to teach students the basic principles ofdrone aeronautics through laboratory programming.This course was designed by professors from Vaughn College of Aeronautics andTechnology for high school students who work on after-school and weekend programs duringthe school year or summer. In early 2021, the college applied for and was approved to offer acertificate program in UAS (Unmanned Aerial Systems) Designs, Applications and Operationsto college students by the Education Department of New York State. Later that year, thecollege also received a grant from the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) to providetuition-free early higher education for high school students, allowing them to complete themajority of the credits in the UAS certificate
Paper ID #43127Board 149: Pioneering Pathways for High School Students in STEM Education(Work in Progress)Mr. Adam W Davidson, Duke University Adam is a seasoned educator and Senior Laboratory Administrator for the Electrical & Computer Engineering (ECE) department at Duke University’s Pratt School of Engineering. With a degree in Technology Education from NC State University, his journey in education began as a Technology Education teacher at Penn-Griffin School for the Arts and later as a PLTW Engineering Instructor and Fab Lab Manager at Riverside High School and Technology Equipment Coordinator for Durham Public
Paper ID #37776Creation of a Mobile Science and Engineering Road Show for Texas A&MUniversity at Qatar: Multicultural STEM Education and Entertainment(Resource Exchange)Mr. G. Benjamin Cieslinski, Texas A&M University at Qatar A resourceful science professional with expertise in STEM fields, science communication, laboratory safety, program management, and chemistry, Benjamin Cieslinski manages the science, technology, engi- neering, and mathematics (STEM) laboratories for Texas A&M University at Qatar’s Office of Advance- ment. He designs and performs demonstrations of science and engineering to local schools via
Paper ID #37624Keeping Cool with Qatar Cool: A Pre-College Education ProgramEmphasizing Corporate Regional Engineering with Hands-On STEM Learn-ing(Resource Exchange)Mr. G. Benjamin Cieslinski, Texas A&M University at Qatar A resourceful science professional with expertise in STEM fields, science communication, laboratory safety, program management, and chemistry, Benjamin Cieslinski manages the science, technology, engi- neering, and mathematics (STEM) laboratories for Texas A&M University at Qatar’s Office of Advance- ment. He designs and performs demonstrations of science and engineering to local schools via the
work closely with national labs and industry to maintain course projects with real ©American Society for Engineering Education, 2023 AFRL Career STREAM implementation at NMT (Work in Progress)AbstractThe New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology (NMT) partnered with the Air ForceResearch Laboratory (AFRL) to provide a STEM experience for late-year high school students.This paper will evaluate the program in terms of implementation, results of apprentice growth,and lessons learned. The AFRL NM Career STREAM program aims to provide an industrialenvironment on a college campus, demonstrating what a career would be like, to apprenticescoming from rural New Mexico and other underserved groups. The paid
, we adapted the Draw-an-Engineer Test and utilizedan inductive coding scheme gathered from the research literature [13]-[14]. From the literature[14, we utilized an inductive coding consisting of three constructs: attributes, professions, andactivities. When coding for attributes, we considered perceived gender, collaboration, andself-identification. For profession, we coded the type of work depicted or described in thedrawing, e.g. designer, builder, train conductor, etc. Coding for activities involved taggingimages or words related to action, e.g. laboratory work, engineering design process, drawings,etc. The following section describes the implementation of the module and the results fromanalyzing the drawings. III. Implementation and
Leadership and Principal Certificate from Northern Arizona University in 2007. She is currently working on heRebekah Jongewaard, Arizona State UniversityMaryan RobledoSteven J. Zuiker, Arizona State University ©American Society for Engineering Education, 2023 Energizing the Engineering Pipeline with Agrivoltaics Citizen Science (Pre-College Resource Exchange) Authors: Janet Ankrum, Cheryl Carswell, Andrew Centanni, Melany Coates, Mia DeLaRosa, Rebekah Jongewaard, Michelle Jordan, Maryan Robledo, Steven ZuikerThe Sonoran Photovoltaics Laboratory (hereafter SPV Lab) organizes a regional approach topursuing photovoltaic (PV) engineering research for 4th-12th grade STEM teachers and
Conditioning/Finishing Grinding Burnishing Polishing Safety Laboratory Guidelines Attire & Equipment Machine SafetyQuantitative Computational Thinking Algorithm Forming Software Design, Implementation, & Programming LanguagesAnalysis Testing Computational Tools Spreadsheet Tools Computational Environment System Design Tools Data Collection, Analysis, Data Collection Techniques Data-Driven Decision Making Data Visualization
physical prosthetic hand that can beoperated by students from their own homes. In this paper we describe the development aninteractive experience to teach K12 students about prosthetics, medical devices, and soft roboticsby controlling a laboratory-based physical robotic hand via webcam that is reliable in a variety ofcontexts. To evaluate this curriculum, we also present results of a mixed methods approach tocollect quantitative and qualitative data on the tool and students’ perceptions of engineering as aresult of using the tool. Previous research has shown that new materials in soft robots may fosterrobotics interest for a diverse population of students and expand students’ ideas about whatrobots do and how engineering can be used in human
Laboratory: During this field trip,students were able to see and try common protocols for CPR, IV injections, intubation andrespiratory rescue on complex mannequins. In the respiratory section, students were shown howprofessionals in training use the mannequins and equipment to practice procedures for criticalmedical situations. Students got the chance to intubate the mannequin and to visualize how arespiratory assistance machine works on the body using a pig’s lung. In the CPR section,students practiced CPR on a mannequin. In addition, students had the opportunity to operate a daVinci surgical system through a game exercise. Lastly, students played a scavenger hunt on amannequin looking to identify several medical equipment placed on the patient
well as school and camp curriculums centered around Artificial Intelligence. Previously, he has worked as an instructor at Mathnasium, where he taught math to K-12, and as a lab assistant in an undergraduate laboratory at the University of Florida.Jacob Casey Yarick, University of Florida Jacob Yarick is an undergraduate student at the University of Florida pursuing a Bachelor of Science in Aerospace Engineering and Bachelor of Science in Astrophysics. He works under the EQuIPD program where he designs, creates, and teaches lessons related to Python programming and Artificial Intelligence. Previously, he has worked at the Kika Silva Pla Planetarium, and the Calusa Nature Center & Planetarium. He has also tutored
Pennsylvania State University, Pennsylvania, 2010.[9] Chien, Yu-Hung, Chia-Yu Liu, Shaio-Chung Chan, and Yu-Shan Chang, "Engineering Design Learning for High school and College First-year Students in a STEM Battlebot Design Project," International Journal of STEM Education, vol. 10, no. 1, pp. 1-15, 2023.[10] Tenenbaum, Laura S., Margery K. Anderson, Swati B. Ramadorai, and Debra L. Yourick., "High school students' experience with near-peer mentorship and laboratory-based learning: In their own words," Journal of STEM Education: Innovations and Research, vol. 18, 2017.[11] Price, M., Kallam, M., & Love, J., "The learning styles of Native American students and implications for classroom practice," In Eighth Native American
, testing its movements, andpicking up/dropping off/transporting objects using the Workcell. The laboratory work wascarried out by the students in groups of two. The school of engineering provided completesupport in terms of equipment and software required for the program.The weekly plans of the robotics program are shown in Table 2. Students worked onAutonomous Vehicle for four times (12 hours), Robotics modeling for five labs (15 hours), andeight labs for VEX Robot (24 hours). One of the challenging factors that we encountered wasfaculty involvement. Since the participating faculty already had a full teaching load during theSummer, it was difficult to arrange lab content in a way that was both meaningful and coherent.As a result, the program
/her knowledge on the topic). In order to make these meetings more dynamicand participative, the remote instructor uses CIT resources such as Menti – an interactive platform thatfacilitates the interaction of the students with the remote instructor using students' cellular phones. Inremote locations, the internet bandwidth is limited. Using only ONE computer to implement thesynchronous meeting (instead of each student connected to the videoconference) improvescommunication with the class, and the students' interactions via cell phones have no impact on thebandwidth. The remote instructor has access to the minimum CIT resources at the location where theinstructor lives (cameras, microphones, tablet, board, laboratory equipment, and others) to
Paper ID #37626Promoting STEM Education through the Preparation of MulticulturalNational Robotics Teams in Qatar (Evaluation)Tala Katbeh, Texas A&M University at Qatar Tala Katbeh is a STEM Instructor and Program Coordinator at Texas A&M University at Qatar (TAMUQ) where she applies her enthusiasm for engineering to create curricula and engineering courses for school students. Katbeh is currently also pursuing her PhD at Texas A&M University, having graduated from TAMUQ with a BSc and MSc both in chemical engineering.Mr. G. Benjamin Cieslinski, Texas A&M University at Qatar STEM Initiatives and Laboratory
: An international interdisciplinary exploration. Biomimetics, 8(1), 125. https://doi.org/10.3390/biomimetics8010125Youngblood, T. D., Yeter, I. H., Williams, C. M., & Burley, H. (2016, June). STEMChoice: An examination of program evaluation data in a STEM-centered, inquiry-based program. In 2016 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition. https://peer.asee.org/25875Zorzano, M. P. (2020). Gender balance in Mars exploration: Lessons learned from the Mars Science Laboratory. Sustainability, 12(24), 10658.
within chemically modified, biomimetic hydrogels and was awarded the Distinguished Master’s Thesis Award by the university’s graduate office for her work. After graduating, she continued her research in a tissue engineering/ biomaterials laboratory until accepting a teaching position at Marian University where she currently teaches Physics I, Physics II, Biophysics, and will soon be developing courses related to biomaterials. In addition to teaching, Tanja also plays a large role in the community outreach of the E.S. WSOE through directing events such as the Central Indi- ana Regional Science and Engineering Fair and the annual INnovation Through Engineering Residential Summer Camp. Through her efforts, Ms. Greene
, Johns Hopkins University Dr. Michel A. Kornegay (Reece) is currently a Senior Professional Staff in the Air Missile Defense Sector (AMDS) at Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory (JHUAPL). Prior to joining JHUAPL, for 16 years she was as an Associate Professor within the Department of Electrical and Computer Engi- neering at Morgan State University.Mrs. LaDawn Partlow, Morgan State University Mrs. LaDawn E. Partlow serves as the Director of Academic Engagement and Outreach for the Cyber Security Assurance and Policy (CAP) Center at Morgan State University. She earned both a Bachelor of Science and a Master of Engineering in Electrical Engineering from Morgan State University. Mrs. Part- low also
UniversityProf. Kevin Kornegay, Morgan State University Kevin T. Kornegay received the B.S. degree in electrical engineering from Pratt Institute, Brooklyn, NY, in 1985 and the M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in electrical engineering from the University of California at Berkeley in 1990 and 1992, respectively. He isDr. Kofi Nyarko, Morgan State University Dr. Kofi Nyarko is a Tenured Associate Professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Morgan State University. He also serves as Director of the Engineering Visualization Research Laboratory (EVRL). Under his direction, EVRL has acqDr. James Holly, Jr., University of Michigan ©American Society for Engineering Education, 2024
Engineering Dr. Cory J. Prust is a Professor in the Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Department at Milwaukee School of Engineering (MSOE). He earned his BSEE degree from MSOE in 2001 and his Ph.D. from Purdue University in 2006. Prior to joining MSOE in 2009, he was a Technical Staff member at MIT Lincoln Laboratory. He teaches courses in the signal processing, communication systems, and embedded systems areas.Elizabeth Taylor, Milwaukee School of Engineering Elizabeth Taylor is the director of the STEM Center at Milwaukee School of Engineering where she directs institutional strategy for K-12 STEM programming and outreach and oversees the operations of the Center. She advocates for the alignment of
school students participated in a week-long summer camp thatfocused on electrical and computer engineering (ECE) concepts and practices. The five-daysummer camp consisted of hands-on activities, tours of different laboratories in ECE disciplines,and a group project that spanned the whole week where students built circuits using theSparkFun Inventor’s kit. During the group activity, the students were organized into eightgroups, and each group was mentored by an undergraduate mentor who facilitated thecollaborative hands-on activities. The middle school students completed validated and reliablepre and post-surveys adapted from the Student Attitudes Toward STEM (S-STEM) Survey andthe Group Work Skills Questionnaire Manual. The S-STEM survey is
for her immunosuppressed patients by reducing exposure to infectious and non-infectious air pollution in public schools and community spaces throughout the State of Connecticut. She founded and is the director of the UConn Indoor Air Quality Initiative, a cross-campus, multidisciplinary team of scientists and clinicians studying low-cost air purifiers in both laboratory and real-world settings.Dr. Kristina M. Wagstrom, University of Connecticut Dr. Kristina Wagstrom is an associate professor in Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering at the University of Connecticut in Storrs, CT. She specializes in applying chemical engineering principles to better understand the human and ecosystem health impacts of air pollution