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Morgan M. Bakies, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; Karen Seliah Lamb, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
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Student Development
engineering education by preparing students for their future careers. Thispaper demonstrates student development through the international experience of JuniorEnterprise and makes a case for the expansion of Junior Enterprise in the United States. Theconclusion of this paper includes the core benefits of involvement in Junior Enterprise forAmerican engineering students and recommendations for universities interested in starting their Page 20.25.2own Junior Enterprise.MethodThe primary research question of this study, How has Junior Enterprise impacted students?, wasconducted through the network of international Junior Enterprise students from Europe
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- 2014 ASEE International Forum
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Cheryl Matherly, The University of Tulsa; Sarah R. Phillips, Rice University ; Junichiro Kono, Rice University; Shane M Curtis, University of Tulsa
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Student Development
Professor and was promoted to Associate Professor in 2005 and to Professor in 2009. Kono is a Fellow of the American Physical Society and was a recipient of the CAREER Award of the National Science Foundation. His current research interests include optical studies of low-dimensional systems; non-equilibrium many-body and cooperative dynamics; strong-field physics in solids; and terahertz phenomena in semiconductors.Mr. Shane M Curtis, University of Tulsa Page 20.42.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2014 Impact on Student Learning: A Comparison of International and
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David DiBiasio, Worcester Polytechnic Institute; Terri A. Camesano, Worcester Polytechnic Institute; Natalie A Mello, The Forum on Education Abroad
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Student Development
in our senior global projects, but overall over 80% of chemical engineering majorscomplete at least one project experience off-campus. The ID project requires student teams to “research, solve, and report on a problem examininghow science or technology interacts with cultures, societal structures, and values.Project objectives include enabling students to understand, as citizens and as professionals, howtheir careers will affect the larger society of which they are a part.” The senior year project, inthe major, “should demonstrate… skills, methods, and knowledge of the discipline to… solve aproblem… representative of the type to be encountered in one’s career. Activities encompassresearch, development, and application, involve analysis or
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Pradeep Kashinath Waychal, Pune Innovation Centre; Gautam Akiwate, University of California, San Diego; Ayano OHSAKI P.E., nnovation Center for Engineering Education, Tottori University
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Student Development
successful ‘bazaar’model closely resembles the ‘egoless programming’ and that proves effectiveness of the ‘egolessprogramming’.Research DesignThis section presents the scope, instrument selection, data collection, reliability assessment, and dataanalysis.ScopeEgoless behavior is a mindset. Earlier it is developed, better it is. Younger minds are more malleable andhave whole careers ahead of them. Carver,et al. argue that before running an empirical study at asoftware company, it is useful to carry out a pilot study with students in an academic setting14.Therefore, we limited our scope of research to a set of engineering students who had some experience indeveloping software.Selection of InstrumentsAlthough egoless programming - as a concept - has
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Robert O. Warrington Jr., Michigan Technological University; Madelyn Marie Espinosa, Michigan Technological University - Pavlis Institute; Helena Keller, Michigan Technological University
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Student Development
international experience leaves them with a greater sense of self-confidence and selfawareness that has made a profound impact on their career choices and lives. Although hard todocument, learning outcome comparisons will be made with more traditional internationalengineering experiences at Michigan Tech, including our International Senior Design programwhich is faculty led. The Pavlis Institute’s unique student-led international experience providesstudents with the opportunity to practice their leadership, engineering problem-solving, andcommunication skills in an international context.IntroductionIn response to the growing demand for graduates with cross-cultural communication skills
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Patrick D Ulrich, Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences; Chad D Vecitis; Jason Dyett, Harvard University, DRCLAS; Monica F A Porto, USP
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Student Development
collaborations. To help meet these goals, Harvard and USP participants were fullyintegrated in the classroom, on field visits, in hotels, and throughout their social interactions.Participants were encouraged to experience the culture of the destination cities during the freetime and organized group outings. Additionally, students were given information about potentialfunding opportunities for international internships and were encouraged to talk with facultymembers about their academic and career goals.Course planning and pre-departure preparationsIn order to plan an effective course that encompassed these comprehensive goals, a long-termcollaborative effort by a dedicated team of faculty and staff members from the three sponsoringinstitutions was
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Arnold Neville Pears, Uppsala University; Mats Daniels, Uppsala University; Åsa Sofia Cajander
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Student Development
of engineering education. These skill sets and competences are described in the ABET accreditation criteria (see www.ABET.org), as well as in the newly established ACM/IEEE Computer Science Curricula 2013 (www.computer.org), and similar criteria can be found in the national educational goals of many countries. Swedish engineers are increasingly pursuing careers abroad, this is a direct consequence of the size of the Swedish economy and industry base. Consequently it is vital that engineering education in Sweden should foster global engineering skills.What is then required of the “global engineer”? What competencies are needed and how can they be
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Megan Mercedes Echevarria, International Engineering Program, University of Rhode Island; Sigrid -- Berka, University of Rhode Island
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Student Development
those experiences and impressions, and analyze the relevance of their project in a largercontext of global challenges. Subsequently, we will hold public presentations on campus so thatthose students may share their insights and conclusions with our campus community.This sustainability project serves as a way to engage students early in their academic careers notonly with complex technical content relating to anaerobic energy systems in a practical, hands-onsetting, but also gives them the invaluable opportunity to work as part of a multicultural team asthey complete the project and to view and reflect on their work from a vantage point that makesthe larger, highly relevant sustainability, social and economic issues quite salient. We project