through assignments,class discussions and a final project that incorporated one or more suitable broader impact effortsin the context of their technical research area. The first offering of the course was taken by 13students and student feedback indicated that 90% of the students gained a better understanding ofbroader impacts, could better articulate the impacts of their research and understood theimportance of intentional efforts to achieve specific societal outcomes.IntroductionEngineers must communicate the potential impact of their work beyond just the technicalaspects. The ability to develop and articulate how one’s research benefits society and contributesto the achievement of societal outcomes are key skills for scientists and engineers
this program have apositive effect on the communication abilities of the graduate students. In particular, thestudents’ ability to take their current research and effectively communicate it to high schoolstudents with limited technical knowledge and experiences will be showcased. The focus of thispaper will be on the previous engineering graduate students, each assigned to a different schoolwith diverse culture and economic backgrounds and each working with four different teachers inthat school.Project STEP OverviewOur project is currently in its ninth year of funding. Bringing well communicated engineeringconcepts, based on a city theme and graduate student research, into high school classrooms is themain focus of the project. The graduate
librarian in an effort to deliver broadknowledge on RDM standards and tools from the expertise of the librarian while allowingresearch focused examples and experience from the faculty perspective. This manuscriptdescribes the course, course materials, lecture topics, assignments and projects and assessmenttools for the course. Comparison with similar approaches and courses in the literature along withlessons learned are also provided. An earlier version of this manuscript appeared in ChemicalEngineering Education as “A Graduate Class in Research Data Management”.[15]Methods: A three credit graduate course, Research Data Management, was developed and taughtfor the first time during the Fall 2017 semester. The course was team taught by a
tend to reject any inquiry that strays outside of a strictly positivist or perhaps post-positivist paradigm. This paper outlines our vision and understanding of engineeringdesign and communicates the approach we have taken to defining a Master of EngineeringDesign degree that at the same time is acceptable to the scholarly sensibilities ofengineering faculty and pushes the boundaries of the practice of engineering design. Todevelop the program, we believe that engineering scholarship must extend beyondproblem-solving to include inquiry approaches from the arts and humanities2.The Nature of Engineering DesignMany of the early projects performed by students in the Master of Engineering Designdegree resembled in every way a research Master s
Foundation, the only national award that recognizes outstanding college teaching.Mr. Patrick H. Knowles Jr., Cleveland Mixer Patrick Knowles has had more than thirty years of increasing responsibilities in engineering design, engi- neering education, leadership & personnel supervision, financial & project management, and regulatory compliance. A registered Professional Engineer in Virginia, he recently accepted a position at a manufac- turing firm with duties including engineering design, engineering research, and engineering sales support. Previously he was the Technologies Department Chair of Three Rivers Community College as well as Professor in Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering Technology, and an Associate
concentrations thatrequire one or more of the courses that use the simulation approach: OrganizationalManagement, Project Management, Project/Organization Management, Technical InnovationManagement, and Quality Management. The simulation approach courses are also electives forthe Master of Science in Systems Engineering.Project ManagementThe first course in which the student encounters this simulation is entitled Introduction to ProjectManagement. In this course, the students learn about planning, organizing, and monitoring aproject. The scenarios involve the sequences of activities involved in bringing a new project intoAVI. Each student takes on the role of the manager of this new project and learns about all theactivities and interactions with others
in your applicationmaterials and/or recommendation letters include: Research experience (volunteer or paid work in a lab; independent study with a faculty; extensive research or design projects completed as part of coursework; research or problem solving skills developed through internships or work experience) Industry experience (volunteer or paid internships; opportunities to solve problems, test equipment, investigate materials, give presentations, work in a team, etc.) Leadership experience (serving as an officer in student organizations; organizing an event or activity; leading a research or project team, etc.) Teamwork skills (working effectively with others to solve problems or complete
from each subject, Technology,Communications, and English, collaborate and weave the curricula together to form thoseexplicit connections. An example of this collaboration is a final project that is developed acrossall three disciplines and presented as a culmination of their work in all three courses.The purpose of this paper is to explore research methods and assess the validity of using theEngineering Design Process Portfolio Scoring Rubric (EDPPSR) to analyze students’ finaldesign journals in both integrated and non-integrated sections. This Rubric is intended tomeasure students’ abilities to document their design processes. For this paper, multipleresearchers evaluated artifacts using the EDPPSR evaluation rubric. This pilot study will
TaskForce Engineer-Leaders Project. The Project concerns the deliberate advancement of professionalgraduate engineering education relevant to the needs of creative engineering practice in industry toenhance U.S. technological innovation and competitiveness. The strength of the innovation and leadershipcapacity of America’s professional engineering base in our civilian, aerospace, and defense industries is acritical asset in our global economic recovery. As with other learned professions, there are progressiveskill sets and actions that must be learned or developed at the advanced levels of the practice ofengineering. This series of papers addresses the skills continuum in three main parts: a) Part I addressesthe Direct Leadership Skills and Actions
University. The University of East Anglia has been delivering a ‘Rotation PhD’in which students visit different labs in 10-week long research mini-projects, directed bydifferent supervisors and trained in different techniques. The ‘Integrated PhD’ at theUniversity of Southampton has offered 3 laboratory rotation projects after which the studentis awarded an MRes (Master of Research) and they then spend 3 more years deepening theirexpertise towards a PhD degree. These approaches have been successful over the years anddemonstrate an appetite for very varied, skills-training focused programs that provide theresearcher with broader knowledge and varied competencies that prepare them foremployment. However, these programs are typically found in
Engineering and Technology at Western Carolina University in Cullowhee, North Carolina. He holds a B.S. and an M.S. from Appalachian State University, and earned his doctorate from Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. His areas of interests include fluid power, advanced machining, prototyping systems, and applied research.Michael Clare, Western Carolina University Michael Clare is a graduate student of Engineering Technology at Western Carolina University pursing a Masters of Science in Technology. He earned his B.S at Western Carolina University in 2004 and, at the time of this project, Mr. Clare was a senior in the Engineering Technology program.Chip Ferguson, Western Carolina
-based algorithms, have had some success with this problem. The use ofHigher Order Statistics (HOS), more specifically PSD and auto-correlation functions,were used for statistical signal processing [3]. Data analysis could also be accomplishedusing the Weighted Fourier Linear Combiner (WFLC), which is based on the FourierLinear Combiner (FLC) [6]. The WFLC has the capability to extend the FLC to the caseof an unknown fundamental frequency; essentially, the WFLC can essentially track thefrequency and amplitude modulation of a time varying input signal [7].This paper reports the progress of a graduate research project on human hand tremordetection and analysis. This project has two major aspects: hardware and software. Thehardware was used to
University. He has developed and implemented mobile learning solution with iPad, eBooks and educational apps for the MID program – first of its kind at Texas A&M University for working professionals in distance education graduate program. He has more than 20 years of experience in teaching, applied research, academic program management and business development. For more than 15 years he has worked with the Global Supply Chain Lab- oratory at Texas A&M University on applied industry consulting projects, consortia and professional development programs for more than 100 industrial manufacturers and distributors. He has published in academic journals and industry publications. His research areas include distribution
needed for a new type of professionally oriented engineeringgraduate education that is combined with engineering practice and is designed for practicingengineers in industry and government service to spur innovation at the professional master ofengineering level, the professional doctoral level, and beyond to the highest levels of engineeringpractice. But these changes won’t occur by themselves without vision, commitment, leadership,and resolve.Today, professional engineering education for working professionals must correlate with themodern practice of engineering including growth from project levels, technical program levels,through policy levels. As such, professional education for the practice of engineering is quitedifferent from traditional
interms of, 1) needs and justification, 2) planning process, 3) program description and objectives,4) curriculum, 5) implementation issues related to faculty, students, and resources, and 6)examples of MSV related industry projects. The description also includes the process, startingfrom a concept paper development through approval of the program by the State Commission ofHigher Education.IntroductionAdvanced modeling, simulation, and visualization technologies provide an innovative way forhumans to learn and understand extremely sophisticated concepts and problem solving skills aswell as effectively design and optimize complex systems and processes. Through visualizing,manipulating, and interacting with computer-generated simulations and models
Paper ID #6942PERFORMANCE-CENTERED ADAPTIVE CURRICULUM FOR EMPLOY-MENT NEEDSProf. Clara P´erez-Molina, DIEEC - National Distance Education University Clara P´erez Molina received her MSc degree in Physics from the Complutense University in Madrid and her PhD in Industrial Engineering from the National Distance Education University (UNED). She has worked as researcher in several national and European projects and has published different technical reports and research articles for journals and conferences, as well as teaching books. She has received the UNED’s Social Council Award for the best Didactic Materials in
the bridge program in the comingyear as effective as possible, the project team interviewed current engineering graduate studentsat Purdue whose undergraduate degree is from an MSI or other relatively small school, to learnwhat challenges they faced when making the transition from a small, minority-serving institutionto a large, majority institution.During conversations with faculty members at MSIs and with URM students participating in thefirst year of the summer undergraduate research program, it became clear that the end of thejunior year was too late to introduce students to the idea of pursuing a graduate degree andfaculty career in engineering. By that time, most of the top students had already participated incorporate internships or
Graduate Education and Research Traineeship Program (IGERT) to be a catalystin educating future research engineers with the skills needed in an interdisciplinarybackground14. In one IGERT program, an engineering doctoral student is paired with a master’sof business administration student and two law students to study the commercialization potential,technology transfer, legal protecting and marketing issues of the engineering doctoral students’ Page 25.860.2research project. This program creates a greater awareness of the value of engineering students’research, develops their understanding of how to sell research ideas to industry, and
thiscontext can be effectively implemented, managed, and evaluated. Exploratory studies of theseissues at the graduate level in engineering and science disciplines will facilitate teaming andtraining strategies so future practitioners and researchers are prepared to operate effectively inhigh-performing cross-disciplinary teams.II. Literature ReviewA. Attributes and Definitions of Effective TeamsAccording to Katzenbach and Smith5, ill-structured problems require strong teams ofinterdependent collaborators. The idea of a team extends beyond a group of people who happento be working on the same project, emphasizing the importance of shared commitment andpurpose with performance goals to which they hold themselves and each other accountable.Similarly
. & Prod. in Ind. & Tech. (IT 508) and Adv. Quality Eng. Methods. • Less emphasis on qualitative methods, despite the fact that the degree is an interdisciplinary degree with students coming from a diverse background and career. • Unfamiliarity of a majority of students with the resources available to help them with their directed MS project, how to prepare the final report, and as such (a similar concern is mentioned in [1]). This is in particular, important since the majority of students are non-traditional (e.g., part-time students) who may have been out of academia for a number of years and therefore, they are not familiar with the expectations and degree requirements they need to be
unique contributions to society and their current and future professions. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2020 Novel Courses for the Professional Development of Graduate Students: Results and ReflectionAbstractThe Paul-Elder model of critical thinking has been adopted as the pedagogical framework fortwo, one-credit graduate courses for engineering (STEM) graduate students at the University ofSouth Carolina. The courses aimed at explicit instruction in development of critical reading andwriting skills. Course 1 is for new graduate students who need to develop an understanding ofthe literature for their research projects. This course focuses on finding, assessing
the areas of science, engineering technology andmanagement of technology with an opportunity to join an innovative Professional ScienceMaster’s (PSM) Degree program in “Advanced Engineering Technologies-Plus” designed toaddress current industrial needs. This high quality application oriented program will require atotal of 30 credit hours divided into four categories: 1) Core courses, 2) Major required courses,3) General elective courses and (4) Thesis or a project. The core courses are tailored to broadenthe students’ technical entrepreneurialship prospective and require a minimum of nine credithours in the areas of total quality management, financial engineering and technical/ legalcommunication with Technology Transfer applications. New and
graduate student in Engineering because of her research work. Her Research work is related to last year internship in Northrop Grumman Ship Systems in Ocean Springs, MS. During that time, Yamilka was a link in a pilot project between the university and the company in where she apply what she learned in class and research at MSU, to the real shipboard power systems problems in the company. Her work is going to continue this summer, when she goes back to Northrop Grumman for second consecutive year as a summer intern. She is an active student in research, courses and extracurricular activities, especially sports. Some research interests include control techniques and the application in power systems
AC 2007-41: THE ENGINEERING INSTITUTE: A COLLABORATIVEGRADUATE EDUCATION AND RESEARCH PROGRAMCharles Farrar, Los Alamos National Laboratory Chuck Farrar has 25 years experience as a technical staff member, project leader, and team leader at Los Alamos National Laboratory. While at Los Alamos, he earned a Ph. D. in civil engineering from the University of New Mexico in 1988. He is currently working jointly with engineering faculty at University of California, San Diego to develop the Los Alamos/UCSD Engineering Institute with a research focus on Damage Prognosis. This initiative is also developing a formal, degree-granting educational program in the closely related areas of validated
“design under constraint”. And, in this creative process, as Simon Ramo notes, engineers use the ‘systems approach’. 12 In essence, the engineering ethic and mission for purposeful innovation and improvement of the human condition in bringing about effective solutions through planned, creative problem-solving and responsible leadership in deliberately conceptualizing, developing and innovating new and improved technology as solutions to real-world, meaningful needs of people and industry is the driving force of the creative practice of engineering for technology innovation. Basic research is often used to gain a better understanding of phenomena involved in the engineering project, but contrary to conventional wisdom, basic
ofgraduate-level engineering research [1, 2]. The overall hypothesis of this effort is that the two-course sequence we will describe, which utilizes the Richard Paul/Linda Elder framework of CT[3], will effectively and consistently facilitate students’ acquisition of information literacy andwriting skills, and speed the development of intellectual independence.The two courses are designed for just-in-time intervention to graduate students at key juncturesin their programs of study. The first course is for new graduate students who have selected aresearch project and who are expected to begin developing breadth and depth of understandingthereof. Course 1 focuses on information literacy: finding, assessing, and critically reading theresearch
AC 2012-3934: USING PEER TEACHING OBSERVATIONS TO GIVE FEED-BACK TO GRADUATE TEACHING INSTRUCTORSMs. Mary Lynn Brannon, Pennsylvania State University, University Park Mary Lynn Brannon is an Instructional Support Specialist and instructor of the Graduate Teaching Assis- tants Seminar at the Leonhard Center for the Enhancement of Engineering Education, College of Engi- neering, Penn State University. She has a master’s of arts degree in education and human development specializing in educational technology leadership. Her work focuses on projects that measure and assess student perceptions of learning related to their experiences with engineering course innovations. She has worked extensively in the design of
students (in many cases over 50%) from all areas of the globe. Becausethese classes involve considerable student discussion and participation, and most of the studentsfeel very comfortable with the professors, we had, and continue to have, an excellent opportunityto learn, discuss, and teach some of these differing attitudes and perspectives. The subject matterof these two classes lends itself very well to studies of this type.MethodologyRather than simply observing cultural differences and trying to avoid offence, the authorsdecided to structure our graduate classes in Project Management and Engineering Ethics toincrease the learning opportunities for our students (and us, too). To formalize this process, wedesigned relevant class discussions
done by graduate studentsis supervised by faculty who may not have strong mentoring skills in technical writing, thesestudents often struggle to communicate their graduate research in an effective manner. As aresult, some supervisors experience more challenges guiding the writing process than theresearch. At degree completion, these MS in CM students frequently produce satisfactoryresearch but still have poorly crafted writing for the publication submission required by the finalcapstone project. Because of the writing challenges, some have failed to complete the degreealtogether.This paper presents a brief summary of the literature describing university experiences andresponses to the limited preparation of graduate students for scholarly
globalizing profession, the challenges facingengineers in a developing country, the development of professional “soft skill” learningoutcomes not easily taught in traditional classrooms and to get first-hand experience inwhat engineering is ultimately about: building things that make people’s lives better.Components of the program include service learning project development, managementand installation and the development of leadership, teaming and communication skills setwithin a developing country - Peru. The service learning component was the installationof 18 solar panels in three remote Peruvian Amazon villages. The service part of thegraduate course, built upon previously established UA-Peru connections, involved theconception, planning and