Paper ID #42544Enhancing Entrepreneurial Minded Learning of Process Control and HeatTransfer Concepts Using Micromoments and Concept MapsProf. Erick S. Vasquez-Guardado , University of Dayton Erick S. Vasquez-Guardado is an Associate Professor in the Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering at the University of Dayton. Dr. Vasquez earned his B.Sc. degree in chemical engineering (ChE) at Universidad Centroamericana Jose Simeon Canas (UCA) in El Salvador, an M.S. in ChE at Clemson University, and a Ph.D. in ChE at Mississippi State University.Prof. Ricardo G´omez Gonz´alez, Universidad Autonoma de Nuevo Leon
others.(10) Coping strategies for stress relief isdependent on an individual’s preferences, however, reliance on peers has been reported to be themost common approach used by engineering students.(3)(5)(10)Due to its importance, institutions, departments, and professors have developed programs and/orincluded assignments to promote wellbeing and stress management techniques to students. Someexamples include meditation (mindfulness(11)(12)(13), Tamarkoz(14), Yoga(15)), a resilienceprogram(16), dance movement therapy(17), engaging in acts of kindness and giving(18), anassignment consisting of developing an actual plan for mental wellness(19), and increasing student-faculty interaction through informal social events.(20) It is worthwhile to mention
Paper ID #37015Community Perspectives on Chemical Engineering EducationMilo D. Koretsky, Tufts University Milo Koretsky is the McDonnell Family Bridge Professor in the Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering and in the Department of Education at Tufts University. He received his B.S. and M.S. degrees from UC San Diego and his Ph.D. from UC Berkeley, all in chemical engineering.Dr. Lisa G. Bullard, P.E., North Carolina State University, Raleigh Dr. Lisa Bullard is an Alumni Distinguished Undergraduate Professor in the Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering at North Carolina State University. She
Paper ID #37196Sensemaking of Block Flow Diagrams in Chemical EngineeringProf. Jiamin Zhang, University of California, Riverside Jiamin Zhang received her B.S. in Chemical Engineering from Cornell University, and went on to com- plete her Ph.D. in Chemical Engineering at the University of California Santa Barbara. After completing a postdoc in physics and engineering education at Auburn University, she joined the department of chemical and environmental engineering at the University of California Riverside as an assistant professor of teach- ing. Her teaching interests include fluid mechanics, soft matter, and engineering
Paper ID #42268Alumni Engagement and Mentoring Integrated in the Chemical EngineeringCurriculumDr. Joaquin Rodriguez, University of Pittsburgh Joaquin Rodriguez is an Assistant Professor at the Department of Chemical and Petroleum Engineering at the University of Pittsburgh since 2018. He received his bachelor degree in Chemical Engineering from Universidad Simon Bolivar (Caracas, Venezuela), MSc. and PhD in the same discipline from the University of Pittsburgh (1990-92). He developed his expertise in thermal cracking processes and advanced materials (cokes, carbon fibers) from oil residues, and became a business leader for
complement traditional classroom lectures is twofold: 1) they provide away for students to visualize the phenomena about which they are learning, lowering thecognitive load of the lesson; and 2) they also provide professors with an opportunity to havestudents work in groups. The first point is mostly intuitive. If students must visualize in theirown minds the phenomena taking place, they must exert extra effort they could be spending onsolving problems or exploring the topics in more detail. This also leads to misconceptions, asstudents likely will not have a complete model of the phenomena with their current knowledgeand will need a form of reference material to avoid making mistakes. This is often why, in atraditional engineering class, students
and longer concept retention [11]. Previous studies in theChemical Engineering Unit Operations Laboratory demonstrated that incorporating project-basedlaboratory aspects with experiential learning leads to deep learning and effective instruction [5],[12], [13]. The entrepreneurially minded learning (EML) framework based on the 3 Cs ofcuriosity, connection, and creating value also support student-centered learning experiences, asdemonstrated in the classroom and the laboratory [14], [15].In this study, we aim to qualitatively assess the implementation of open-ended final projects inthe Chemical Engineering Unit Operations Laboratory with experiential learning components.This remaining sections of this paper include: 2. Experiential Learning
, it is desirable to keep these factors in mind from theconception stages of case studies so that they can appropriately capture these topics withoutappearing superfluous or unrelated in scope.The interplay between social and engineering issues lends itself well to project-based learningapproaches of assessment, which enable a deeper and more longform analysis of an individualtopic compared to exams. While many classes that discuss atmospheric systems will focus onbroader regional- or global-scale climate as motivation for research questions in such projects,conversations around public health in outdoor air systems provide a smaller-scale but equallyimportant context from which atmospheric phenomena can be observed. As more granular
and applied/enrolled in the chemical engineering program. Anotherspace that we can tap into with the desk-scale modules is online education, specificallyhomeschooled students. Once we have a proper mechanism to ensure the delivery of sufficientkits, we can expand to other locations to tackle the challenge of decreased chemical engineeringenrollment nationwide. We will also incorporate other topics like heat transfer and solid-liquidoperations. UF has already developed these other modules; thus, their integration into thesummer program can be planned in a smooth and organized manner, keeping in mind that theymust be customized for high-school students.The chemical engineering course in the summer program starts with an introductory
to make changes to incorporate EBIPs in their teaching.Faculty SurveyThe faculty survey was designed to help quantify faculty opinions on the curriculum, teachingpractices, and the mindsets in teaching chemical engineering. The Yeager et al. 2022 study foundthat teacher mindset in high school math teachers was a key factor for a student mindsetintervention to be successful, and cultivating a student’s growth mindset needed intentionalteacher support [6]. With that in mind, we decided to find out how our faculty felt about growthmindset.The term “growth mindset” refers to those who believe that abilities and intelligence can bedeveloped over time (for example, a belief that students can improve their math abilities throughstudy practice) [7
2020). We believe adding thebreakout room facilitators helped, and we continue to address these comments.Overall, these findings also confirm the assumption that independent of the specific case studyparticipated in, participants found the case studies were valuable in assisting their learning. Weattribute this high-value ranking to the specific nature of the case studies and their directconnection to chemical engineering topics, where the majority of participants (graduate students,post-docs, and faculty) are conducting research in related areas. These case studies providedconcrete examples of analyses of research topics with social justice in mind, ideally givingparticipants a framework for similarly analyzing their own research
Paper ID #38606Preparing Engineering Students to Find the Best Job Fit: Starting Earlywith the Career Development ProcessDr. Cheryl Carrico, P.E., E4S, LLC Cheryl Carrico is owner of E4S, LLC. E4S, LLC conducts external evaluations, engineering education research, and industry consulting. Her current research focus relates to STEM career pathways and con- ceptual understanding of core engineering principles.Dr. Holly M. Matusovich, Virginia Tech Dr. Holly Matusovich is the Associate Dean for Graduate and Professional Studies in the College of Engineering at Virginia Tech and a Professor in the Department of Engineering
://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hiiEeMN7vbQ. [Accessed March 06, 2024].[4] “Growing your mind,” Khan Academy, August 2014. Available:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WtKJrB5rOKs. [Accessed March 06, 2024].[5] “The obstacle is the way by Ryan Holiday,” FightMediocrity, October 2015. Available:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2rQfr7XAQi0. [Accessed March 06, 2024].[6] K.L. Meyers, M.W. Ohland, A.L. Pawley, S.E. Silliman, and K.A. Smith, “Factors relating toengineering identity,” Global Journal of Engineering Education, vol 14, no. 1, pp. 119-131, 2012.[7] J.S. Moser, H.S. Schroder, C. Heeter, T.P. Moran, and Y.H. Lee, “Mind your errors: Evidencefor a neural mechanism linking growth mind-set to adaptive posterror adjustments,” Psychologicalscience, vol 22, no. 12, pp
Paper ID #39794Is Poor Classroom Attendance a Virtual-Learning Hangover or the NewNormal? A Qualitative StudyDr. Matthew Cooper, North Carolina State University, Raleigh Dr. Matthew Cooper is an Associate Teaching Professor in the Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering at North Carolina State University. He served as a researcher at RTI International before joining the NC State faculty in 2011. Dr. Cooper’s research interests include effective teaching, process safety decision-making skills, and best practices for online education. He also hosts the In The (Fume) Hood chemical engineering education podcast.E
Paper ID #37143Work-in-Progress: Developing a Research Plan for a RetrospectiveAnalysis of the Effect of Bridging Courses on Student Success inGraduate StudiesDr. Matthew Cooper, North Carolina State University, Raleigh Dr. Matthew Cooper is an Associate Teaching Professor in the Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering at North Carolina State University where he teaches courses in Senior Design, Unit Opera- tions, Transport Phenomena, Material & Energy Balances and Mathematical/Computational Methods. Dr. Cooper’s research interests include effective teaching, process safety education and conceptual learning
Paper ID #44357Work in Progress: Building Conceptual Understanding in the Mass and EnergyBalances Course through Qualitative Analysis and Interactive DemonstrationsDr. Sakul Ratanalert, Columbia University Sakul Ratanalert is a Senior Lecturer in Discipline in the Department of Chemical Engineering at Columbia University. He received his BS in Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering from Cornell University, and his MS in Chemical Engineering Practice and his PhD in Chemical Engineering from MIT. His current research interests include developing engaging learning activities and building students’ intuition and conceptual
Paper ID #44058Empowering Students to Self-Select Resources Befitting Their Individual LearningStyles in a Reactor Design Engineering CourseDr. Elizabeth Michelle Melvin, Clemson University Elizabeth M. Melvin is currently a Lecturer in the Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering Department at Clemson University. She earned her BS in chemical engineering from The Ohio State University in Columbus, OH in 2002 and her MS and PhD from NC State in 2008 and 2010. Dr. Melvin held a number of positions in industry with companies such as Dow Corning (now Dow), Johns Manville, and Hospira (now Pfizer). Her passion is helping students
Paper ID #41123Use of Top Hat Questions to Build Classroom Community and Improve theStudent-Teacher RelationshipDr. Matthew Cooper, North Carolina State University Dr. Matthew Cooper is a Teaching Professor in the Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering at North Carolina State University where he teaches courses in Senior Design, Unit Operations, Transport Phenomena, Thermodynamics and Material & Energy Balances. ©American Society for Engineering Education, 2024 Use of Top Hat Questions to Build Classroom Community and Improve the Student- Teacher
Paper ID #41235Integrating Problem-Solving Studio into 75-minute Chemical Reaction KineticsSessionsDr. Huan Gu, University of New Haven I am an Assistant Professor in Chemical Engineering. I am teaching Chemical Reaction Kinetics, Chemical Engineering Thermodynamics, Process Analysis, Introduction to the Modeling of Engineering Systems, and Chemical Engineering Workshops. ©American Society for Engineering Education, 2024 Integrating Problem-Solving Studio into 75-minute Chemical Reaction Kinetics SessionsIn Fall 2021, I started teaching 75-minute Chemical Reaction Kinetics Sessions. By the end of theFall
Paper ID #38716Ungrading in Chemical Engineering: Attempting to Eliminate Exams,Deadlines, and Anxiety by Refocusing on Learning Instead of GradesDr. Lucas James Landherr, Northeastern University Dr. Lucas Landherr is a teaching professor in the Department of Chemical Engineering at Northeastern University, conducting research in comics and engineering education. ©American Society for Engineering Education, 2023Ungrading in Chemical Engineering: Attempting to Eliminate Exams, Deadlines, and Anxiety ByRefocusing on Learning Instead of GradesAbstractModern means of assessment require approaches that consider fair
Paper ID #38413Work-in-Progress: A Pedagogical Unboxing of Reservoir Simulation withPython — Backward Design of Course Contents, Assessment, and Pedagogy(CAP)Dr. Olatunde Olu Mosobalaje, Covenant University Dr. Olatunde Mosobalaje holds a Chemical Engineering Bachelor degree from Ladoke Akintola Uni- versity of Technology, Ogbomoso. He is an alumnus of the World Bank-funded African University of Science and Technology, Abuja, where he bagged a Petroleum Engineering MS degree in 2011. In 2019, he completed his Petroleum Engineering PhD program at Covenant University, Ota. He has been a fac- ulty member at the Petroleum
Paper ID #44154Bioengineering 101: A Design Challenge to Teach High School Students aboutHow Engineers Design and Build Complex SystemsProf. Adam T Melvin, Clemson University Adam Melvin obtained a BS in Chemical Engineering and a BA in Chemistry from the University of Arizona, a MS in Chemical Engineering (with a minor in Biotechnology) and a Ph.D. in Chemical Engineering from North Carolina State University. He spent the first 10 years of his independent career as a faculty member in the Cain Department of Chemical Engineering at Louisiana State University. He recently joined the faculty in the Department of Chemical and
Paper ID #41062Work In Progress: Enhancing Thermal and Fluids Laboratory Learningthrough the Integration of the Heat Exchanger Module (HEM)Benjamin Miles Phillips, Baylor University Ben Phillips is a PhD Candidate in the Department of Mechanical Engineering at Baylor University, working as a Research Assistant in the Baylor Energy And Renewable Systems (BEARS) Lab. His research interests are in Energy Storage and Renewable Systems, with projects focused in Concentrated Solar Thermal Energy Storage. He aspires to become a lecturer in the field of Chemical or Mechanical Engineering.Alexandre Yokochi, Baylor UniversityDr. Anne
Paper ID #43035Building a Great Student Chapter: Reflections on Workshop Activities UsingEntrepreneurial MindsetProf. Matthew W Liberatore, University of Toledo Matthew W. Liberatore is a Professor in the Department of Chemical Engineering at the University of Toledo. He earned a B.S. degree from the University of Illinois at Chicago and M.S. and Ph.D. degrees from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, all in chemical engineering. From 2005 to 2015, he served on the faculty at the Colorado School of Mines. In 2018, he served as an Erskine Fellow at the University of Canterbury in New Zealand. His research involves the
Paper ID #39118Do Small Collaborative Learning Communities within a Larger ClassIncrease Students’ Sense of Belonging and Learning?Dr. Mechteld Veltman Hillsley, Pennsylvania State University Dr. Hillsley is a Teaching Professor in the Department of Chemical Engineering at Pennsylvania State University. She received a BS in Chemical Engineering from Virginia Tech in 1988 and an MS and PhD from Penn State in 1990 and 1994, respectively.Dr. Stephanie Butler Velegol, Pennsylvania State University Stephanie Butler Velegol is a Teaching Professor in Chemical Engineering at Penn State University. She pioneered the use of Flipped
-9830.2009.tb01030.x9. Liberatore, M.W., Improved student achievement using personalized online homework for a course in material and energy balances. Chemical Engineering Education, 2011. 45(3): p. 184-190. DOI: https://journals.flvc.org/cee/article/view/12214910. Chapman, K.E., M.E. Davidson, N. Azuka, and M.W. Liberatore, Quantifying deliberate practice using auto‐graded questions: Analyzing multiple metrics in a chemical engineering course. Computer Applications in Engineering Education, 2023. 31(4): p. 916- 929. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/cae.2261411. Couch, J.D., J. Towne, and S. Wozniak, Rewiring Education: How Technology Can Unlock Every Student's Potential. 2018: BenBella Books12. Miller, M.D., Minds
fact, Table 4 shows that even though GPA did notcorrelate with any of the scales for men, we did see a significant correlation for women for theperformance-based Engineering Identity and Belonging. Keep in mind that there is no differencebetween the GPA for men and women. Examples of questions that show that these areperformance-based are: 1. “I can do well on exams in engineering.” (EI), 2. I can overcomesetbacks in engineering (EI), 3. “I think in the same way as do people who do well in chemicalengineering at X University.” (Belonging) 4. “Compared with most other students at XUniversity, I know how to do well in chemical engineering.” (Belonging). Future studies willinvestigate if this correlation holds with the non-performance-based
Paper ID #43337Material and Energy Balances and Character Development: An Investigationof Student Responses to Intentional Virtue Education in a Traditional ChemicalEngineering CourseDr. Victoria E Goodrich, University of Notre Dame Dr. Victoria Goodrich is a Teaching Professor in the Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering department at the University of Notre Dame. She holds a BS in Chemical Engineering from the University of Oklahoma and a MS and PhD in Chemical Engineering from Notre Dame. In her role as a teaching professor, she teaches hands-on courses across the chemical engineering curriculum. Her educational
Paper ID #42681Navigating the Theory-to-Practice Gap: Insights from a Process Safety EducationPilot StudyMrs. Brittany Lynn Butler-Morton, Rowan UniversityCayla Ritz, Rowan University Cayla Ritz, is pursuing a Ph.D in Engineering Education in the Experiential Engineering Education Department at Rowan University. Her research focuses on how story-driven games can be used to help engineering students understand how they may make decisions in professional engineering roles. She is particularly interested in how engineers make decisions in public welfare, community/environmental safety, and social contexts.Dr. Elif Miskioglu
Paper ID #42979Quantitative and Qualitative Analysis of a Curriculum-Wide Chemical ProcessProjectDr. Alyssa Powell, University of California, San Diego Alyssa Powell is an Assistant Teaching Professor at University of California San Diego.Dr. Justin Paul Opatkiewicz, University of California, San Diego Teaching Professor of Chemical Engineering in the NanoEngineering Department at UCSD since 2012. ©American Society for Engineering Education, 2024 Quantitative and Qualitative Analysis of a Curriculum-Wide Chemical Process ProjectAbstractThe chemical engineering program at