Paper ID #34729Building 1U CubeSat as a Tool to Promote Project-Based Learning inParaguay, a Case StudyMr. Cristhian David Coronel, Nihon Gakko University I am a Electromechanical Engineering student, currently developing my final project in order to graduate. I find space development and technologies very fascinating, as well as innovative solutions to any engi- neering problems. I am looking forward to extend my knowledge and experience about new technologies and the development for a better and processing future.Miss Mayra Luj´an Mosqueda, Nihon Gakko University I am a student at Nihon Gakko University, I am currently
Paper ID #29672(Student Paper) Undergraduate Demonstration of a Hall Effect Thruster:Self Directed Learning in an Advanced Project ContextBraden K. Oh, Olin College of Engineering Braden Oh is a second-year mechanical engineering student at Olin College of Engineering with an in- terest in space technology. Previous work of his has included CubeSat systems engineering through the NASA CubeQuest Challenge and software systems verification and validation for the Perseverance Mars rover at the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory.Justin Haruaki Kunimune, Olin College of Engineering Justin Kunimune (/dstn kunmune/) is a nuclear
AC 2008-1102: ADDRESSING AEROSPACE WORKFORCE NEEDS: THE IMPACTOF HANDS-ON SPACE SYSTEMS PROJECT EXPERIENCES ON CAREERCHOICESSven Bilen, Pennsylvania State University SVEN G. BILÉN is an Associate Professor of Engineering Design, Electrical Engineering, and Aerospace Engineering at Penn State. He is the Chief Technologist for Penn State's Center for Space Research Programs and Director of the Student Space Programs Lab. He is member of IEEE, AIAA, AGU, ASEE, URSI, and Sigma Xi.Mieke Schuurman, Pennsylvania State University MIEKE SCHUURMAN is an engineering education research associate with the Leonhard Center for the Enhancement of Engineering Education in the College of Engineering at The
AC 2009-1847: PASSAT: A CUBESAT STUDENT DESIGN PROJECT FOR ACTIVECONTROL-SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT AND VERIFICATIONDaniel Rooney, Saint Louis UniversityMathew Roseman, Saint Louis UniversityCharles Shotridge, Saint Louis UniversityJeffrey Aschenbrenner, Saint Louis UniversitySanjay Jayaram, Saint Louis University Page 14.944.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2009 PASSat: ACTIVE CONTROL SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT AND VERIFICATIONAbstract: The CubeSat program at Saint Louis University’s Parks College is a highlyeducational and valuable program for engineering students. Students gain a largespectrum of knowledge; both theory and real world based
special problem projects. He is a former chair of the Aerospace Division. Page 23.859.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2013 Learning to Innovate Across Disciplines: A Case Study on Three Team Project ExperiencesAbstractThis is a student-led paper summarizing a case study on how present-day engineering studentslearn what is needed to innovate solutions, going well beyond what is usually taught in courselectures. It is set in the context of an aerospace engineering school in an American university,with typically large class sizes and a school culture that
AC 2012-4719: INTEGRATING AEROSPACE RESEARCH MATERIALSINTO A PROJECT-BASED FIRST-YEAR ENGINEERING DESIGN COURSEDr. Jacques C. Richard, Texas A&M University Dr. Richard got his Ph. D. at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 1989 & a B. S. at Boston Univer- sity, 1984. He was at NASA Glenn, 1989-1995, taught at Northwestern for Fall 1995, worked at Ar- gonne National Lab, 1996-1997, Chicago State, 1997-2002. Dr. Richard is a Sr. Lecturer & Research Associate in Aerospace Engineering @ Texas A&M since 1/03. His research is focused on compu- tational plasma modeling using spectral and lattice Boltzmann methods such as in plasma turbulence (http://www.worldscinet.com/cgi-bin/details.cgi?id=jsname:ijmpc&
Paper ID #8797IMPLEMENTING PROBLEM-BASED LEARNING PROJECTS TO SYN-THESIZE FEEDBACK CONTROLLERS USING MATLAB/SIMULINK ANDSTUDENTS ASSESSMENTDr. Rajnish Sharma, University of Maryland, Eastern Shore Dr. Rajnish Sharma, an Assistant Professor in the Department of Engineering and Aviation Sciences at the University of Maryland Eastern Shore, received his doctoral degree in Aerospace Engineering from Texas A&M University, College Station in Dec. 2008. He received his Bachelor of Technology in Mechanical Engineering from Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur in 1999. He entered the Aerospace Department at Indian Institute
Paper ID #6059Autonomous Patrol and Surveillance System (APSS) – A Student Project toHelp Aid the Campus PoliceDr. Adeel Khalid, Southern Polytechnic State University (ENG) Dr. Adeel Khalid is an assistant professor of Systems Engineering. Page 23.237.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2013 Autonomous Patrol and Surveillance System (APSS) – A Student Project to Help Aid the Campus PoliceAbstractAs part of this long term project, undergraduate students design, develop and test variouscomponents
AC 2010-760: NASA MOONBUGGY SENIOR DESIGN PROJECT AS ANASSESSMENT TOOL AND POTENTIAL CAREER PATH IN AEROSPACENidal Al-Masoud, Central Connecticut State University Dr. Al-Masoud, Associate Professor, earned his Ph.D. in Mechanical Engineering from The University at Buffalo, The State University of New York in 2002. Dr. Al-Masoud has taught at both graduate and undergraduate level courses at University at Buffalo, he joined Central Connecticut State University as an Assistant Professor in 2003. At CCSU, he teaches courses mechanics, Thermo-fluid, and Control Systems and Dynamics. Dr. Al-Masoud research interests are in the fields of Control Systems and Dynamics, HVAC systems, and Engineering
AC 2010-903: EVALUATION OF A STUDENT TEAM PROJECT IN ANINTRODUCTION TO SOFTWARE ENGINEERING COURSE FOR AEROSPACEENGINEERSMary Lynn Brannon, Pennsylvania State University Mary Lynn Brannon, Instructional Support Specialist at the Leonhard Center for the Enhancement of Engineering Education at the Pennsylvania State University, has a Master of Arts Degree in Education and Human Development specializing in Educational Technology Leadership. Her work focuses on projects that measure and assess student perceptions of learning related to their experiences with engineering course innovations. She is a faculty development consultant with previous experience in instructional design, and instructor of the
Paper ID #8131Renovating an Ancient Low Speed Wind Tunnel: A Student Team ProjectCase StudyDr. Narayanan M. Komerath, Georgia Institute of Technology Professor Dr. Narayanan Komerath is a professor of aerospace engineering at Georgia Institute of Tech- nology, and director of the Experimental Aerodynamics and Concepts Group and the Micro Renewable Energy Systems Laboratory. He has over 300 publications, over 120 of them peer-reviewed. He has three US Patents, and has guided fifteen Ph.D.s , 50+ M.S. and over 160 undergraduate research special problem projects. He is a former Chair of the Aerospace Division
January 2009 at the University of Texas at Austin, where he is pursuing his Ph.D. He enjoys flying radio controlled aircraft, tinkering with projects, and loving life with his wife.Mr. Adam Wayne Nokes, The University of Texas at Austin Adam Nokes is currently a doctoral student at the University of Texas and resides in Austin with his wife Travis and dog Motley. His educational experience includes a B.S. from Cornell University in Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, an M.Eng. from Cornell in Engineering Management, and an M.S. from the University of Colorado at Boulder in Aerospace Engineering. His current research focus is trajectory optimization and mission design. Nokes is also a teaching assistant for the
junior years is dominated by coretechnical subjects such mechanics of materials, aerodynamics, propulsion, and controls. Ideally,these engineering science courses give students the theoretical background that they can apply inengineering design courses, on student project teams, and as a practicing engineer. However, itcan be easy to teach engineering science courses with little connection to the practice ofengineering. One way to make the connection between engineering science content andengineering practice is to frame this technical content as mathematical models that describenatural phenomena under certain simplifying assumptions. With this framing, the purpose ofengineering science courses shifts from memorizing formulas and applying them
Education at Clemson University. Dr. Dancz’s research interests include creativity in engineering, technology-rich learning environments, STEM faculty development, team formation with conation, and sustainable civil engineering. She earned her Ph.D. in Sustainable Engineering from Arizona State University. She serves as external evaluator on engineering and science education research projects, corresponding member of the Formal Engineering Education Subcommittee to the Committee on Sustainability at the American Society for Civil Engi- neering, teaches an interdisciplinary Creative Inquiry course on Conation and Creativity in Engineer- ing, and is the director for NAE Grand Challenge Scholars Program at Clemson.Dr
, project-based learning are effective approaches. The‘chalk and talk’ transmittal method in the classroom is being replaced by the constructivistapproach that has some of its basis in the ‘zone of proximal development’ construct [17]. In thisapproach, students are given the opportunity to construct their own knowledge through e.g.cooperative learning opportunities. Team-based learning which promotes cooperative learningimproves student achievement by increasing student reasoning, problem-solving and criticalthinking skills, encouraging more scientific thinking, and developing a deeper understanding ofcourse content [18]-[24]. A team learning environment that promotes interdependence of the teammembers has been shown to positively impact student
fabrication of the Berkut UAV for Geneva Aerospace, and engine fairings for the U.S. Army. He was the test conductor during the UltraLight Sensor Platform project, which was a research initiative to develop an ultralight sensor platform by creating an optionally-piloted aircraft system. As test conductor he wrote the flight test plans, flight test cards, and supervised the flight test team during test missions. He advises the Student UAS Team. He teaches the capstone aircraft design course, aircraft flight dynamics, and aircraft advanced performance. He has since left Raspet and transitioned to the aerospace engineering department. He is also developing the unmanned aircraft system engineering curriculum
, Fairbanks, Upward Bound John Monahan is currently the Director of University of Alaska Fairbanks, Upward Bound and Princi- pal Investigator of the National Science Foundations EPSCoR Track 3 ”Modern Blanket Toss” project investigating the use of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles in K12 classrooms.Mr. Samuel VanderwaalCarl H FranceLogan Walker Graves, UAF c American Society for Engineering Education, 2016 UAS Systems Engineering Design Process in Active LearningAbstractUnmanned aircraft systems (UAS) offer a fresh opportunity to teach students the systems engineeringdesign process (SEDP) and basic principles of aerospace engineering. The widespread popularity ofUAS, the explosion of affordable and
Paper ID #16028Mentored, Unpaid Design Team Internship ExperienceProf. Peter J. Schubert, Indiana University Purdue University, Indianapolis Schubert is a Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering and serves as the Director of the Richard G. Lugar Center for Renewable Energy (www.lugarenergycenter.org) and is the faculty advisor for Stu- dents for the Exploration and Development of Space (SEDS) at IUPUI. He holds 40 US Patents, a Pro- fessional Engineering License (Illinois), and has published over 95 technical papers and book chapters. Schubert has managed research projects from USDA, NASA, DOE, NSF, and DoD
American Society for Engineering Education, 2016 Preparing Aerospace Engineering Students for Career in UAV TechnologiesAbstractUnmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) have potential of reducing human casualty and cost formany dull, dirty, and dangerous missions. UAVs are one of the fastest growing sectors ofAerospace Industry. However, there is a lack of professionals entering the workforce. There isalso a lack of students pursuing studies for graduate degrees in the UAV related areas. Thispaper talks about innovative projects and teaching practices designed to increase students’interest and involvement in UAV related projects. Many aspects of UAV technologies are not orcannot usually be taught in classroom
Paper ID #26821Make to Innovate: Blending of Project-based Learning and Flipped Class-room Pedagogies to Provide Real-world Engineering Experiences to Engi-neering StudentsMr. Matthew Nelson, Iowa State University My background and interests are in RF and embedded systems as it relates to the aerospace engineering field. However, recently I have been doing research and have an interest in engineering education and how we can improve our education to our students. I have a B.S. in Electrical Engineering and a M.S. in Com- puter Engineering both from Iowa State University. I am now working towards my PhD in Engineering
AC 2012-3641: FRESHMEN RESEARCH PROJECT: DESIGN, DEVEL-OPMENT, AND TESTING OF VARIABLE PITCH PROPELLER THRUSTMEASUREMENT APPARATUS - A CASE STUDYDr. Adeel Khalid, Southern Polytechnic State University Adeel Khalid, Ph.D., Assistant Professor Systems Engineering Program, Division of Engineering, Q-349, Southern Polytechnic State University, 1100 South Marietta Parkway, Marietta, GA 30060, Office: 678- 915-7241; Fax: 678-915-5527; Web: http://www.spsu.edu/systemseng/adeel khalid.htm; http://www.spsu.edu/aerospace/. Page 25.653.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2012
students in aerospace-related research projects. Some of the research areas include autonomous navigation of micro-space vehicles, underwater robotic vehicles, and design of experiments for testing new materials for spacecraft thermal protection systems.Dr. Jacques N Beneat, Norwich University Dr. Jacques Beneat received the Ph.D. degree in electrical and computer engineering from Worcester Polytechnic Institute (WPI), Massachusetts in 1993 with focus on advanced microwave structures for satellite communications. He is currently associate professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Norwich University in Vermont. He has been involved in undergraduate research for many years with international collaborations with
AC 2010-318: A MODEL FOR PROMOTING COGNITION, META-COGNITIONAND MOTIVATIONMoshe Barak, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev Page 15.55.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2010 A Model for Promoting Cognition, Metacognition and Motivation in the Technological Class: The Theory of Self- Regulated LearningAbstractEducators widely acknowledge the advantages of project-based learning intechnology and engineering over traditional schooling. However, teachers with astrong background in engineering often focus on learning specific subject matter andcompleting a technical work rather than developing students’ learning competences.To address
Paper ID #6816An Introductory Course in Practical Systems EngineeringDr. Michael A. Swartwout, Saint Louis University Dr. Michael Swartwout is an assistant professor of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering at Saint Louis University. His research is on the design and operation of low-cost, capable space systems. He has sponsored many student-built space projects, with two due to launch in 2013 and 2014.Dr. Sanjay Jayaram, Saint Louis University, Parks College of Eng. Dr. Sanjay Jayaram is an associate professor in the Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering Department of Saint Louis University. He obtained his Ph.D. in
and provided the opportunity to rapidly climb the learningcurve.One response to this need is to more rapidly and better train students by means of realistic andintensive design-build-test activities. Since 1998, the Student Space Systems FabricationLaboratory (S3FL) at the University of Michigan’s College of Engineering has combined aformal design process with student creativity and spontaneity to train and provide students withopportunities for research in space system design and development.5 This paper describesS3FL’s resources and operations, outlines the lab’s educational and design philosophy, anddiscusses the technical, teamwork, communication, and project management skills developedthrough S3FL. The paper also discusses how these
president of the Stratospheric Ballooning Association. This organization aims to promote, educate, and encourage collaboration for high-altitude balloon projects. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2020Implementation of an inductive learning and teaching framework for anAircraft Flight Dynamics and Control classAbstractMany aerospace engineering students have difficulties when learning the concepts in aircraftflight dynamics and control (AFDC) due to the complexity of the materials. Inductive learningand teaching methods promote connections between physical-hardware systems and the complexmathematical concepts by performing the dynamic modeling activities with fixed-wingUnmanned Aerial Systems (UASs
address the challenges facinga student-run lab. Case studies of projects are also used to highlight important lessons learnedover the years.1 What is S3FL?Since 1998, the Student Space Systems Fabrication Laboratory (S3FL) at the University ofMichigan’s College of Engineering has combined a formal design process with student creativityand spontaneity to train and provide students with opportunities for research in space systemsdesign and development.1 Each year, S3FL involves over a hundred undergraduate and graduatestudents in realistic and intensive design-build-test activities ranging from balloon payloads tomicrogravity experiments to nanosatellites. By participating in the end-to-end development ofcomplete space systems, students acquire
overview of the modifications made to the freshman level Introduction toAerospace Engineering course at Texas A&M University and details the motivation fortransitioning to a more design-centered course structure from previous modifications made overthe past few years. The course focuses on three multi-week design projects supplemented byother various forms of instruction, such as guest lecturing and student mentoring. The paperconcludes with survey results and testimonials that demonstrate the effectiveness of engineeringdesign education at the freshman level.IntroductionA successful engineer is equipped to innovate and create within the technical community and toinspire and inform the whole of society. Creating the framework for this success
hundred undergraduate and graduate students each year with the opportunity towork on real-world, design-build-test space systems projects. Such opportunities include themicrogravity flight experience available through NASA’s Reduced Gravity Student FlightOpportunities Program. By having a proposal accepted through a competitive evaluation process,students can design and fabricate an experimental payload that flies onboard a C-9 plane whoseparabolic flight trajectories permit short periods of microgravity test conditions.During August 2006, S3FL flew a C-9 microgravity test payload in support of the lab’s TetheredSATellite Testbed (TSATT) project, now known as the Tethered Satellite Ionospheric eXplorer(TSIX) satellite. In accordance with the 2004
a Ph.D. in Electrical/Aeronautical Engineering from the University of Alaska Fairbanks. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2020 Educational Benefits of Unmanned Aerial Systems Design and Interdisciplinary Engineering OpportunitiesIntroductionOne requirement for an Engineering program to be accredited by the Accreditation Board forEngineering and Technology, Inc (ABET) is to “Provide both breadth and depth across the rangeof engineering and computer science topics…”. This is often done through paper-based designprojects where multiple aspects of a project will be theoretically designed but never implementedin the real world due to time and budget constraints, thereby