Paper ID #30713The role of prototyping in design and policy making: Visual stimuli,selective attention and decision makingHadi Ali, Arizona State University, Polytechnic campus Hadi Ali is a doctoral student in Engineering Education Systems and Design at Arizona State University. American c Society for Engineering Education, 2020The role of prototyping in design and policy making: Visual stimuli, selective attention and decision making 1. OverviewThis is a theory paper. In this study, we integrate research on visual stimuli
2006-2205: WHAT’S SO IMPORTANT ABOUT PEER REVIEW OF TEACHINGPORTFOLIO COMPONENTS? AN EXPLORATORY ANALYSIS OFPEER-REVIEW EPISODES WITHIN ETPPJennifer Turns, University of Washington Jennifer Turns is an assistant professor in the Department of Technical Communication at the University of Washington. She holds a Ph.D. in Industrial Engineering from the Georgia Institute of Technology. Her interests include engineering education, learner-centered design, user-centered design, and audience analysis. Dr. Turns is currently working on multiple NSF grants dealing with engineering education including an NSF Career award exploring the impact of portfolio construction on engineering students
Paper ID #19703Molecules and Cells: Team-based and Multi-modal Learning Improves Com-prehension and Increases Content RetentionEileen Haase PhD, Johns Hopkins University Dr. Haase is a senior lecturer at Johns Hopkins University in the Department of Biomedical Engineer- ing and chair of the Applied Biomedical Engineering program. She is currently the interim Director of Undergraduate Studies.Mr. BaDoi Nguyen Phan, Johns Hopkins UniversityDr. Harry R. Goldberg, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine c American Society for Engineering Education, 2017 Molecules and Cells: Team-based and multi-modal
Paper ID #18834FEAL: Fine-Grained Evaluation of Active Learning in Collaborative Learn-ing SpacesMs. Sixing Lu, University of Arizona Sixing Lu is a PhD candidate of Electrical and Computer Engineering department of University of Ari- zona.Prof. Loukas Lazos, University of Arizona Loukas Lazos is a faculty member of the Electrical and Computer Engineering Department at the Univer- sity of Arizona. Before joining the University of Arizona, he was a co-director of the Network Security Lab at the University of Washington. He received my PhD. and M.S. degrees in Electrical Engineering at the University of Washington. he
Paper ID #29852Usability of Data Visualization Activity Worksheets in the Context of aCritical Data Visualization Workshop: Findings from a Usability SurveyDr. Vetria Byrd PhD, Purdue University-Main Campus, West Lafayette (College of Engineering) Dr. Vetria Byrd is an assistant professor in the Department of Computer Graphics Technology in the Polytechnic Institute at Purdue University in West Lafayette, Indiana. Dr. Byrd is the founder and orga- nizer of the biennial Broadening Participation in Visualization (BPViz) Workshop. Dr. Byrd has given numerous invited talks on visualization and has been featured in HPC Wire online
Paper ID #16568The Role of Shared Physical Space in Affording the Creation of Shared Con-ceptual Spaces in Design Project TeamsDr. Penny Kinnear, University of Toronto Penny Kinnear currently works with the Engineering Communication Program at the University of Toronto where she focuses on the development and delivery of Professional Language support for a highly student body. She has a background in applied linguistics, second language and bilingual education and writing education. She is co-author of the book, ”Sociocultural Theory in Second Language Education: An in- troduction through narratives.” Her current research
AC 2008-335: IDENTIFYING ROLES AND BEHAVIORS OF INFORMALLEADERS ON STUDENT DESIGN TEAMSDiane Zemke, Gonzaga University Diane Zemke is a PhD candidate at Gonzaga University in Leadership Studies. Her interests include small group dynamics, reflective practices, learning, and qualitative methods. She has co-authored papers on use of small teams in design engineering.Steven Zemke, Gonzaga University Steven Zemke is an Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering at Gonzaga University. His primary responsibilities are Design courses and assessment. His research interests include effective learning environments and design teaching and learning. Prior to teaching he was a design engineer and
AC 2012-4551: CHARACTERIZING STUDENTS HANDWRITTEN SELF-EXPLANATIONSMr. James Herold, University of California, Riverside James Herold earned his B.S. in computer science at California Polytechnic State University, Pomona, in 2004. He is currently a Ph.D. student in computer science at the University of California, Riverside.Dr. Thomas Stahovich, University of California, Riverside Thomas Stahovich received a B.S. in mechanical engineering from the University of California, Berke- ley, in 1988. He received a M.S. and Ph.D. in mechanical engineering from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1990 and 1995, respectively. He is currently Chair and professor in the Mechanical Engineering Department at the
Technology in the College of Education at Purdue University. Dr. Exter’s research aims to provide recommendations to improve or enhance university-level design and technology programs (such as Instructional Design, Computer Science, and Engineering). Some of her previous research has focused on software designers’ formal and non-formal educational experiences and use of precedent materials, and experienced instructional designers’ beliefs about design character. These studies have highlighted the importance of cross-disciplinary skills and student engagement in large-scale, real-world projects. Dr. Exter currently leads an effort to evaluate a new multidisciplinary degree program which provides both liberal arts and
Paper ID #25230Board 39: Designing Intelligent Review Forms for Peer Assessment: A Data-driven ApproachZachariah J Beasley, University of South Florida Zachariah J. Beasley is a Ph.D. candidate, teaching assistant, and instructor at the University of South Florida in the Department of Computer Science and Engineering. He received his M.S. in Computer Science from USF in May 2017 and a B.A. in Computer Science and a B.A. in Applied Mathematics from Franklin College in May 2015. His teaching and research interests include Data Mining, Natural Language Processing (sentiment analysis, text processing), Crowd sourcing
university, and one that is admittedly privileged inmany respects. For example, the respondents indicated few if any issues of economic insecurityor technology access. Nor were the respondents likely to be academically precarious. Thestringent standards for continued enrollment in the engineering program might have put somestudents at risk for being asked to leave the program, but even in those cases, the student wouldtypically not be close to flunking out of college. These conditions of privilege are likely to havehad a significant effect on how these students chose to spend their time, as evinced by emergingstudies of the disproportionate effects of quarantine and other COVID-related conditions onwomen, adult students, LGBTQA+ students, and
2006-374: A COGNITIVE STUDY OF MODELING DURING PROBLEM-SOLVINGThomas Litzinger, Pennsylvania State University Thomas A. Litzinger is currently Director of the Leonhard Center for the Enhancement of Engineering Education and a Professor of Mechanical Engineering at Penn State, where he has been on the faculty since 1985. His work in engineering education involves curricular reform, teaching and learning innovations, faculty development, and assessment. He can be contacted at tal2@psu.edu.Peggy Van Meter, Pennsylvania State University Peggy Van Meter is currently the Professor in Charge of the Educational Psychology Program and an Associate Professor of Education at Penn State where she has
Paper ID #33409A Comparison of Novice Coders’ Approaches to Reading Code: AnEye-tracking StudyDr. Geoffrey L. Herman, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Dr. Geoffrey L. Herman is a teaching associate professor with the Deprartment of Computer Science at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He also has a courtesy appointment as a research assistant professor with the Department of Curriculum & Instruction. He earned his Ph.D. in Electrical and Computer Engineering from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign as a Mavis Future Faculty Fellow and conducted postdoctoral research with Ruth Streveler
AC 2009-1749: CULTURALLY-RELEVANT SCIENCE CURRICULUM - EFFORTSIN A SECONDARY SCHOOL - UGANDAAlexandre Probst, Colorado School of MinesAarthi Krishnaswamy, Colorado School of MinesVinita Singh, Colorado School of MinesBarbara Moskal, Colorado School of MinesCyndi Rader, Colorado School of Mines Page 14.391.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2009 Culturally-Relevant Science Curriculum: Efforts in a Secondary School, Uganda, Africa Key Words: Culturally-relevant, simulated, laboratory, learner-centered Abstract This paper describes the design of a simulated science laboratory experiment which has
The problems inherent to gaining true self-insight are formidable, but they are notunchallenged. In professional environments, where an accurate understanding of one’s ownbehavior may increase profit margins, the self-insight problem has been partially resolved usingmultisource (or 360-degree) feedback interventions. The goal of this project is to adapt bestpractices and existing theoretical knowledge from the organizational literature to facilitate self-insight and adaptive self-development in a collegiate population of Science, Technology,Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM) students. These experimental strategies are technologiesof the self,18, 19 social psychological tools whose purpose is to help individuals chart new territory
AC 2007-2763: A SERVICE LEARNING PROJECT IN DIGITAL MEDIADESIGNED TO DEVELOP PROFESSIONAL SKILLSCher Cornett, East Tennessee State University Cher Cornett, Associate Professor, is the Director of the Niswonger Digital Media Center at East Tennessee State University. She has worked professionally as a graphic designer and illustrator for over 25 years and has been involved in developing interactive multimedia products for over 16 years, including pioneering work in interactive instructional product design at Florida State University. Prior to coming to ETSU, she coordinated the Interactive Multimedia Masters Degree Program at Southern Illinois University; chaired the Graphic Arts Technology program
AC 2007-1680: TEACHING CHEMISTRY AS A CROSS-CULTURAL SUBJECT : IT& LINGUISTICSMargherita Landucci, Liceo Artistico StataleFabio Garganego, Municipality of Venice Page 12.1349.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2007 Teaching Chemistry as a Cross-cultural Subject IT & LinguisticsAbstractThe main theme of this paper is the language of chemical formulae rather than the languagethat explains chemistry; the focus of our interest is the code used in writing chemicalformulae.The paper describes the nature and scope of a research project started by an out-of-schoolmultidisciplinary team who set up in 1993 and concluded