Paper ID #42435Applied Capstone Project for Working Professionals: A Decade of Experiencesin Design, Execution, and Creating Value for EmployersDr. Bharani Nagarathnam, Texas A&M University Dr. Bharani Nagarathnam is an Associate Professor of Instruction and Associate Director of Master of Industrial Distribution program at the Department of Engineering Technology & Industrial Distribution at Texas A&M University. He is the co-founder of the Talent Development Council that works with Distributions on Talent acquisition, management, and development practices. He teaches graduate and undergraduate courses in
experiences with the Earned Value Management(EVM) simulator, understanding the team members' roles and agile development process to gainthe PM experiences. Gilbuena et al. [10] adopt the ethnographic approach to assess how final-year undergraduate students in chemical, biological, or environmental engineering gainprofessional skills through capstone projects, and they [10] found frequent faculty feedback isessential in enhancing their activities in technical training.The majority of research on PM skills has been focused at the undergraduate level [9], [10], [11],[12]. Research on PM training at the graduate level has been limited to Master’s level education[13], [14]. For example, Do Amaral et al. [13] highlighted Project Management (PM
generation of engineers to be ethical, human-centric, collaborative, communicative, and transdisciplinary. As a graduate student she has advised international interactive qualifying projects (IQP) and a senior capstone design project (MQP). As she pursues a career in academia, Tess strives to combine her interests in medical robotics and engineering education.Dr. Ceren Yilmaz Akkaya, Worcester Polytechnic Institute Dr. Yilmaz Akkaya is a postdoctoral researcher in Nanoenergy Group under the Department of Mechanical and Materials Engineering at the Worcester Polytechnic Institute (WPI). She holds BS degrees in Chemistry and Molecular Biology and Genetics from Bogazici University. She completed her Master’s and PhD Degrees
potential vocational pathways, includinggovernment, academia, and industry.The NRT program at our university includes educational and experiential components. Thesecomponents are field experiences, policy experiences at the state capital, applied course work,interdisciplinary research, faculty and peer mentoring, professional development, and periodicassessment of these components. The NRT organized three courses: a one-credit hour cross-listed course called Integrated FEW Systems, a two-credit hour cross-listed NRT Capstone, and a0-credit NRT Seminar. In the Integrated FEW Systems course, students were introduced tosystems thinking, with specific application to the FEW nexus in South West Kansas. The NRTCapstone is a project-based course that
at Charlotte. She currently serves as the Associate Chair for Graduate Programs. Her research interest is in the field ofDr. H. P. Cherukuri, University of North Carolina, Charlotte Harish Cherukuri is the Chair and Professor of Mechanical Engineering and Engineering Science at UNC Charlotte. Dr. Cherukuri obtained his Ph.D. from the Department of Theoretical and Applied Mechanics, The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. His ©American Society for Engineering Education, 2023 Lessons Learned in Adopting a New, Patent-based Doctoral Pathway ModelAbstractThis Work in Progress paper describes the lessons learned from a new pathway for doctoralcandidates in STEM programs allowing capstone degree
to get patents done, and people are always really excited about trying to get this to commercialization.Students continue to pursue publications of their work, though the primary focus is on the patentas their capstone experience. As the feedback from one completer (above) suggests, studentsmay be involved in more than one research project with more than one leading to patentproposals.Additionally, candidates have specific opportunities to develop entrepreneurial skills such asenrollment in courses offered by the College of Business with a focus on entrepreneurship andinnovation including Entrepreneurial Decisions, Entrepreneurial Strategy, Innovation Analytics,Evaluating Entrepreneurial Opportunities, Entrepreneurial
and guiding student teams through the capstone design and a translational course following capstone design. In her Director role, she works closely with the departmental leadership to manage the undergraduate program including: developing course offering plan, chairing the undergrad- uate curriculum committee, reviewing and approving course articulations for study abroad, serving as Chief Advisor, and representing the department at the college level meetings. She is also engaged with college recruiting and outreach; she coordinates three summer experiences for high school students visit- ing Bioengineering and co-coordinates a weeklong Bioengineering summer camp. She has worked with the Cancer Scholars Program
educating and developing engineers, teachers (future faculty), and the community at all levels (k12, undergraduate, graduate, post-graduate and internationally). A few of these key areas include engineering identity and mindsets, global competencies, failure culture, first year experiences in engineering, capstone design thinking, integrating service and authentic learning into the engineering classroom, implementing new instructional methodologies, and design optimization using traditional and non-traditional manufacturing. She seeks to identify best practices and develop assessments methods that assist in optimizing computing and engineering learning. Dr. Gurganus was one the inaugural award winners of the Diane M. Lee
was developed as part of theNRT requirements in the 2019-2020 academic year and has been taught every fall semester since2019. The course objectives are to enhance graduate students’ systems thinking competency andestablish a knowledge base that students build upon through the educational and experimentalpillars of the NRT at our university. These pillars include field experiences in Southwest Kansas,policy experiences at the state capital, course work, and a subsequent 2-credit capstone, project-based course.This paper aims to describe the experience gained from the NRT Integrated FEW Systems course,which may be beneficial in the implementation of a systems thinking course at the graduate levelin other four-year institutions. The paper
US industrial PhD track v. Block grants to universities to educate STEM doctoral students beyond technical expertise vi. Celebrate alumni outside academia who are making a difference in the world vii. Centers of excellence for engaging studentsviii. Support networks for underrepresented students ix. Doctoral analog to undergraduate capstone collaboration to solve current problems x. Co-advisors / mentors from industry xi. Industry involvement in developing classes, programs xii. Refer undergraduate interns in industry to relevant graduate programs depending on their interests and skillsxiii. Engage industry researchers to teach the skillsets needed, and to establish robust mentoringxiv. Engage
presentation for their undergraduatecurriculum through junior writing, capstone, and senior design in every field. Such resources arelimited and often need to be more organized for the graduate curriculum, needing a systematicapproach to address the diverse aspects of communicating science effectively to differentaudiences. Besides, the diverse and multilingual backgrounds of graduate students should benoticed when students are expected to present and publish their work in the field. Therefore,there is a need to infuse the graduate engineering curriculum with well-designed scientificcommunication courses to ensure the productivity of students.The University of Connecticut identified this significant gap in providing structured support tothe graduate
students themselves, that impact their interdisciplinary journey anddemotivate their interdisciplinary scholarship. For example, one of the main priorities graduatestudents discussed as in conflict to their interdisciplinary scholar identity development is theexpectation to have publications in certain disciplinary-acclaimed journals and to specifically bethe first author on those publications. In 2020, Student A said, So I was thinking about the IR program, and I think it is a little bit hard to be motivated, because PhD students need to be the first author of their dissertation. And everyone is PhD student so … their priority cannot be that interdisciplinary project. And I get also faculty have similar feeling, because
Paper ID #38851Literature Exploration of Graduate Student Well-Being as Related toAdvisingDr. Liesl Klein, Villanova University Liesl Krause-Klein is a assistant teaching professor at Villanova University in their electrical and computer engineering department. She graduated from Purdue University’s Polytechnic institute in 2022. Her research focused on student well-being. She is currently in charge of curriculum for capstone projects within her department.Dr. Greg J. Strimel, Purdue University at West Lafayette (PPI) Greg J. Strimel, Ph.D., is an associate professor of Technology Leadership and Innovation and program