independently and collaboratively within a team; 5) recognize the different and sometimescontradictory issues related to a research question. Through participation in cutting-edge researchwith faculty mentors working at the forefront of their respective disciplines, students will engagein complex scientific studies on sustainable energy research topics.Reference:[1] Lund, P.D., Fast Market Penetration of Energy Technologies in Retrospect with Application to Clean EnergyFutures. Applied Energy, 2010. 87: p. 3575-3583.[2] Brown, M.A., Levine, M. D., Short, W., and Koomy, J.G., cenarios for a clean energy future. Energy Policy,2001. 29: p. 1179-1196.[3] Change, I.P.o.C., Climate Change 2007: The Physical Science Basis.Contribution of Working Group I to
AC 2007-390: BOUTIQUE ENGINEERING: STUDENT LEARNING IN AMULTIDISCIPLINARY ENGINEERING CONCEPTS AND METHODS COURSEJames Sweeney, Florida Gulf Coast University JAMES D. SWEENEY is Professor and Chair of the Department of Bioengineering at Florida Gulf Coast University. He received his Ph.D. and M.S. degrees in Biomedical Engineering from Case Western Reserve University in 1988 and 1983, respectively, and his Sc.B. Engineering degree (Biomedical Engineering) from Brown University in 1979. He is a Senior Member of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Fellow of the American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering, and is an ABET Program Evaluator.Diane Bondehagen, Florida Gulf
AC 2011-2444: A MULTIDISCIPLINARY SENIOR DESIGN PROJECT -REDSIGNED TO INCREASE INTERDISCIPLINARY INTERACTIONSteven G Northrup, Western New England College Steven G. Northrup is an Associate Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Western New England College in Springfield, MA. His research interests are: systems engineering and control systems in alternative energy power production, embedded control systems, humanoid and mobile robotics, and pedagogy of multidisciplinary teamwork. He has worked on alternative energy systems in Guatemala and the US and worked in automotive electronics design for several years
AC 2007-2773: IDENTIFYING THE CONTENT OF A GENERAL ENGINEERINGPROGRAM USING BENCHMARKING AND THE FUNDAMENTALS OFENGINEERING EXAMINATIONStephanie Sullivan, East Carolina University Stephanie Sullivan is a Visiting Instructor in the Department of Engineering at East Carolina University. Sullivan has fourteen years of industrial experience in project engineering, quality operations, and operations planning roles. She received her B.S. in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Notre Dame and her M.S. in Chemical Engineering from North Carolina State University. Sullivan has earned the American Production & Inventory Control Society (APICS) Certification in Production and Inventory
AC 2010-1741: EXAMINING STUDENTS’ PERCEPTIONS OFINTERDISCIPLINARITY BASED ON GENDER AND DISCIPLINARYAFFILIATIONAlexandra Coso, University of Virginia ALEXANDRA COSO is a graduate student pursuing an M.S. in Systems Engineering at the University of Virginia. She received her B.S. in Aerospace Engineering from MIT. Her current research focuses on interdisciplinary engineering education and students' perceptions of the different dimensions of interdisciplinary engineering projects.Reid Bailey, University of Virginia REID BAILEY is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Systems and Information Engineering at the University of Virginia. His research interests focus on studying how students
AC 2011-183: TEACHING ENGINEERING ANALYSIS THROUGH A STAND-ALONE JUNIOR PROJECT COURSE IN A MULTIDISCIPLINARY, PROJECT-BASED ENGINEERING PROGRAMPavlos George Mikellides, Arizona State UniversityChen-Yuan Kuo, Arizona State University, Polytechnic campus Page 22.1389.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2011 Teaching Engineering Analysis Through a Stand-Alone Junior Project Course in a Multidisciplinary, Project-Based Engineering Program Abstract Project-based learning (PBL) follows an inductive learning approach by which students are taughtto undertake a
AC 2011-994: WORKING AS A TEAM: ENHANCING INTERDISCIPLINAR-ITY FOR THE ENGINEER OF 2020Lisa R. Lattuca, Pennsylvania State University, University ParkLois Calian Trautvetter, Northwestern University Lois Calian Trautvetter Assistant Professor of Education and Director, Higher Education Administration and Policy Program, Northwestern University, l-trautvetter@northwestern.edu Dr. Trautvetter studies faculty development and productivity issues, including those that enhance teaching and research, motivation, and new and junior faculty development. She also studies gender issues in the STEM disciplines.David B Knight, Pennsylvania State University, University Park David Knight is a PhD candidate in the Higher
. In 2009, he began his M.B.A. at Michigan Technological University finishing in summer 2010. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2018 Growing Entrepreneurial Mindset in Interdisciplinary Student Engineers: Experiences of a Project-Based Engineering ProgramAbstractEngineering education models have recently embraced the entrepreneurial mindset as a desiredoutcome of undergraduate engineering education. Interdisciplinary active learning strategies havebeen suggested as an effective pedagogy for engaging student engineers in undergraduateengineering education. Recent research suggests that active, social learning in context can lead toimprovements in learner innovation, problem-solving
://www.wpi.edu/academics/ugradstudies/project-learning.html15. WPI: Undergraduate Catalog, IQP. http://www.wpi.edu/Images/CMS/IGS/IQP-Handbook-one-file.pdf and https://www.wpi.edu/academics/igsd/iqp.html16. WPI: Engineering Science, Undergraduate Catalog, pages 73-74. http://www.wpi.edu/Images/CMS/Pubs- Catalogs-Ugrad/UGCat14-15FinalWEB.pdf17. INCOSE: http://www.incose.org/AboutSE/WhatIsSE18. Fraser, J. Gosavi, A. “What is Systems Engineering”, ASEE Ann. Conference, AC 2010-267 (2010) available here: http://web.mst.edu/~gosavia/fraser_gosavi.pdf
AC 2012-4447: USING MINI-PROJECTS TO FOSTER STUDENT COL-LABORATION IN MULTI-DISCIPLINARY CAPSTONE DESIGN COURSEProf. Richard S. Stansbury, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, Daytona Beach Richard S. Stansbury is an Associate Professor of computer engineering and computer science in the Department of Electrical, Computer, Software, and Systems Engineering at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, Daytona Beach, Fla. He teaches courses in artificial intelligence, data structures and algo- rithms, and the capstone senior design course. His research interests include unmanned aircraft, mobile robotics, and applied artificial intelligence.Dr. William C. Barott, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, Daytona BeachDr. Salamah
AC 2010-475: DEVELOPMENT AND IMPLEMENTATION OF ANINTRODUCTION TO STEM COURSE FOR DUAL-ENROLLMENT PROGRAMSHoracio Vasquez, University of Texas, Pan American Dr. Horacio Vasquez is an Assistant Professor in the Mechanical Engineering Department at the University of Texas-Pan American (UTPA), in Edinburg, Texas. His current research interests are in the areas of control systems, mechatronics, measurements and instrumentation, and engineering education.Arturo Fuentes, University of Texas, Pan American Dr. Arturo Fuentes is an Associate Professor in the Mechanical Engineering Department at UTPA. His current research interests are in the areas of engineering education, finite element
AC 2011-1411: ”THE ENGINEER AS LEADER” COURSE DESIGN ANDASSESSMENTDr. Don E. Malzahn, Wichita State UniversityLawrence E. Whitman, Wichita State University Lawrence E. Whitman is the Director of Engineering Education for the College of Engineering and an Associate Professor of Industrial & Manufacturing Engineering at Wichita State University. He received B.S. and M.S. degrees from Oklahoma State University. His Ph.D. from The University of Texas at Arlington is in Industrial Engineering. He also has 10 years experience in the aerospace industry. His research interests are in enterprise engineering, engineering education and lean manufacturing.Zulma Toro-Ramos, Wichita State University Zulma Toro-Ramos serves as
AC 2011-23: AN MULTIDISCIPLINARY ENERGY BASED CURRICULUMC.S. Chen, Miami University Dr. C.S.Chen is a professor and founding chair of electrical and computer engineering (ECE) depart- ment at Miami University (Ohio). He was the electrical engineering department head and the interim engineering dean at the University of AkronSteven Elliott, Miami University Dept. of Economics Dr. Steven Elliott is an Associate Professor in the Department of Economics at Miami University. He has been a research associate at Oak Ridge National Laboratory before entering academics. His professional interests include energy and environmental economics and behavioral economics.Mark Boardman, Miami University
electroosmosis isequation; the Hemoltz-Schmulowski, Henry, and Huckel equations; decoupling electrophoreticmobility and hydrodynamic fluxes; and the principle of electroosmotic microfluidic pumping.“Lecture 3: Dielectrophoresis” expanded this focus with particle assembly and crystallizationunder AC electric fields, the advantages of AC over DC electric fields, the Clausius-Mossottiequation for dielectrophoretic force, and particle chaining force. Finally, the fourth lecture,“Electrokinetics in Microfluidics”, provided a comparison of electroosmotic microfluidicpumping with pumping and valving by MEMS and pumping by passive valves. It also includedon-chip function of electrophoretic separations in microchannels.Laboratory Module IV: Effect of Ionic
AC 2009-2414: DEVELOPMENT AND IMPLEMENTATION OF PBL AND OTHERINDUCTIVE PEDAGOGIES IN ENGINEERING SCIENCE: WORK IN PROGRESSJosef Rojter, Victoria University of Technology The author has an academic background in chemical and materials engineering at bachelor and master level and a doctorate in engineering education.He teaches primarily in areas of materials, manufacturing and process technology and is an active member at University's centre for innovation and sustainability. Page 14.466.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2009 Development of Problem-Based Learning (PBL) and Other
AC 2008-416: BUILDING A NEW KIND OF ENGINEERING DEGREE AT JAMESMADISON UNIVERSITYRonald Kander, James Madison University Dr. Ronald Kander is Director of the School of Engineering at James Madison University (JMU), where he teaches and does research in the area of polymer processing, manufacturability, and rapid prototyping/tooling technologies. He received a BS in Chemical Engineering from Carnegie-Mellon University in 1980, and a PhD in Chemical Engineering from the University of Delaware in 1987. Before becoming Director of the School of Engineering at JMU, Dr. Kander was Department Head of Integrated Science and Technology, and before that was a faculty member in the
AC 2007-3068: DEVELOPING ENGINEERING CURRICULUM IN ANINTEGRATED KNOWLEDGE ENVIRONMENTJosef Rojter, Victoria University of Tech. Page 12.495.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2007 Developing Engineering Curriculum in an Integrated Knowledge EnvironmentAbstractUnlike curricula in professional courses such as medicine and law which are focused onspecific discourses such as health and justice respectively, engineering curricula at Australianuniversities lack, by and large, a unifying ideology. In general schools and faculties ofengineering at Australian universities have failed to address this issue and resisted calls forchange in professional engineering
AC 2011-2068: GLOBAL INITIATIVES: SHAPING THE CURRICULARAND CO-CURRICULAR LANDSCAPE AND ITS IMPACT ON STUDENTDEVELOPMENTBarbara A Masi, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Barbara A. Masi Ph.D. is the Director of Education Innovation and Assessment in the MIT School of Engineering. Page 22.750.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2011 Global Initiatives: Shaping the curricular and co-curricular landscape and its impact on student developmentAbstract This study examined the impact of global initiative campus programs as an integrative learningexperience and its impact
Feedback Control System labs (ME 376/ECE 382) (ECE 308) ME students EE students Mechanical Vibration Digital Control System (ME 457) (ECE 483) Figure 1 Flowchart of the related courses.As shown in Figure 1, engineering students in Circuit Analysis I (ECE 201) gain the knowledgeof circuit analysis in time-domain including AC analysis. Electronic Measurement Techniques(ECE 208) is the circuit laboratory course in which students acquire hands-on skills in usingelectronic measurement equipment
AC 2012-5475: DEVELOPMENT OF AN INTEGRATIVE BIOMECHAN-ICS COURSE FOR STEM MAJORSDr. Yogendra M. Panta, Youngstown State University Yogen Panta is an Assistant Professor of mechanical rngineering at Youngstown State University, Ohio. He has been teaching and developing courses and research projects in the fluid thermal area. He is cur- rently conducting applied research in thermo-fluids and computational fluid dynamics with local indus- tries and federal agencies. Panta received a B.E. degree from Tribhuvan University, an M.S. degree from Youngstown State University, and a Ph.D. degree from the University of Nevada Las Vegas. Panta’s re- search interests are in fluid dynamics, computational fluid dynamics (CFD
AC 2012-4071: A MULTIDISCIPLINARY POWER AND ENERGY ENGI-NEERING PROGRAMDr. Lawrence Holloway, University of Kentucky Lawrence Holloway is TVA Professor and Chair, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, and Director, Power and Energy Institute of Kentucky.Prof. Yang-Tse Cheng, University of KentuckyDr. Donald Colliver P.E., University of Kentucky Donald Colliver is a professor in the Biosystems and Agricultural Engineering Department and Associate Director of the Power and Energy Institute of Kentucky, University of Kentucky.Aaron CramerDr. Paul A. Dolloff, University of Kentucky Paul Dolloff is an Electrical Engineer in the Research and Development Department at East Kentucky Power Cooperative. Dolloff
AC 2012-5418: AN ADVENTURE IN EXTREME CURRICULUM INTE-GRATION TO STIMULATE INNOVATION AND COLLABORATIONDr. Ronald G. Kander, Philadelphia University Ronald G. Kander is Executive Dean of the College of Design, Engineering, and Commerce at Philadel- phia University. His current teaching and research interests are in the areas of design processes, materi- als selection, engineering education, and composites. He received a B.S. in chemical engineering from Carnegie Mellon University in 1980 and a Ph.D. in chemical engineering from the University of Delaware in 1987. Before becoming Executive Dean at Philadelphia University in 2011, Kander was Director of the School of Engineering at James Madison University (JMU
AC 2011-2472: MAKING A COLLEGE-LEVEL MULTIDISCIPLINARYDESIGN PROGRAM EFFECTIVE AND UNDERSTANDING THE OUT-COMESShanna R. Daly, University of Michigan Shanna Daly is an Assistant Research Scientist in the College of Engineering and the Design Science Pro- gram at the University of Michigan. Her research focuses on teaching and learning design and innovation strategies in interdisciplinary contexts.A. Harvey Bell, University of Michigan . Harvey Bell, IV was appointed Professor of Engineering Practice and Co-Director of the Multidisci- plinary Design Program on September 1, 2010 after a 39 year career in the automotive industry with General Motors. During his career with General Motors some of his significant positions
AC 2011-2442: ENHANCED AIRPORT MANAGEMENT INFORMATIONSYSTEM FOR SMALL AND MEDIUM-SIZED AIRPORTS: A SYSTEMSENGINEERING CAPSTONE DESIGN EXPERIENCERadu F. Babiceanu, University of Arkansas at Little Rock Radu F. Babiceanu received the Ph.D. degree in Industrial and Systems Engineering from Virginia Tech in 2005, specializing in modeling and analysis of intelligent manufacturing and service industries systems. Dr. Babiceanu also holds a M.S. degree in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Toledo, Ohio, and a B.S. degree in Manufacturing Engineering from the Polytechnic University of Bucharest, Romania. Currently, he is an Assistant Professor of Systems Engineering with the University of Arkansas at Little Rock
AC 2011-2669: FOSTERING SYSTEMS ENGINEERING EDUCATION THROUGHINTERDISCIPLINARY PROGRAMS AND GRADUATE CAPSTONE PROJECTSDavid R Jacques, Air Force Institute of Technology Associate Professor and Chair, Systems Engineering Programs at the Air Force Institute of Technology.John M Colombi, Air Force Institute of Technology John Colombi, Ph.D. is an Assistant Professor of Systems Engineering, Faculty Scholar-in-Residence for the Air Force Center for Systems Engineering and Chair of the Operational Technology Program at the Air Force Institute of Technology. He teaches and leads sponsored research in systems engineering, human systems integration, architectural analysis and enterprise/ software services. Retiring after 21
AC 2011-2339: A CASE STUDY: EDUCATING TRANSPORTATION EN-GINEERS WITH SIMULATION SOFTWAREBrittany Lynn Luken, Georgia Institute of Technology Brittany Luken is a Ph.D. candidate in the Georgia Institute of Technology’s Transportation Systems group. Brittany’s research efforts are focused on investigating customer’s online search and purchase behavior. Brittany was recently awarded a prestigious National Science Foundation (NSF) Graduate Re- search Fellowship. She is also the recipient of an Airport Cooperative Research Program (ACRP) Grad- uate Research Fellowship, Georgia Department of Transportation Scholarship and Gordon W. Schultz Graduate Fellowship.Susan L. Hotle, Georgia Institute of Technology Susan Hotle
Paper ID #29624Promoting Open-source Hardware and Software Platforms in Mechatronicsand Robotics Engineering EducationDr. Nima Lotfi, Southern Illinois University, Edwardsville Nima Lotfi received his B.S. degree in electrical engineering from Sahand University of Technology, Tabriz, Iran, in 2006, his M.S. degree in electrical engineering from Sharif University of Technology, Tehran, Iran, in 2010, and his Ph.D. degree in mechanical engineering from Missouri University of Sci- ence and Technology, Rolla, MO, USA, in 2016. He is currently an Assistant Professor with the Me- chanical Engineering Department at Southern
the Information Age.” Paper presented at the Pew Symposium in Learning and Technology, Charleston, SC, 2002.[14] N. J. Evans, D. S. Forney, F. M. Guido, L. D. Patton, & K. A. Renn, Student development in college: Theory, research, and practice (2nd Ed.). San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass, 2010.[15] O. Stankey, O. “Theory Review Part III: Schlossberg’s transition theory.” Northwest Association of College & University Housing Officers, 2018. Retrieved from http://nwacuho.org/2018/03/theory-review-part-iii-schlossbergs-transition-theory/[16] S. Brown-Schmidt & D. Heller, “Perspective-taking during conversation.” Oxford handbook of psycholinguistics, 551-574, 2018.[17] L. Bensalah, S
AC 2009-1500: TEACHING FACILITY-MANAGEMENT PRACTICES: A CASESTUDYSarel Lavy, Texas A&M University Dr. Sarel Lavy (corresponding author), Assistant Professor, Department of Construction Science, College of Architecture, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843-3137, USA, e-mail address: slavy@archmail.tamu.edu. Dr. Lavy is a faculty member in the Department of Construction Science, which is one of four departments in the College of Architecture at Texas A&M University. He also serves as the Associate Director of the CRS Center for Leadership and Management in the Design and Construction Industry. Dr. Lavy is a member of the International Facility Management
the future outside of class. To facilitate the transition from MATLAB to C, a handoutwith sample code showing the MATLAB and C equivalents is provided to students. During Week6, in addition to writing their first program in C, students also must follow a prescribed algorithm.The Brensenham’s line drawing algorithm is discussed in class without considering theimplementation in C and students are asked to understand the algorithm and to implement it in aC-program. This allows students to further hone their computation mindset by observing how acomplex procedure is decomposed and planned by another author. This also forces students tohave to implement the algorithm exactly as intended and does not leave room for any otherinterpretation. After