AC 2008-1264: TEACHING CONCEPT GENERATION METHODOLOGIES INPRODUCT DEVELOPMENT COURSES AND SENIOR DESIGN PROJECTSKarim Muci-Küchler, South Dakota School of Mines and Technology Karim Muci-Küchler is an Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering at South Dakota School of Mines and Technology. Before joining SDSM&T, he was an Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering at the University of Detroit Mercy. He received his Ph.D. in Engineering Mechanics from Iowa State University in 1992. His main interest areas include Computational Mechanics, Solid Mechanics, and Product Design and Development. He has taught several different courses at the undergraduate and graduate level, has over 30 technical
AC 2007-1102: ESTABLISHING FUNCTIONAL REQUIREMENTS AND TARGETSPECIFICATIONS: A KEY COMPONENT OF PRODUCT DEVELOPMENTPROJECTSKarim Muci-Küchler, South Dakota School of Mines and Technology Karim Muci-Küchler is an Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering at South Dakota School of Mines and Technology. Before joining SDSM&T, he was an Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering at the University of Detroit Mercy. He received his Ph.D. in Engineering Mechanics from Iowa State University in 1992. His main interest areas include Computational Mechanics, Solid Mechanics, and Product Design and Development. He has taught several different courses at the undergraduate and graduate level, has over 25
Paper ID #7029The Innovation Canvas - A Tool to Develop Integrated Product Designs andBusiness ModelsDr. William A Kline, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology Bill Kline is Professor of Engineering Management at Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology. He holds a Ph.D. degree in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign. Bill teaches courses in systems engineering, manufacturing systems, and quality management. He has previously served as Associate Dean for the Rose-Hulman Ventures program and is currently serving as Dean of Innovation and Engagement. Prior to joining Rose-Hulman, he
Paper ID #25586Exploring Differences in Senior and Sophomore Engineering Students’ Men-tal Models of Common ProductsMr. Francis Jacob Fish, Georgia Institute of Technology Francis Fish is a current Ph.D. student at the Georgia Institute of Technology. He earned his Bachelors of Mechanical Engineering and MBA at the University of Delaware, in 2016 and 2017, where he conducted research for DARPA and ARL funded projects as well as private industry projects. From 2016 to 2018 he worked as a Nuclear Engineer for NAVSEA.Alexander R. Murphy, Georgia Institute of Technology Alexander Murphy is a mechanical engineering Ph.D
Paper ID #19834Understanding Young Students’ Problem Solving Pathways: Building a De-sign Process Model Based on Sequential AnalysisMr. Euisuk Sung, Purdue University, West Lafayette (College of Engineering) Euisuk Sung is a Ph.D. candidate at Purdue University. He is majoring Engineering and Technology Teacher Education. He has computer science degree and worked as a computer software developer for three years. then he served as an engineering and technology educator in high school for 9 years in South Korea. Currently he is working in NSF Funded project, titled TRAILS. His research interests are design cognition, design
Paper ID #23471Co-Creating Opportunities for Extracurricular Design Learning with Mak-erspace StudentsVictoria Bill, New York University, Tandon School of Engineering Victoria Bill is the MakerSpace Lab Manager and an adjunct professor in the First-Year Engineering Program at NYU Tandon School of Engineering. She studied electrical engineering and received her B.S. from the Ohio State University and her M.S. from the University of Texas at Austin.Anne-Laure Fayard, New York University, Tandon School of Engineering Anne-Laure Fayard is Associate Professor of Management in the Department of Technology Manage- ment and
connect theirrequired design projects to use of the makerspace. Several courses in the mechanical and civilengineering, digital media, and technology management are requiring makerspace use this springsemester, with more planned in following semesters. Including a question about course usewould lead to assessment of whether course integration changes perception and use of the spaceand equipment. Figure 8: Engineering Design Self-Assessment ResultsFinally, the three statements in Figure 9 attempted to relate student community and teamworkperception. As discussed, the neutral or negative responses to the community responses seem tosupport the qualitative analysis of limited community involvement between core users andnewcomers
University, Tandon School of Engineering Anne-Laure Fayard is Associate Professor of Management in the Department of Technology Manage- ment and Innovation at NYU Tandon School of Engineering, and is affiliated with the Department of Management and Organizations at NYU Stern Business School. Her research interests involve commu- nication, collaboration, culture and space, with a focus on interactions, particularly those between people and technology. Her work has been published in several leading journals such as Administrative Science Quarterly, Information System Research, Organization Science and Organization Studies. She is also the co-author of a book on The Power of Writing in Organizations. She holds a Ph.D. in
Paper ID #21795The Impact of Functional Modeling on Engineering Students’ Mental ModelsJacob Thomas NelsonDr. Julie S. Linsey, Georgia Institute of Technology Dr. Julie S. Linsey is an Assistant Professor in the George W. Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering at the Georgia Institute of Technological. Dr. Linsey received her Ph.D. in Mechanical Engineering at The University of Texas. Her research area is design cognition including systematic methods and tools for innovative design with a particular focus on concept generation and design-by-analogy. Her research seeks to understand designers’ cognitive processes with the
Education, (July), 310–326.9 Oplinger, J. L., & Lande, M. (2014). Measuring Qualities of Different Engineering Design Process Models : A Crit- ical Review. In American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference.10 Wynn, D. C., Eckert, C. M., & Clarkson, P. J. (2007). Modelling iteration in engineering design. ICED 2007 International Conference on Engineering Design, (August), 1–12. Retrieved from http://www.designsociety.org/index.php?menu=15&action=9&date=2007-08-2811 Smith, R. P. (1992). Development and Verification of Engineering Design Iteration Models. Massachusetts Institute of Technology.12 Adams, R. S., & Atman, C. J. (2000). Characterizing Engineering Student Design
. Current interests are in self-regulation, design thinking and active learning in engineering.Mr. Andreas Febrian, Utah State University - Engineering Education He is a doctorate student in Engineering Education at Utah State University; email andreas.febrian@aggiemail.usu.edu. He was an instructor in Information Technology Department in one of the private university in Indone- sia. He taught Introduction to Programming and Mobile Programming. He has strong interest on the application of metacognition in teaching, affective computing, and historical game. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2016Students’ Self-Regulation in Managing Their Capstone Senior Design ProjectsAbstract The
Paper ID #18662An Exploratory Study of Power Dynamics and Feedback in Design ReviewsMr. Mitchell James Cieminski, Franklin W. Olin College of Engineering Mitchell J. Cieminski was born in Fontana, CA in 1995 and grew up in Greeley, CO. He received a B.S. in electrical and computer engineering from Franklin W. Olin College of Engineering in Needham, MA in May 2017, and currently studies science and technology studies at Rennselaer Polytechnic Institute. In 2014, he worked at Insper University in S˜ao Paulo, Brazil as a Junior Partner and visiting student to their developing engineering program. His research interests
engineers at three different technology companies of varied size and withindiverse product sectors. The study focused on how engineers working on cross-disciplinarydesign teams use artifacts to communicate and how those artifacts affect design decision making.Examinations of the artifacts practicing engineers use supported the development of designprinciples for instructors to create modules, assessments, and activities for engineering designclassrooms. The educational design principles, presented in this paper as ‘how might we’statements, include: (1) How might we encourage students to report honestly and accuratelyabout status? and (2) How might we foster the use of documentation in student engineeringprojects? Findings from this study will be
AC 2009-1405: FIRST-YEAR DESIGN EXPERIENCE: ASSEMBLING THE “BIGPICTURE” THROUGH INNOVATIVE PRODUCT DESIGNKelly Crittenden, Louisiana Tech UniversityDavid Hall, Louisiana Tech UniversityMark Barker, Louisiana Tech UniversityPatricia Brackin, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology Page 14.633.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2009 First-Year Design Experience: Assembling the “Big Picture” Through Innovative Product DesignAbstractAs part of the freshmen engineering curriculum at Louisiana Tech University, students developnovel solutions to problems that “bug” them. During the spring quarter, students are asked tospend several weeks
at Tuskegee University, AL. He obtained his PhD in Mechanical Engineering from Texas A&M University in 2012. His research interests include design theory & methodology, design creativity and engineering education.Dr. Julie S Linsey, Georgia Institute of Technology Page 24.114.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2014 A Study on the Factors Influencing the Usage of Environmentally Friendly ProductsAbstractDesigning engineering systems to minimize their environmental impact is a very complex task.Little exists to guide designers in developing
Fellowship PROFESSIONAL SOCIETIES: American Chemical Society American Academy of Nanomedicine (Founding Member) UCLA Alumni AssociationKenneth Pickar, California Institute of Technology Visiting Professor of Mechanical Engineering (1998-present),J. Stanley Johnson Professor (1999-2003)California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA. Teaching courses in Entrepreneurship, Management of Technology, Product Design for the Developing World. Coaching start-up Ventures; Presidents Advisory Board for JPL, Co-PI of NSF-funded Entrepreneurial Postgraduate Fellowship Program 2005 Award for Excellence in Teaching by Undergraduate Students of Caltech Board of Directors, Level One Corporation (1997-1999
Paper ID #10403A Study on Teaching Functional Modeling in a Sophomore Engineering De-sign CourseDr. Robert L. Nagel, James Madison University Dr. Robert Nagel is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Engineering at James Madison University. Dr. Nagel joined the James Madison University after completing his Ph.D. in mechanical engineering at Oregon State University. He has a B.S. from Trine University and a M.S. from the Missouri University of Science and Technology, both in mechanical engineering. The research interests of Dr. Nagel focus on engineering design and engineering design education, and in particular, the
Paper ID #33142Comparison of Student Learning in Two Makerspace CommunitiesDanielle M. Saracino, Georgia Institute of Technology Danielle Saracino is a M.S. graduate student in the George W. Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineer- ing at the Georgia Institute of Technology under the guidance of Dr. Julie Linsey. Her B.S. degree in Mechanical Engineering is also from the Georgia Institute of Technology where she began conducting research and interned with BAE Systems and Pratt and Whitney. Danielle’s research interests are how academic makerspaces support student learning and how this compares across various
Paper ID #30384Validation of a Mental Model Elicitation Instrument through Deploymentof Control Groups in an Undergraduate Engineering ProgramAlexander R. Murphy, Georgia Institute of Technology Alexander R. Murphy is a graduate student at the Georgia Institute of Technology and is pursuing a Ph.D. in mechanical engineering. He was born and raised in Tampa Florida, where he received a B.S. in mechanical engineering with a minor in creative writing from the University of South Florida. He is proud to have received a NSF GRFP fellowship this past spring of 2018. Currently, he is interested in exploring students’ and
AC 2007-2390: A PILOT PROGRAM ON TEACHING DISPERSED PRODUCTDEVELOPMENT IN COLLABORATION WITH AN INTERNATIONALUNIVERSITYKatja Holtta-Otto, University Of Massachusetts-DartmouthPia Helminen, Helsinki University of Technology (TKK)Kalevi Ekman, Helsinki University of Technology (TKK)Thomas Roemer, University of California-San Diego Page 12.88.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2007 A Pilot Program on Teaching Dispersed Product Development in Collaboration with an International UniversityIntroductionDispersed product development is becoming ever more prevalent across industries. Mostmultinational companies have research and development laboratories
Paper ID #19259Negotiating Tensions of Autonomy and Connection in Makerspace Cultures:A Qualitative Examination of a University’s MakerspacesMs. Megan Tomko, Georgia Institute of Technology Megan E. Tomko is a Ph.D. graduate student in the George W. Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineer- ing at the Georgia Institute of Technology under the guidance of Dr. Julie Linsey. She completed one semester in her graduate studies at James Madison University with Dr. Robert Nagel as her advisor. Her B.S. degree in Mechanical Engineering is from the University of Pittsburgh where she also worked as a Field Telecommunications Intern
Paper ID #25664Teaching Systems Thinking in a Capstone Mechatronic Design CourseDr. Mark David Bedillion, Carnegie Mellon University Dr. Bedillion received the BS degree in 1998, the MS degree in 2001, and the PhD degree in 2005, all from the mechanical engineering department of Carnegie Mellon University. After a seven year career in the hard disk drive industry, Dr. Bedillion was on the faculty of the South Dakota School of Mines and Technology for over 5 years before joining Carnegie Mellon as a Teaching Faculty in 2016. Dr. Be- dillion’s research interests include distributed manipulation, control applications in
Paper ID #30144A longitudinal exploration of students’ functional modeling abilitiesMr. Henry David Banks, James Madison University Henry Banks is an undergraduate engineering student at James Madison University. He has been conduct- ing design research as an undergraduate research assistant since 2017 and is currently working towards his honors thesis.Alexander R. Murphy, Georgia Institute of Technology Alexander R. Murphy is a graduate student at the Georgia Institute of Technology and is pursuing a Ph.D. in mechanical engineering. He was born and raised in Tampa Florida, where he received a B.S. in mechanical
Paper ID #14654Quantitative Survey and Analysis of Five Maker Spaces at Large, Research-Oriented UniversitiesProf. Craig Forest, Georgia Institute of Technology Craig Forest is an Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering at Georgia Tech where he also holds program faculty positions in Bioengineering and Biomedical Engineering. He is a Fellow at the Allen Brain Institute in Seattle WA and he is one of the inaugural recipients of the NIH BRAIN Initiative Grants, a national research effort to invent the next generation of neuroscience and neuroengineering tools. He is cofounder/organizer of one of the largest
advancement of manufacturing and related en- gineering and technologies. Karen also has expertise in providing professional development that includes strategies for the engagement and persistence of under represented populations in STEM disciplines. She has received awards from several organizations including the American Association for University Women (AAUW) for her work in addressing the need to increase females in engineering and technology fields as well as for her work in educating students with the skills required for the 21st century workforce.Wesley Francillon, PhD, Connectiuct Community College (College of Technology)John Birch, The Birch Group, LLC
Paper ID #15483Flipping Engineering by DesignDr. Jacqulyn Baughman, Iowa State University Dr. Jacqulyn Baughman Senior Lecturer, Mechanical Engineering Director of Graduate Education (DOGE), BRT Graduate Program Faculty-in-Charge, ADM Biorenewables Education Labs Iowa State UniversityDr. Lesya M. Hassall, Iowa State University Lesya M. Hassall is a program coordinator at the Online Learning Innovation Hub in Center for Excel- lence for Learning and Teaching, Iowa State University. Her professional responsibilities revolve around assessment and meaningful integration of learning technologies into teaching and learning
Paper ID #19152Work in Progress: A Delphi Study to Investigate the Value of Board Gamesto Teach Teamwork SkillsDr. Kevin Ray Hadley, South Dakota School of Mines and Technology Dr. Hadley received his BS in Chemical Engineering at the Colorado School of Mines and his PhD in Chemical Engineering at Vanderbilt University. At Vanderbilt, he also completed their teaching certificate program and was the first participant to publish the results of his project in a national peer-reviewed journal, Chemical Engineering Education. Afterwards, Dr. Hadley completed a postdoctoral study at NASA. IN 2012, he joined the faculty at South
AC 2008-1045: IMPROVING THE QUALITY OF SENIOR DESIGN PROJECTREPORTSEdward Lumsdaine, Michigan Technological University Dr. Edward Lumsdaine is currently Professor of Mechanical Engineering at Michigan Technological University and Special Professor of Business, Institute for Enterprise and Innovation, University of Nottingham (England). For many years he was management consultant at Ford Motor Company and in the last years helped develop and direct a high-tech education and training program in the use of design and data management tools. In 1994 he received the ASEE Chester F. Carlson award for innovation in engineering education. He has co-authored several books in creative problem solving
Paper ID #15433Multidisciplinary Patient-Centered Capstone Senior Design ProjectsDr. Mansoor Nasir, Lawrence Technological University Dr. Mansoor Nasir received his B.Sc. in Electrical Engineering from the University of Cincinnati and Ph.D. in Bioengineering from the University of California-Berkeley. He worked as a research scientist at the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory in Washington, D.C. before joining the Department of Biomedical Engineering at Lawrence Technological University. He has several publications in the areas of microflu- idics, chemical and biological sensors, and MEMS technology. He is also passionate
AC 2008-185: A COMMON DESIGN-BUILD-TEST PROJECT INCORPORATINGFRESHMAN AND SENIOR UNDERGRADUATE ANALYSIS SKILLSMichael Plumley, US Coast Guard Academy LT Michael Plumley is on active duty in the U.S. Coast Guard and is a faculty member and 1998 graduate of the Mechanical Engineering program at the U.S. Coast Guard Academy where he has served as course coordinator for a variety of subjects including Machine Design, Heat Transfer, and Modeling and Control of Dynamic Systems. He holds Masters of Science degrees in both Mechanical Engineering and Naval Architecture and Marine Engineering from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and is a registered Professional Engineer in the State of