model-b-plus/. [Accessed: 19-Apr- 2019].[4] “Pi NoIR Camera V2,” Raspberry Pi. [Online]. Available: https
Wisconsin Association for Environmental Education.Mr. Joel B. Shoemaker, Madison Area Technical College Joel Shoemaker is a Wisconsin state-certified Master Electrician with over 18 years of experience with photovoltaic systems, and currently serves as a Co-Principal Investigator for the National Science Foundation- funded Center for Renewable Energy Advanced Technological Education (CREATE). He has been teach- ing at Madison Area Technical College for the past 12 years. In 2011, the Wisconsin Bureau of Ap- prenticeship Standards and the Wisconsin Apprenticeship Advisory Council recognized Shoemaker as a Centennial Educator. He has taught solar photovoltaic trainer programs offered by CREATE and So- lar
Biomedical Engineering. Previously, Aileen was the Associate Director for Academics in the Center for Entrepreneurship and was responsible for building the Program in Entrepreneurship for UM undergraduates, co-developing the masters level entrepreneur- ship program, and launching the biomedical engineering graduate design program. Aileen has received a number of awards for her teaching, including the Thomas M. Sawyer, Jr. Teaching Award, the UM ASEE Outstanding Professor Award and the Teaching with Sakai Innovation Award. Prior to joining the University of Michigan faculty, she worked in the private sector gaining experience in biotech, defense, and medical device testing at large companies and start-ups. Aileen’s current
professor of engineering education at the University of Georgia. He is affiliated with the Engineering Education Transformational Institute and the school electrical and computer engineering at the university. He holds a Bachelor’s degree in electronic and computer engi- neering from the Lagos State University in Nigeria, a Masters in Project management from the University of Sunderland, and a PhD in Educational Psychology from Washington State University. His research in- terests include learning and cognition, students’ engagement, and the assessment of learning and students engagements, in engineering classrooms. His expertise also include the development and validation of measurement inventories, systematic reviews
undergraduate and graduate courses in ET Masters program. Also, she introduced the first experiential activity for Applied Mechanics courses. She is coordinator and advisor for capstone projects for Engineering Technology.Dr. Michael G Mauk P.E., Drexel University Michael Mauk is Assistant Professor in Drexel University’s Engineering Technology program.Mr. Perry B. GoldMr. Nando Tyler Orfanelli c American Society for Engineering Education, 2018 From Capstone Student-led Project to Experiential Learning Module: Design and Manufacturing of an Integrated System of Pico-Hydroelectric Generator and Water FiltrationIntroductionRenewable energy technologies are continuously expanding
the Wisconsin Association for Environmental Education.Mr. Joel B. Shoemaker, Madison Area Technical College Joel Shoemaker is a Wisconsin state-certified Master Electrician with over 18 years of experience with solar photovoltaic systems, and currently serves as a Co-Principal Investigator for the National Science Foundation-funded Center for Renewable Energy Advanced Technological Education (CREATE). He has been teaching at Madison Area Technical College for the past 12 years. In 2011, the Wisconsin Bureau of Apprenticeship Standards and the Wisconsin Apprenticeship Advisory Council recognized Shoemaker as a Centennial Educator. He has taught solar photovoltaic trainer programs offered by CREATE and Solar
worked extensively in the domain of welding, specifically in the area of weld- ing technology and training. He has a deep appreciation for the importance of the welding field and plan to continue pursuing research projects that benefit the welding community.Ms. Audrey Fyock, Iowa State University Audrey Fyock is a senior in Industrial and Manufacturing Systems Engineering and first year Master of Business Administration student at Iowa State University. This is her first year doing an undergraduate research assistantship with the IMSE Department, where she is studying the impacts of undergraduate research on retention rates and graduate school.Devna Fay Popejoy-Sheriff, Iowa State University Devna Popejoy-Sheriff is
has served as a consultant to industry for over 10 years.Dr. Teresa J.K. Hall, South Dakota State University Hall is currently professor and head of the Construction and Operations Management department at South Dakota State University. She also serves the JJ Lohr College of Engineering as program coordinator for the professional masters degree in Engineering.Dr. Albena Yuliyanova Yordanova, South Dakota State Univeristy Education: University of Northern Iowa, Cedar Falls, Iowa; Doctor of Technology with emphasis in Sus- tainable Design & Construction (2016); University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri ; Master of Arts in Architectural Studies (2005); Institute of Architecture and Civil Engineering, Sofia, Bulgaria
pursued a Masters degree in Science Education as well as a Master’s degree in Curriculum and Instruction in STEM Education. Jessica is a NASA Endeavor Teaching Fellow and also a graduate of Carnegie Mellon’s Robotics Academy.Miss Rasheda Likely, Drexel University Rasheda Likely received her Bachelors of Science and Masters of Science in Biology from the University of North Florida. Prior to beginning the doctoral program at Drexel University, she worked in Virology (the study of viruses) for the Florida Department of Health for three years. She has also taught ”Princi- ples of Biology” laboratory sections at University of North Florida and Physiology at Drexel University. Rasheda is currently in her second year