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Conference Session
Engineering Education Graduate Research Consortium (EEGRC) Poster Session
Collection
2018 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Cristina Diordieva, Texas Tech University; Ibrahim H. Yeter, Purdue University-Main Campus, West Lafayette (College of Engineering); Walter Smith, Texas Tech University
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Paper ID #24561Cross-Case Analysis: K-12 International Teachers’ Perspectives on IntegratedSTEM and Computational Thinking PracticesMrs. Cristina Diordieva, Texas Tech University Mrs. Cristina Diordieva is the Project Coordinator for the World MOON Project. Mrs. Diordieva is currently a doctoral candidate in Educational and Instructional Technology (EDIT) program and minoring in Bilingual Education in the College of Education at Texas Tech University. She earned a BA majoring in French and minoring in Linguistics from Texas Tech University. She is highly interested in conducting research within the multidisciplinary studies
Conference Session
Engineering Education Graduate Research Consortium (EEGRC) Poster Session
Collection
2018 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Erdogan Kaya, University of Nevada, Las Vegas; Ezgi Yesilyurt, University of Nevada, Las Vegas; Anna Danielle Newley; Hasan Deniz, University of Nevada Las Vegas
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ranked journals (e.g. Journal of College Science Teaching), reviewed conference proposals (e.g ASEE).Miss Ezgi Yesilyurt, University of Nevada, Las Vegas Ezgi Yesilyurt is a PhD student in curriculum and instruction/science education at University of Nevada, Las Vegas. She is working as a graduate assistant in an NSF funded grant project in which she assumed major responsibilities such as data collection, data analysis, design and delivery of teacher professional development workshops in the grant project. Also, she is currently teaching science methods courses. She received her MS degree and BS degree in elementary science education. She participated European Union Projects in which she conducted series of
Conference Session
Engineering Education Graduate Research Consortium (EEGRC) Poster Session
Collection
2018 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Kathryn Waugaman, University of Colorado Boulder; Janet Y. Tsai, University of Colorado, Boulder; Malinda S. Zarske, University of Colorado, Boulder
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work considers the intentional and unintentional consequences of durable struc- tures, products, architectures, and standards in engineering education, to pinpoint areas for transformative change.Dr. Malinda S Zarske, University of Colorado, Boulder Malinda Zarske is a faculty member with the Engineering Plus program at the University of Colorado Boulder. She teaches undergraduate product design and core courses through Engineering Plus as well as STEM education courses for pre-service teachers through the CU Teach Engineering program. Her primary research interests include the impacts of project-based service-learning on student identity - es- pecially women and nontraditional demographic groups in engineering - as
Conference Session
Student Division Technical Session 2
Collection
2018 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Sarah De Rosier, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo; Dominic Emilio Riccoboni, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo; Paul Michael Rothhammer-Ruiz, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo; Charles Birdsong, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo
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applications for the automotive industry. He has worked in the vibration test and measurement industry helping to drive new technologies to market and working with industry to meet their emerging needs. He is currently a Professor at California Polytechnic State University at San Luis Obispo in the Department of Mechanical Engineering teaching dynamics, vibrations and controls. He is involved in several undergraduate and master’s level multidisciplinary projects and interested in engineer- ing education research. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2018“Intelligent Vehicles:” Development of a new course for undergraduate engineering studentsIntroductionThe field of intelligent
Conference Session
Student Division Poster Session
Collection
2018 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Joseph Michael Derrick, Indiana University Purdue University, Indianapolis; Michael Golub, Indiana University Purdue University, Indianapolis; Vaibhav R. Shrivastav
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Student
aerospace applications, I participate in many projects related to controls and heat transfer. Aside from my research, I focus heavily on the advancement of engineering education at the collegiate level. I work on revising and updating laboratory experiments to help improve student understanding of how concepts are applied and utilized. I also spend time writing design optimization MATLAB codes for various applications.Mr. Michael Golub, Indiana University Purdue University, Indianapolis Michael Golub is the Academic Laboratory Supervisor for the Mechanical Engineering department at IUPUI. He is an associate faculty at the same school, and has taught at several other colleges. He has conducted research related to Arctic
Conference Session
Engineering Education Graduate Research Consortium (EEGRC) Poster Session
Collection
2018 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Anna Newley, American College of Education; Erdogan Kaya, University of Nevada, Las Vegas; Hasan Deniz, University of Nevada Las Vegas; Ezgi Yesilyurt, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Tagged Divisions
Student
Science Standards.Miss Ezgi Yesilyurt, University of Nevada, Las Vegas Ezgi Yesilyurt is a PhD student in curriculum and instruction/science education at University of Nevada, Las Vegas. She is working as a graduate assistant and teaching science methods courses. She received her MS degree and BS degree in elementary science education. She participated European Union Projects in which she conducted series of professional development programs for in-service science teachers. Areas of research interest are engineering education, inquiry learning and evolution education. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2018Introduction: Methods
Conference Session
Student Division Technical Session 1
Collection
2018 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Bryon Kucharski, Wentworth Institute of Technology; Aaron Carpenter, Wentworth Institute of Technology; Joan Giblin, Wentworth Institute of Technology; Mehmet Ergezer, Wentworth Institute of Technology
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Student
do you spend with organized extracurricular activities (sports, clubs, professional organizations)? • How many hours a week to do spend with work commitments (i.e., part-time job/work-study)? • If you have an assignment or project due in 2 weeks, how far in advance do you usually start? • If you have an exam in 2 weeks, how far in advance do you usually start studying?A group of questions also addressed questions of how students seek help, including in class,through classmates, or through other means. Students have numerous ways to get information,especially with videos and tutorials being posted online for free. These questions helpedinvestigators to better understand what students do more frequently. • How
Conference Session
Student Division Technical Session 1
Collection
2018 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Monika Ingalls; Elizabeth Hill, University of Minnesota Duluth; Helene Finger P.E., California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo; Marca J. Lam, Rochester Institute of Technology (COE); Gloria Guohua Ma, Wentworth Institute of Technology; Diane L. Peters, Kettering University; Stephanie G. Wettstein, Montana State University, Montana Engineering Education Research Center; Deborah S. Won, California State University, Los Angeles; Claudia Mara Dias Wilson, New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology; Cheyenne Florenia Rivera; Emily Silva, California State University, Los Angeles; Tara Sundsted, Montana State University, Bozeman
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Student
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.Dr. Diane L. Peters, Kettering University Dr. Peters is an Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering at Kettering University.Prof. Stephanie G Wettstein, Montana State University, Montana Engineering Education Research Center Stephanie Wettstein is an Assistant Professor in the Chemical and Biological Engineering department at Montana State University in Bozeman, MT. She has been the faculty advisor of the MSU SWE chapter since 2013.Dr
Conference Session
Student Division Technical Session 1
Collection
2018 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
VJ Tocco, University of Florida; Kevin Buettner; Madeline G Sciullo, University of Florida; Jennifer Sinclair Curtis, University of California, Davis; Jason E. Butler, University of Florida
Tagged Divisions
Student
Electrical and Computer Engineeringat the University of Florida. Her research is centered on her advisor’s device and processsimulator, Dr. Mark Law Florida Object Oriented Device/Process Simulator (FLOOD/FLOOPS).She has three major projects of which the applications are radiation effects on AlGaN/GaN HighElectron Mobility Transistors (HEMTs), mechanical stress effects of Silicon based Hall magnetic © American Society for Engineering Education, 2018 2018 ASEE Southeastern Section Conferencesensors, and pH chemical/biological sensors on open-gated GaN-based HEMTs. Maddie plans tograduate in August 2018 and is pursuing postdoctoral opportunities.Jennifer S. CurtisJennifer Sinclair Curtis is a
Conference Session
Student Division Technical Session 2
Collection
2018 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Beau Vezino, University of Arizona; Alexander M Alvarez, University of Arizona Department of Biomedical Engineering; Byron Hempel, University of Arizona; Christina Julianne Loera, University of Arizona; Samantha Davidson, University of Arizona; Savannah Boyd, University of Arizona; Vignesh Subbian, University of Arizona
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Diversity
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Paper ID #23819Re-envisioning the Role of the Engineering Education Chapter at a Research-I Institution: Lessons from a Cross-disciplinary ModelBeau Vezino, University of Arizona Beau R. Vezino is a Ph.D. student at the University of Arizona’s College of Education. His focus is engineering and science education. Beau currently teaches the science/engineering methods course for pre-service teachers and works on several related research projects. Beau is certified K-12 teacher and holds a MS in Education in Curriculum and Instruction (2009) and a BS in Mechanical Engineering (2005). Beau’s research focus is on teaching
Conference Session
Student Division Technical Session 1
Collection
2018 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Marigold F. Bays-Muchmore, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign; Alexandra Chronopoulou, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Tagged Topics
Diversity
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Student
having a goodunderstanding of what engineering is as a major and a field. That understanding itself variesdepending on what type of engineering program the first year student is in, and what gender theyare. The majority of participants however saw engineering as cross functional, responding thatengineers work with people, machines and technology to solve problems and help society. Thismultifaceted view is a positive sign for the freshmen engineers, as they will often have to workon projects and in areas that can span several engineering and non-engineering fields. Regardlessof major, the first year students showed a grasp of the fundamentals of engineering beingproblem solving and improving.Incoming engineering students also have largely
Conference Session
Student Division Technical Session 2
Collection
2018 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Shelby Buffington, Syracuse University; Ryan L. Falkenstein-Smith, Syracuse University; Alexander Johnson, Syracuse University; Katy Pieri, Syracuse University; Alex Vincent Jannini, Syracuse University
Tagged Divisions
Student
week. This response could bedue to scheduling difficulties around research activities: it can be difficult to take time awayfrom projects for a few days in a row. Therefore, the 2018 retreat will be designed so that eventswill be one day per week for three consecutive weeks in May. We are also hoping to addmodules on topics that were of interest to the graduate community, but could not be organizedwith the current resources available on campus.Assessment tools could also be refined for the 2018 retreat. Self-reported data can bemisleading: participants have different ideas on how to rate themselves, which may explain thevariation of competency and knowledge of specific topics in the “before” survey. Because theinitial ratings were high, it was