actual events or situations. This work explores the impact ofthe use of case studies in an environmental engineering laboratory, introductory engineeringcourse, introductory biology seminar course, and upper level biology course. Motivations forimplementing the cases include determining how case studies teaching impacts students’ abilityto carry out a scientific investigation (from hypothesis to data analysis to discussion of results)and if the results correlate to students’ learning style preferences. This work is part of acontinuing funded investigation of the use of case studies with the potential to contribute to thebody of knowledge related to the use of learning styles assessments in educational practiceacross a variety of disciplines. The
Paper ID #18230Using Nursing Theory to Improve the Teaching of Engineering PracticeDr. Daniel B. Oerther, Missouri University of Science & Technology Professor Daniel B. Oerther, PhD, PE, BCEE, CEng, F.AAN joined the faculty of the Missouri University of Science and Technology in 2010 after ten years on the faculty of the University of Cincinnati where he served as Head of the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering. Since 2014, he has concur- rently served as a Senior Policy Advisor to the U.S. Secretary of State in the areas of environment, science, technology, and health (ESTH). Oerther earned his B.A
teaching for electricalengineering students such as Digital Circuits, Analog Circuits, Electronics, and Introduction toCircuits. eIt is extremely challenging for any course instructor to cover such a diverse topic, engage withstudents, and provide hands-on laboratory experience at the same time. Like many universities,students evaluate the instructor at the end of the semester. Some of the student comments frommy first-time teaching were, “the course being fast pace,” “difficult to understand” and “toomuch math and very few labs.” They also mentioned that they were constantly being rushed tofinish the lab experiment on time. Overall, student feedback clearly showed that students did nothave a positive experience from the only electrical
at Harvard Medical School where he was listed as a Research Associate in its Renal division.Dr. Tariq Akmal, Washington State University Tariq Akmal is currently the Chair of the Department of Teaching & Learning at Washington State Uni- versity. He has collaborated with engineering scholars on numerous projects, providing expertise in cur- riculum and instruction, learning, and K-12 schools.Dr. Ryan Anderson, Montana State UniversityDr. Phillip Himmer, Montanta State University, ECE Dept., Montana Microfabrication Facility Phillip Himmer received his B.S. in Physics at Washington State University and M.S. in physics at Mon- tana State University. He obtained his PhD in engineering at Montana State University in
Paper ID #17826EE and ME – Together Again: Forging a BSE from BSEE and BSME Pro-gramsDr. Dennis A. Silage, Temple University Dennis Silage received the PhD in EE from the University of Pennsylvania. He is a Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Temple University, teaches digital data communication, digital signal and image processing and embedded processing systems. He is also the Director of the Interdisciplinary Engineering program in the College of Engineering. Dr. Silage is past chair of the Electrical and Computer Engineering Division of ASEE, recipient of the 2007 ASEE National Outstanding Teaching
Paper ID #20401Learning from Engineering Disasters: A Multidisciplinary Online CourseDr. Gary P. Halada, Stony Brook University Dr. Halada, Associate Professor in Materials Science and Engineering at Stony Brook University, directs an interdisciplinary undergraduate degree program in Engineering Science. He designs educational ma- terials focused on nanotechnology, advanced manufacturing, and how engineers learn from engineering disasters and how failure and risk analysis can be used to teach about ethics and societal implications of emerging technologies. Halada also coordinates the Long Island Alternative Energy
/social interfaces, combined sewer overflows, and improved communication and education of engineering concepts. Prior to arriving at Merrimack College in 2015 Dr. Carlson’s most recent teaching experience was as assistant professor of environmental science at New England College, and instructor of the professional engineer licensing test review class for the American Society of Civil Engineers.Dr. Anne Pfitzner Gatling, Merrimack College I taught for 10 years as an elementary teacher in Alaska. I won the Presidential Award for Science Teaching and was an Einstein Fellow in Senator Lieberman’s office where I worked on the teacher quality portion of the Higher Education Reauthorization. I have been the co-director of the
play akey role in the curriculum. Furthermore, it is important to link the curriculum to research andscholarship in engineering and applied science education to foster the use of the best pedagogicalpractices and to create visibility for the curriculum model. Over the last several years, a few institutions in the country have established separateDepartments of Engineering Education to spearhead innovative teaching practices and conductresearch in engineering education. However, a separate Department of Engineering Educationcan become yet another “silo” within the engineering college with its own values that do notpermeate into disciplinary departments. Faculty in this separate department can be viewed as“second class citizens” by faculty
graduating, Caleb joined the United States Marine Corps and served as a Reconnaissance Ma- rine at 3rd Reconnaissance Battallion in Okinawa, Japan from 2006 to 2010. Following his enlistment in the Marine Corps, he worked as a weapons and tactics instructor for M¨obius Industries, in Okinawa, teach- ing Marines and sailors prior to unit deployments. Caleb and his family returned to the United States in January of 2015, when he enrolled at The University of Texas at Tyler and declared mechanical engineer- ing as his major. Currently, he works as a tutor in the University tutoring center for Several engineering courses and is also an undergraduate research assistant in the Mechanical Engineering department.Dr. Chung-Hyun Goh
solutions. This process ensures that students take ownership of their project as anengaged team. It allows students to strengthen their problem-solving and collaboration skills.The interdisciplinary teaching team models the teamwork skills the students are learning. Theaim is to promote interdisciplinary learning, foster teamwork, and improve student engagement.Other course objectives are to develop students’ creative problem solving, empathetic designpractices, communication skills, prototyping skills, and ethical reasoning. Students are expectedto become proficient at the empathetic design process as well as interdisciplinary communicationand teamwork. Creative problem solving, ethical reasoning, and realization of a product throughprototyping
affiliated with CAMRA as a principal investigator. Her lab conducts both computational risk modeling research and fundamental research. Her current work and future interests lie at the intersection of chemical and microbial stressors where under- standing trade-offs, benefits and risks deviate from existing risk paradigms and require new data, tools and frameworks. Her future research goals include applications of risk-based decision making to water infrastructure management, and emerging hazards such as antibiotic resistance. She is managing editor and a developer of the QMRAwiki, an interactive, online tool for the QMRA community. Dr. Mitchell has also been involved in developing and teaching training workshops in QMRA
. She has been teaching robotics with Lego Mindstorm to ME freshmen for several years. She is actively involved in community services of offering robotics workshops to middle- and high-school girls. Her research interests are dynamics and system modeling, geometry modeling, project based engineering design, and robotics in manufacturing. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2017 Different Lab Formats in Introduction to Engineering CourseAbstractMany incoming freshmen are ambiguous about which engineering major they are interested in.Exposing them to different engineering labs in freshman year will help them have a clearunderstanding about different majors.The objective of this
advancing semiconductor technology and the 2007 Sevin Rosen Funds Award for Innovation. He is currently an Associate Professor in the department of Electrical Engineering at the University of Hawaii at Manoa, where he develops microsensors, microactuators, and technologies for rapid prototyping, visualization, renewable energies and sustainability. He received the 2016 UH Re- gents Award for Excellence in Teaching and 2014 Frances Davis Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching.Dr. Jay GeorgeProf. Brian E. Gilchrist, University of Michigan Faculty Co-Director, Multidisciplinary Design Programs (MDP), College of Engineering; Director, XTRM Labs/Space Physics Research Laboratory, College of Engineering; Professor
University (ISU) from 1996 to 1997. He is currently professor of Mechanical Engineering at Texas A&M University-Kingsville. Dr. Ozcelik’s teaching and research interests are in the fields of systems theory and controls, robust and adaptive control, robotics, mobile robots, UAVs, intelligent control.Mr. John Austin McCoy, Texas A&M University, Kingsville Mr. John Austin McCoy is the Director of the Javelina Engineering Student Success Center at Texas A&M University-Kingsville. He has over 8 years experience in student services to include academic advising, undergraduate degree audits, and scholarship coordination. Mr. McCoy serves on multiple student success committees and works with other grants. Address
Paper ID #19838Benefits for Undergraduates from Engagement in an Interdisciplinary Envi-ronmental Monitoring Research and Education LabDebarati Basu, Virginia Tech Ms. Debarati Basu is a PhD candidate in Engineering Education at Virginia Tech (VT), advised by Dr. Vinod K. Lohani and working in the Learning Enhanced Watershed Assessment System (LEWAS) lab. She holds BS and MS in Computer Science and Engineering. For her dissertation, she is interested in understanding students’ learning and engagement within a cyberlearning system. She has three years of experiences in teaching problem solving and design process to