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- Student Division Technical Session 2
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Danielle Nicole Carter; Rafael E. Landaeta, Old Dominion University
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primarily executing theplans of the initiative; each day following through with the schedule created during the planning stage.Because things do not always go exactly as planned, the acting stage required flexibility due tounplanned occurrences and quick responsiveness to unforeseen issues. During the third stage,observation, the detailed written observances and mental reflections of the Program Coordinator inconjunction with those of the mentors was taken into account. The program coordinator noted students’interaction among the mentors and their receptivity to daily scheduled activities. The mentors observedthe personal behind the scenes responses of students and their interactions among each other. Assessingthe observed actions from the planning
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- Student Division Technical Session 4
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Alyson Grace Eggleston, The Citadel; Robert J. Rabb P.E., The Citadel
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completed an internship (n=23) and current students aided in surveyrecruitment. The IRB-approved survey discussed in this paper was administered after studentscompleted the TWC course and had time to reflect on the content of the course. Data wascaptured both online and through paper copy responses to the survey, depending on studentavailability and convenience. The questions essentially gaged the students’ perception of theirprofessional skills after the course.Using a standard five-level Likert scale with response levels indicating “strongly agree” through“strongly disagree,” the survey asked participates to indicate to what degree they agreed with asurvey statement. We believed in this way we could get a more accurate range on the
- Conference Session
- Student Division Technical Session 5
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Alaa Abdalla, Virginia Tech; Nicole P. Pitterson, Virginia Tech ; Jennifer M Case, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
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semester they standardized it [labs], which made itvery hard for just a one credit class, and it's just too much work that you have to put into it.“-DeviBalancing in-class and out-of-classWe asked the students to reflect on how their time is being distributed between being inside andoutside of the class. Out of the ten participants, five students commented on spending more timeoutside of the classroom, mainly dedicated to studying and completion of assignments. Therewere three students who felt that their time balances out between inside and outside of class.One of the students highlighted how the class meeting time is relatively limited, which leaves themajority of the day to the students to spend however they like: “there's definitely a lot more
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- Student Division Technical Session 3
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Jayanta K. Banerjee, University of Puerto Rico, Mayaguez Campus
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nother first language, yet she explained to me numerous technical matters with effective idiomatic language,humor and clarity. (Young-Me Chung, mentee of Asian origin and European mentor).It is very clear from the above comments that trustworthiness and freedom of thinking are the keys for anefficient and rewarding mentor-mentee relationship.Impact of the studyThis study, using qualitative research method of case studies, reflects the need of mentoring engineeringstudents at the undergraduate level in both local as well as global perspectives. In the local level, such asin Puerto Rico, mentoring helps not only in course works but also in preparation for job interviews, résuméwriting and other broader decisions as practitioners for the outgoing
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- Student Division Technical Session 4
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Niloofar Kamran, Cornell College; Qingbao Wang, Cornell College ; Andy Grove; William Nitschke Dragon II, Cornell College
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design, including the ability to switch between notes and chords,additional instrument voicings, an LCD screen, a shutdown command, and a custom-madeenclosure. The students wish to see variations of this project implemented in hospitals, nursinghomes, and schools so that no matter the stage of life or the physical capability, such as weakmuscle issues or joint-related disabilities, the user enjoys playing the piano. We also hope thisproject will reflect the power of engineering in a liberal arts education through the combination ofmultiple disciplines, experiences, skills, and interests.1. IntroductionThe Cornell College engineering major, established in 2013, focuses on general engineering andprepares students with the knowledge they need for
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Alyssa Travitz, University of Michigan; Ayse Muniz, The University of Michigan; Joanne Kay Beckwith, University of Michigan; Rose K. Cersonsky, University of Michigan
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connect withone another and reflect on the information they have been exposed to throughout the day.As shown in fig. 6, the majority of teachers have already used, or are intending to use the activitykit provided. Some have even mentioned using activities from the website that were not part of thetrack they attended at the workshop but fit their classroom curriculum. There was a wide breadthin the ways teachers implemented their classroom kits. Some teachers mentioned they use theactivity as an introduction to a new concept, while others used them as hands on reinforcement ofa concept they had already taught in a traditional fashion. Teachers who used the kits mentionedthat they encouraged them to try new teaching strategies in their classrooms
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- Student Division Technical Session 5
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Hassan Ali Al Yagoub, Purdue University-Main Campus, West Lafayette (College of Engineering)
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between the ages of three to five years acquire these skills. The second development stagereferenced by Piaget is visualizing objects in three-dimensional forms and being able to perceivethese objects from different dimensions via mental rotation. Students typically acquire this skill byadolescence for objects they are familiar with [24]. He cautions, however, that if the object is notfamiliar, students may have difficulty in visualizing the object even while in college. Piagetclassified projection skills as the third stage, where students can visualize different measurementsand combine them such as distance, rotation, volume, translation, and reflection [24].Theoretical PerspectiveThis study evaluates the literature through the lens of a social
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- Student Division Technical Session 2
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Stephen Secules, Florida International University
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presume to speak for all, buteach act of adding perspective would help the collective understand the process of graduate schooltogether.Methodologically and analytically, I approach my research and life as an ethnographer, a critical scholar,an educator, and an engineer (Secules & Groen-McCall, 2019). Although there was not a formal in situseries of autoethnographic reflections for these findings, I consider my own lived experience to be asource of embodied knowledge. As such, I do not draw on statistics, literature, or studies about graduatestudents to present these findings, these sources do not provide a sense of agency, voice, or the knowledgethat personal experience brings by graduate students. Rather, I synthesize my own and others
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- Student Division Technical Session 3
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Jeong Hin Chin, University of Michigan; Yuan Gao, University of Michigan; Herbert Li, University of Michigan; Magel P. Su, California Institute of Technology; Robin Fowler, University of Michigan
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-mediated peer review,” InternationalJournal of Educational Telecommunications, vol. 4, pp. 311-345, 1998.[33] T. Connolly, L. M. Jessup, and J. S. Valacich. “Effects of anonymity and evaluative tone onidea generation in computer-mediated groups,” Management science, vol. 36, pp. 689-703, 1990.[34] K. Maneeratana and A. Sripakagorn, “Use of CATME for teamwork assessment inengineering projects,” ThaiPOD 2009, 2009.[35] R. Fowler, “Talking teams: Increased equity in participation in online compared toface-to-face team discussions,” Computers in Education Journal, vol. 6, pp. 21, 2015..[36] P. L. Hirsch and A. F. McKenna, “Using reflection to promote teamwork understanding inengineering design education,” International Journal of Engineering Education