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- Entrepreneurship & Engineering Innovation Division Technical Session 5
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- 2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Chris Carroll, Saint Louis University, Parks College of Eng.; Scott A. Sell, Saint Louis University, Parks College of Eng.; Michelle B. Sabick, Saint Louis University, Parks College of Eng.
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Entrepreneurship & Engineering Innovation
]. In short,students with low self-efficacy and self-confidence are less likely to persist in science andengineering compared to their peers with higher levels of self-efficacy and self-confidence [2].Gleason et al. [31] found a strong correlation between math placement and retention rates inengineering. They found that students who placed in College Algebra or below accounted foronly 10% of engineering graduates and those who placed in Pre-calculus accounted for nearly40% of dropouts. Likewise, Santiago and Hensel [32] found that 34% of students who leftengineering due to academic difficulties noted specific difficulty with Calculus I. Students takelonger to complete core requirements when they fail to place into Calculus I or above
- Conference Session
- Entrepreneurship & Engineering Innovation Division Technical Session 8
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- 2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Anthony Ferrar, Temple University; Dustyn Roberts P.E., Temple University
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Entrepreneurship & Engineering Innovation
2015, he joined the BEARS Lab (B&E Applied Research and Science) in the nuclear engineering program at the University of Florida as postdoctoral researcher where he investigated spent fuel storage and cancer treatment. Throughout his graduate and postdoctoral experiences he participated in teaching, student mentorship, and faculty development as an instructor and advocate for learning inno- vation. He joined the Temple University faculty in 2015, where he focuses on Engineering Entrepreneur- ship, Social Networking and Connections in Higher Education, Peer-to-Peer Mentorship, and Open and Inclusive Education.Dr. Dustyn Roberts P.E., Temple University Dustyn Roberts received her B.S. in Mechanical and Biomedical
- Conference Session
- Entrepreneurship & Engineering Innovation Division Technical Session 5
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- 2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Charles J. Robinson, Clarkson University
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Diversity
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Entrepreneurship & Engineering Innovation
through in-formation gathering, proof-of-concept, prototype development, beta testing and now production-on-order stages: 1. Research, design and build appropriately sized physical hardware (e.g., intake and sorting tables) and optimize flow through their use. 2. Develop, wire and test individual units that use industry-proven commercial electronics to build robust totalizers that reduce errors and that can be maintainable by NYSARC staff. 3. Employ an industry-proven commercial industrial electronic controller/ display and write software for it, to collect and log data from all totalizers in a given plant, provide a real-time display to staff, and allow for the printing of individual receipts or bag labels.Proof of ConceptIn
- Conference Session
- Entrepreneurship & Engineering Innovation Division Technical Session 4
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- 2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Lisa Bosman, Purdue University; Sandhya Arumugam, Purdue University
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Entrepreneurship & Engineering Innovation
technologycourse. Throughout the course, students were assessed using a 360-degree evaluation process.The implications suggest the benefit of applying self- and peer-assessment techniques toCBE.2.2 Scaffold Assignments“Scaffolding assignments assist students as they generate solutions to complex problems,goals, or tasks, helping increase and integrate their higher order skills in the process. [16]”Scaffolding is a common pedagogical approach in higher education used to leverage priorlearning and to promote higher level skill development. Wass and colleagues [17] conducteda longitudinal study to assess the influence of scaffolding on zoology undergraduate students’development of critical thinking skills. Their analysis suggested the greatest benefit
- Conference Session
- Entrepreneurship & Engineering Innovation Division Technical Session 8
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- 2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Matthew J. Traum, Engineer Inc.; Emre Selvi, Jacksonville University; Adele Hanlon, Jacksonville University
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Entrepreneurship & Engineering Innovation
Paper ID #24917Evaluation of DEEP POOL on Student Learning Outcomes AttainmentDr. Matthew J. Traum, Engineer Inc. Dr. Matthew J. Traum is founding CEO at Engineer Inc., a Florida-based STEM education social enter- prise start-up. Traum invented @HOLMTM lab kits to enable students in on-line courses to build and run engineering experiments remotely at home. Before founding Engineer Inc., Dr. Traum was a well-known higher education administrator, fund raiser, educator, and researcher with co-authorship of 12 peer-reviewed research journal articles, 18 refereed research conference articles, and 20 refereed pedagogical
- Conference Session
- Entrepreneurship & Engineering Innovation Division Technical Session 4
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- 2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Karl D. Schubert FIET, University of Arkansas; Leslie Bartsch Massey, University of Arkansas; Alan E. Ellstrand, University of Arkansas
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Entrepreneurship & Engineering Innovation
]. In April, the student teams pitched their productor service at the CoE Honors Engineering Symposium. Students were also required to write afull paper, as well as develop a project poster (for the poster session and evaluation at theSymposium) and a pitch deck (for presentation and evaluation at the Symposium) for theirdesign.While conducting the piloted courses in the first year, we realized (for iterative improvement)that the content presented by the faculty and industry professionals in the first eight weeks of thecourse should be expanded upon and reorganized into a more logical series of presentations. Wealso observed that the student team that came up with their own project idea (noted above as anextremely important iterative