during thesemester been asked to work in teams either on a project or a laboratory, research or learn somematerial on their own, and communicate findings in writing and/or orally. Students had beengiven formative feedback on these tasks, and neither instructors nor students felt they were ill-prepared to tackle the final exam task.Overall, instructors were pleased with the lower stress level of the students going into this typeof final, as well as the energy, excitement, and collaboration in the classroom. One instructorstates:I have never seen so much focus and energy in the classroom. It was wonderful. It truly was acelebration of learning. It was rewarding to see the students work together and help one another.Also, instructors took joy in
tackled were data aggregation/fusion, distributed consen- sus, power control, scheduling and synchronization in wireless ad hoc networks, intrusion detection in a large scale wireless sensor network with Random Linear Network Coding (RLNC), and coordinated probabilistic map construction by the mobile robotic sensor network (a multi-agent system) such as a group of UAVs. Dr. Chen obtained his PhD from School of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Purdue University, USA. Prior to his PhD study, he was with Chunghwa Telecom Laboratories, CHTL, Taiwan. He is a 3GPP regular meeting delegate by the collaboration with ITRI, Taiwan.Prof. Edward J. Coyle, Georgia Institute of Technology Edward J. Coyle is the John B. Peatman