- Conference Session
- Experimentation and Laboratory-Oriented Studies Division (DELOS) Technical Session 4: Bring Your Own Experiments +
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- 2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Alyssa Catherine Taylor, University of California, San Diego; Molly Y. Mollica, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
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Diversity
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Experimentation and Laboratory-Oriented Studies Division (DELOS)
. Postsecond. Educ. Disabil., vol. 25, no. 3, pp. 211–225, 2012.[2] B. Blaser, K. M. Steele, and S. E. Burgstahler, “Including Universal Design in Engineering Courses to Attract Diverse Students,” presented at the 2015 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Jun. 2015, p. 26.935.1-26.935.12. Accessed: Oct. 20, 2022. [Online]. Available: https://peer.asee.org/including-universal-design-in-engineering-courses-to-attract-diverse- students[3] N. A. of Engineering, Changing the Conversation: Messages for Improving Public Understanding of Engineering. 2008. doi: 10.17226/12187.[4] R. E. Davis, S. Krishnan, T. L. Nilsson, and P. F. Rimland, “IDEAS: Interdisciplinary Design Engineering and Service,” Int. J. Serv. Learn. Eng. Humanit. Eng
- Conference Session
- Experimentation and Laboratory-Oriented Studies Division (DELOS) Technical Session 5: Lab Design
- Collection
- 2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
- Authors
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Nick A. Stites, University of Colorado Boulder; Micaela Valentina Bara, University of Colorado Boulder
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Diversity
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Experimentation and Laboratory-Oriented Studies Division (DELOS)
objectivesbetween the IDE and mechanical engineering versions of the course. We feel non-parametricmethods must be included in the course if students are expected to appropriately analyze thedata that they collect as part of their culminating Design Your Own Experiment (DYOE)project. History has shown that students’ DYOE data are often non-normal with smallsample sizes.AssessmentsTable 2 provides a comprehensive list of the assessments that were created to evaluate theextent to which students achieved the learning outcomes of the course. Collectively, theseassessments account for 92% of a students’ grade in the class, with embedded questions inthe online lecture videos (5%) and professionalism and participation (3%) making up theremainder. One notable