Computer Engineering (ECE) department at MSU since August 1994 and currently serves as the Interim Associate Dean for Undergraduate Studies in the School of Engineering. Dr. Astatke is the winner of the 2013 American Society for Engineering Education (ASEE) ”National Outstanding Teaching Award,” and the 2012 ASEE Mid-Atlantic Region ”Distinguished Teacher” Award. He teaches courses in both analog and digital electronic circuit design and instrumentation, with a fo- cus on wireless communication. He has more than 15 years experience in the development and delivery of synchronous and asynchronous web-based course supplements for electrical engineering courses. Dr. Astatke played a leading role in the development and
Quantitative Strand 1. Review Literature on Ethics 1. Develop Survey on How Ethics is Education Taught in Construction (HETC) 2. Review Curriculum Guides of 2. Select Sample and Administer Construction Programs Survey 3. Report Findings (throughout section) 3. Analyze and Report Survey Data Discussion (Interpretation of Results) Supplementary Review Discuss Review of Accreditation
Information Technology and Engineering at a mid-Atlantic university28. The aim was to assess students’ engineering entrepreneurship perceptions within the context of a virtual information technology enterprise. In executing the project design in the virtual environment, students were exposed to many different fundamental engineering concepts from such disciplines as computer engineering, computer science, and systems. Evaluation and assessment were done by means of a pre/post-survey. Stony Brook University’s inter-university Sensor Consortium for Medical and Sensor Systems central purpose was to provide entrepreneurship education to engineering and other technical students through a senior design entrepreneurship course within the
] O. E. LeDee, R. T. Barnes, R. Emanuel, P. B. Fisher, S. K. Henkel and J. R. Marlon (2011).Training a new scientist to meet the challenges of a changing environment. Eos, TransactionsAmerican Geophysical Union, 92(16), pp.135-136.[9] L. Potts and H. Jin (2022). Cognitive strategies in STEM education: Supporting thedevelopment of engineers’ multi- and cross-disciplinary competence, Paper presented at 2022Spring ASEE Middle Atlantic Section Conference, Newark, New Jersey.https://peer.asee.org/40044[10] G. Schmidt and E. Moyer (2008). A new kind of scientist. Nature Climate Change, 1(808),102-103.[11] M. Caeiro-Rodríguez, M. Manso-Vázquez, F. A. Mikic-Fonte, M. Llamas-Nistal, M. J.Fernández-Iglesias, H. Tsalapatas, and L. T. Sørensen (2021
Description (an example of response) (frequency) Students highlighted that ChatGPT provides more comprehensive results, often incorporating integrals or more technical steps than those used in their manual More detailed and calculations. "The differences were that the theoretical answers were more detailed, and accurate results (20) the calculations were broken down into sections; in some cases, it used integrals to evaluate the exercises." Some students noted discrepancies in ChatGPT's calculations, such as incorrect valuesErrors or inconsistencies
possibility of problem and project-based learning [exhibit 2] Fourth, that there arealternative techniques of teaching that in some circumstances are preferable. His illustrationof an alternative approach to the teaching of English for the purpose of developing what isnow called critical thinking will be described in the next section. “Mann wrote that a series of questions about educational aims, methods and practices which he personally presented to faculties at seven schools he visited “proved highly unpopular”. 88 per cent of the professors spent no time in increasing their understanding of educational methods. He argued that if serious progress was to be made then the study of education required much more attention, and while taking into account
identify with only one persona. Rather, our hope is that students will seethemselves in multiple personas as a creative process of identity-building in engineering.MethodsInstitutional Context Our research team analyzed the origins, identities, and trajectories of students at a small liberalarts college in the Mid-Atlantic region of the United States in an Electrical and Computer Engineering(ECE) department. Engineering within a liberal arts context offers smaller class sizes and enablesprofessors to engage more closely with students on an individual basis. Students who choose this setting,rather than typically larger engineering programs at research institutions, are often well-roundedindividuals seeking greater breadth to both their
, “Generative artificial intelligence and engineering education,” J. Eng. Educ., Jun. 2023, doi: 10.1002/jee.20537.[13] S. S. Gill et al., “Transformative effects of ChatGPT on modern education: Emerging Era of AI Chatbots,” Internet of Things and Cyber-Physical Systems, vol. 4, pp. 19–23, 2024, doi: 10.1016/j.iotcps.2023.06.002.[14] Z. Zhang and Y. Chang, “Leveraging generative ai to enhance engineering education at both low-level and high-level study,” presented at the 2024 ASEE Mid-Atlantic Section Conference, Oct. 2024, doi: 10.18260/1-2--49450.[15] A. Konya and P. Nematzadeh, “Recent applications of AI to environmental disciplines: A review.,” Sci. Total Environ., vol. 906, p. 167705, Jan. 2024, doi
courses.While LA programs were initially developed for science and math courses, many LA programssupport LAs in a wide range of disciplines. This paper describes a pilot adaptation of the LAprogram for engineering design courses that we have developed at the University of Maryland,College Park Campus. All LAs assist in 14 separate sections of University of Maryland’sengineering design course for first-year undergraduate students. Our seminar integrates topicsfrom the discipline-general LA pedagogy seminar (cognitive science of learning, facilitation ofclassroom discourse, collaboration, metacognition) with topics especially relevant to engineeringdesign (design reviews, design thinking, expert-novice practices in engineering design,engineering
age 497 Graduate University Civil 18-29 Male No No White Student in Mid- Engineering years Atlantic of age 65 Graduate University Civil 18-29 Male No Yes White Student in Engineering years Southwest of age 20 Graduate University Manufacturing 18-29 Prefer No No Other- Student not listed Engineering years not to Kekistani of age say 449 Undergraduate University
engineers are mostly likely tohave this attitude in the results section.MethodsThis section describes our process for classifying engineers according to their acculturationattitudes, as determined by their acculturation preferences, and exploring differences in theseattitudes based on their personal and job characteristics.Participants: Data for this study was collected as part of a larger research project administered inFall 2019 [46]. Nearly twelve thousand alumni who earned engineering degrees from a large,public university in the southwestern U.S. within the past 15 years were invited to participate inan online survey via an initial invitation email and two reminder emails sent over the course of atwo-week period. All participants had the
,” and the 2012 ASEE Mid-Atlantic Region ”Distinguished Teacher” Award. He teaches courses in both analog and digital electronic circuit design and instrumentation, with a fo- cus on wireless communication. He has more than 15 years experience in the development and delivery of synchronous and asynchronous web-based course supplements for electrical engineering courses. Dr. Astatke played a leading role in the development and implementation of the first completely online un- dergraduate ECE program in the State of Maryland. He has published over 50 papers and presented his research work at regional, national and international conferences. He also runs several exciting summer camps geared towards middle school, high
) ”National Outstanding Teaching Award,” and the 2012 ASEE Mid-Atlantic Region ”Distinguished Teacher” Award. He teaches courses in both analog and digital electronic circuit design and instrumentation, with a fo- cus on wireless communication. He has more than 15 years experience in the development and delivery of synchronous and asynchronous web-based course supplements for electrical engineering courses. Dr. Astatke played a leading role in the development and implementation of the first completely online un- dergraduate ECE program in the State of Maryland. He has published over 50 papers and presented his research work at regional, national and international conferences. He also runs several exciting summer camps
approach, the instrument must be adapted to a round-robin formatwhich is discussed below.Data and MethodsSample and Data CollectionData for this study were drawn from a total of 435 mechanical engineering capstone designstudents at a large, mid-Atlantic engineering research institution (n=203) as well as a smallernortheastern military focused engineering college (n=22). These responses represent 56.7% and25.5% of the course enrollments, respectively. The data were collected in a combination of paperwith online follow-up and online only survey formats at the midpoint of their year-long teamingexperience. Questions stemmed from the MLQ Form 5X,12 adapted for round-robin data collectionwhere each team member rated each of their teammates and faculty
system. We conclude the paper with a discussion about the opportunities and challenges ofuniversity-community partnerships, experiential learning and cross-disciplinary collaborativeteaching.Aging Wastewater InfrastructureSyracuse, New York is one of many cities in the United States with aging water infrastructurethat is need of replacement or significant repair. In fact, the American Society of Civil EngineersInfrastructure Report Card assigns a grade of ‘D+’ to the country’s wastewater system [22].Most of Syracuse’s water and sewer infrastructure was built in the early 1900s withmodifications over the years to meet increased demand by Syracuse's mid-century expandingpopulation. Most of these modifications included sewers that are combined
social and societalconnections with engineering and science—the place of engineering and science in developmentof knowledge and technology, the roles of engineers and scientists in driving theory-building andtechnological change, and the effects of these disciplines on all aspects of modern life—increasesinterest and motivation of students to drive their own learning and achievement [2].In this section we introduce three design principles that contribute to greater interest andmotivation for all students, but particularly groups who are underrepresented in engineering: (1)using narratives to develop and motivate students’ understanding of the place of engineering inthe world; (2) demonstrating how engineering helps people, animals, and/or
oftheir designs. Page 23.876.3The studio model places emphasis on: (a) a content-rich curriculum that links youth to theirenvironment, (b) support and scaffolded discussions with mentors (site leaders and facilitators),and (c) an online network that supports the creation and maintenance of relationships amongprogram participants. The informal character of this program allows youth the freedom toexplore and self-identify with STEM topics.MethodParticipantsYouth in three after-school programs at middle schools in a rural, impoverished, mountainousregion of a mid-Atlantic state were asked to participate in the project. The site leaders explainedthe
consistent with values of society.✔ Generating and evaluating alternatives.✔ Communicating ideas to peers and public-at-large.✔ Using resources effectively (enhancing production capability PC) and efficiently (enhancing production P). PC/P balance is a must to derive optimal benefits.In the next section, we discuss how a human brain can turn into an entrepreneurship savvy oneby following a model proposed by Ned Hermann and extensively discussed by Lumsdaines.2 Proceedings of the 2001 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition Page 6.1.9 Copyright©2001, American Society for Engineering
decide that engineering is not for them. A greater fraction, being goodat anything they do, find themselves following their classmates, the majority of whom areenrolled in Mechanical and Electrical Engineering. They hear too often that these disciplines aremuch more “general” than A.E., and that A.E. is “too hard”. These superstitions are general, bothworldwide and through the decades. In the mid-90s, attrition rates climbed as bad news keptpouring in from the traditional employers of A.Es.Getting into TroubleThe Introduction to Aerospace Engineering course has existed for a long time, intermittently. Itsadvocates pointed to the perspective and motivation it provided; its detractors called it an “easy-A” waste of a good 3 credit hours on PR
LeTourneau University in the mid-2010s. That project provided junior-level environmental engineering students the opportunity toconstruct and operate pilot-scale water treatment plants. Water was retrieved from a local riverand students were initially provided 55 gallons to treat. Groups of 3-4 students designed, built,and tested a system that produced a volume of 35 gallons of potable water within 48 hours andmet water quality testing of alkalinity, pH, solids, conductivity, turbidity, and bacterial growthaccording to TAC 290. The plant operations were permitted to be a combination of batch andcontinuous flow. Initial ImplementationThe environmental engineering course in this study was first taught at Cedarville University inFall 2020 as a
following: RQ 1. How do graduate engineering and design students commonly conceptualize interdisciplinary education across two universities? RQ 2. What are the variations in students’ conceptualizations of interdisciplinary education across the two universities?MethodsStudy BackgroundStudy Site 1: A United States UniversityOur first project site was an interdisciplinary graduate program (referred to as the IDR Programfrom here) funded through the National Science Foundation (NSF) Research Traineeshipprogram at a large land-grant university in the mid-Atlantic region of the United States. As theNSF website states, “The NSF Research Traineeship (NRT) Program is designed to encouragethe development and
continued to Halloween Sunday. The inversion trapped “a mass of warm, stagnant air . . . .The pollutants in the air mixed with fog to form a thick, yellowish, acrid smog that inhibited thenormal process where the sun would burn off the fog” [31]. On Tuesday and Wednesday, fewnoticed the different quality of this fog, as residents had become accustomed to breathing fetidair and were used to driving mid-day with car headlights on. By Thursday, however, the airturned a sickly yellow and noticeably more viscous. Standing at the corner of Seventh Street andMcKean, attorney Arnold Hirsh watched smoke billowing from a train on the railroad tracksbelow. The plume ascended for six feet and then simply stopped, as if held in place by aninvisible barrier. As
, workshops, design challenges, andpresentations that illuminated presumptions and prejudices through a technical, ethical, social, and legal lens(complete list of activities in Appendix C). Following lectures, participants did hands-on AI case-studies. In additionto the week-long group case studies, the mid-week project was a large collective case study on AI’s uses for theprediction of antibiotic resistance conducted by Concordia University. At the end of the week-long program, therewere group presentations and roundtable discussions. This allowed for a variety of perspectives to emerge ondifferent topics, time for questions, and inspiration for post-program plans.Participants have generally deemed the program delivery to have been strong and the
improvement in student learning, however it had itsown issues, the most troubling being the long waits that the students tended to encounter whentrying to get their pre-labs checked. The following is the Reflection section from the FCAR: What worked well: Needing to get the pre-labs 100% correct helped the students understand the concepts better and certainly made the post-labs drastically better. I felt that the students learned more and fewer were just going through the motions when doing the experiments. My post-lab grading time was cut to almost nothing. The field trip was great. What didn’t work as well: I spent A LOT of time checking and re-checking pre-labs and helping students. The lines were long
’ approach toprocess safety judgements [34], [36]. There were five senior-level chemical engineering studentsrecruited from a process safety course at a mid-Atlantic institution for this pilot. Due toscheduling complications, only three students completed all phases of the data collection process.The participants were selected at random after they filled out an interest and consent form. Theirdata has been de-identified as part of the analysis process and pseudonyms were assigned to thestudents (Alex, Bradley, and Charlie). These students were all male, senior-level chemicalengineering students. The selected participants then completed the three-phase pilot researchstudy that took place over the course of the spring 2022 semester. IRB approval was
system of their choice. Engineering and Race in the USA was selected for study due tothe unique content and the first author’s familiarity with the course and the professor, which ledto increased access to data and participants [58]. Engineering students whose racial identities have been historically marginalized and first-generation students enroll in this elective course in higher proportion than is representative of theuniversity at large. Specifically, students were 19% Asian, 25% Black or African American, 19%Hispanic, 31% White, and 6% multi race. Half the class was female and the other half weremale. The course was taught at a mid-Atlantic university at which 24% of undergraduateengineering students are Asian, 5% are Black or
sin The freshmen can experimentally test their model in lab by lifting different weights (Fload) andcomparing the calculated deltoid force, Fdeltoid, with an estimate based on the cross-sectional areaof their deltoid muscle. Although there is some variation in published values, a reasonable valueof maximum muscle force per unit area is 30-40N/cm2. A cross-sectional picture of the armthrough the deltoid, something many of the students get to see in an imaging lab, can provide anestimate of the cross-sectional area of the deltoid, and consequently maximum deltoid force [15].The arm model demonstrates that based on the free-body diagram, the deltoid muscle force issignificantly greater than the load that can be lifted. For a cylindrical model
recordedstudent activity; they coded the qualitative data, including detailing how they developed thecoding scheme and how reliable their coders were. For instance, one study found that studentsspent more time engaged in mathematical and graphical modeling than physical modeling, incontrast to previous research findings, but seldom used mathematical modeling to inform theirdesigns, echoing findings in the previous section about the challenges to integrating engineeringand mathematics content successfully [72]. In a study of high school students who hadcompleted engineering courses, student design process was compared to expert design process,finding that the students spent significantly less time gathering information, making decisions,and evaluating the
engineering design (e.g., designthinking, engineering epistemology, teamwork and equity). Our peer educators move betweenthese two activity systems: one is the field site for their teaching responsibilities within one of~15 sections of a first-year engineering design course (UMD ENES100), and the second is anengineering-design focused pedagogy seminar (UMD EDCI488E). The co-occurence of theseexperiences in the same semester allows our peer educators to have firsthand experiencesworking with students while trying to make sense of key ideas from education theory andresearch. Details of the design of the pedagogy seminar and the design course context areprovided in Quan et al. (2017), and the design of ENES100 course is presented in Calabro,Gupta, &