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- Best of DEED
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- 2016 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Susannah Howe, Smith College; Sophia L. Poulos, Smith College; Laura Mae Rosenbauer, Smith College
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Design in Engineering Education
the design team as if they are graduates employed by myfirm.” (R79)A similar number of respondents (n=47) addressed real-world projects, clients, and applications: “Iattempt to use the capstone design project to illustrate a microcosm of the real world, giving students asclose an experience to what they will encounter in design assignments.” (R53) Table 2 - Categories and Content Themes Regarding Teaching/Coordinating Strengths in Capstone Design Category # Resp. Content Themes (n=361) (in descending order of frequency) industry involvement; mentoring/advising/nurturing students; faculty
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- Design in Engineering Education Division Poster Session
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- 2016 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Christina L. Carmen, University of Alabama - Huntsville; Ben Groenewald, Cape Peninsula University of Technology; Rhyme Kagiso Setshedi, Cape Peninsula University of Technology ; Aysha Abrahams, Cape Peninsula University of Technology
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Diversity
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Design in Engineering Education
Moonbuggy Race. In 2012, the UAH Moonbuggy team won 1st place in the Moonbuggy race. Dr. Carmen is the UAH ASME student chapter faculty advisor as well as a Director of the North Alabama ASME section. Dr. Carmen has served as a National Science Foundation scholarship panelist, Department of Defense SMART scholarship panelist and as a delegate to the ASME Leadership Training conference. In 2010 and 2013, Dr. Carmen was named the Outstanding Mechanical Engineer in North Alabama by ASME. In 2010 she was awarded a NASA Exploration Systems Mission Directorate (ESMD) faculty fellowship – one of 5 senior design class instructors selected from around the country to participate in the program. As a result of the fellowship
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- Professional Skills development in Design
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- 2016 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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John Mark Dawidow, Harding University; James L. Huff, Harding University; Keelin Siomha Leahy, University of Limerick
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Design in Engineering Education
Paper ID #16136Investigating How Design Concepts Evolve in Engineering StudentsMr. John Mark Dawidow, Harding University John Dawidow is a recent graduate of Harding University, receiving his bachelor’s in biomedical engi- neering. His research interests involve investigating how students think about design considerations in relation to social and technical dimensions.Prof. James L. Huff, Harding University James Huff is an assistant professor of engineering at Harding University, where he primarily teaches multidisciplinary engineering design and electrical engineering. His research interests are aligned with how
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- Capstone Design Courses II
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- 2016 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Charles Pezeshki, Washington State University; Jacob William Leachman, Washington State University; Michael Richey, The Boeing Company
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Design in Engineering Education
, theauthors will attempt to provide some insight on what worked, as well as what could useimprovement, through contrast of the three projects.Individual Team Member and Group Composition DynamicsProject 1Not surprisingly, Project 1’s team membership might be described as a ‘Dream Team.’Motivated Ph.D. students, with a combination of strong technical expertise, as well aspast, hands-on experience building and flying R/C aircraft, and buttressed by aparticipatory faculty member, created a tested solution that maximized both reliabilityand validity. What do these terms imply? In Martin’s book on Design Thinking, TheDesign of Business, [12] he develops an argument of the difficulty in creating solutionsthat are both reliable – function as intended; and
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- Capstone Design Courses II
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- 2016 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Nikhil Gupta, Florida State University; Matthew J Jensen, Florida Institute of Technology; Chiang Shih, Florida A&M University/Florida State University
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Design in Engineering Education
midterm to their peers, mentors, faculty adviser and the course coordinator forconstructive feedback. The teams are also asked to submit a report on the same. Towards theend of the semester the team has to provide an interim design report, stating the progressmade so far, the final design selected based on the decision matrix, more in details drawingof the concept they are going on to work upon along with discussion of the future work.In the beginning of the spring semester, the team has to provide an oral presentation on thelast semester accomplishments and recent updates with an updated Gantt chart. By this timethey are expected to start ordering parts and materials for their prototype. In the second halfof the semester students are required to
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- Design in Engineering Education Division Poster Session
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- 2016 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Mary Carpenter Ed.D., CCD - Custom Curriculum Design; Logan Edward Micher, Florida Polytechnic University; Chris Yakymyshyn; Jorge Vargas, Florida Polytechnic University; Christina Drake, Florida Polytechnic University
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Design in Engineering Education
.” Students always show interest in things(proposals) that are related to personal benefits and/or career aspirations (i.e. what am I going todo with this?). Since most engineering curricula in the first 2 years are not necessarilyengineering or design based (ABET curriculum requirements call for one year combination ofbasic math and sciences plus a general education component), freshmen cornerstone classes suchas ours are a way to weave the larger story of being an engineer into the first year studentexperience and perhaps even help with learning gains (and motivation) in those courses.Teaching FrameworksA number of teaching frameworks for engineering courses have been described elsewhere16 andinclude: 1) Project-Based Learning (PBL)- projects
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- Design in Engineering Education Division Poster Session
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- 2016 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Jacqulyn Baughman, Iowa State University; Lesya M. Hassall, Iowa State University; Nadia V. Jaramillo Cherrez, Iowa State University; Mathew Hagge, Iowa State University
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Design in Engineering Education
-based learning. Her research interests lie upon the intricacies amongst the design of learning environments, human-computer interaction, online learning.Dr. Mathew Hagge, Iowa State University Matt Hagge is a Senior Lecturer at Iowa State University. He has spent his career talking to students to figure out how students think and learn. The result of these talks has been the development of a course-wide decision framework for a thermodynamics course that allows students to solve previously unseen problems while building their expertise. This pedagogy is called Decision Based Learning, and has received tremendous student feedback and results. Students are able to solve complex problems through understanding rather