notspecifically target the freshman-to-sophomore transition [12, 13]. We therefore created aprogram that begins in the last term of the participants’ freshman year, with a service learningEngineering Ethics and Professionalism course, and allows students to work on service learningprojects for a local community organization in the summer. The design projects, with theirinevitable need to revisit design choices, teach students to build grit and learn from mistakesthrough the iterative process of design, build, and test. It also builds their engineering identity, asthey see themselves more as real-world problem solvers. The service learning aspect enablesstudents to see the impact of their engineering abilities on their local community and motivatesthem to
Third WorldCountries (Reverse Engineer the Brain and Advance Personalized Learning).The learning objectives assessed included the abilities to: 1) communicate with rhetoricalawareness to a multifaceted academic, public, and professional audience (modeled upon theStudent Summit podcasts); 2) demonstrate upper-division level research abilities, includinginterviewing skills; 3) identify and analyze pressing ethical issues within their discipline; 4)prepare and give professional oral presentations; 5) articulate the impact their discipline has oneveryday life; and 6) work collaboratively to research, write, and present information and ideas.Students were surveyed about their learning experience after submitting their podcasts andbefore receiving
for teams without a deep practiceof computer security.Observation 3: Some competitors are very advanced in their knowledge of cybersecurity, even atthe high school level. This results in some very lopsided competitions. We view this as a threat tonovice players. Our conclusion is that the disparity of skills in an unbalanced game environmentcreates a hostile, inaccessible environment for students with budding interest in cybersecuritywho have limited computer-technical skills.Observation 4: Many competitions do not emphasize the tangential competencies ofcybersecurity careers such as ethical, legal, and privacy concerns inherent to cybersecurity.Additionally, most competitions also don not explore the need for demonstrating goodcommunication
through theREU program were also made available to the participating students in this ASPIRES program.These workshops include Responsible Conduct of Research and Ethics, Research Process,Literature Review and Conducting Research, Verbal and Written Communication Skills,Learning to Give Powerful Oral and Poster Presentations, The Elevator Pitch: Advocating forYour Good Ideas, and project-specific topics, such as structural dynamics, topologyoptimization, and training tutorials for prevalent software. These workshops intend to helpstudents develop independent research ability, better present research outcomes, and effectivelypromote research findings. Since MATLAB is one of the essential tools needed for this particularresearch project, all interns
benefit for all those involved. “Students can enrich their academic learning andcivic ethic; faculty can find community partners provide excellent co-educators and thepartnerships can invigorate their teaching and research; agencies can access enormous resourcesto address their missions and goals, and; community members gain through services that might nototherwise be available” [13]. “It is important to carefully consider various aspects of thepartnership before embarking on a service-learning project. The following issues andrecommendations are taken or adapted from service-learning research and stakeholder input” [14].The following notes are compiled from the Service-Learning workshops and seminars at CaliforniaState University, Fresno ([13
image processing, computer vision, engineering education, and academic ethics. He has extensive experience as a computer hardware engineer at Hewlett-Packard. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2019 Paper ID #27793Dr. Jie Yang, Northern Arizona University Dr. Yang is an assistant professor of practice in the School of Informatics, Computing, and Cyber Systems at Northern Arizona University. She serves a coordinating role in the NAU/CQUPT 3+1 Program. Her research interests are in wireless communications, signal processing, and engineering education. c American
Paper ID #27847Bridging the Gap: Teamwork and Leadership in Engineering Capstone CoursesDr. Matthew J Haslam, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, PrescottDr. Mary Angela Beck, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University Angela Beck is a member of the Dept. of Humanities/Communications at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, Prescott campus. As an Associate Professor she teaches technical communications with oc- casional forays into applied linguistics, the philosophy of language, and ethics. She helped found and institutionalize the practice of team-teaching between her department and the College of Engineering at Embry-Riddle
the ability to analyze data and other information. 4.40 I understand science. 4.36 I have learned about ethical conduct in my field. 3.96 I have learned laboratory techniques. 4.32 I have an ability to read and understand primary literature. 4.40 I have skill in how to give an effective oral presentation. 4.40 I have skill in science writing. 4.08 I have self-confidence. 4.32
field. 4.28 3.56 0.72** I have the ability to integrate theory and practice. 4.20 3.84 0.36 I understand how scientists work on real problems. 4.40 3.52 0.88** I understand that scientific assertions require supporting evidence. 4.52 4.04 0.48* I have the ability to analyze data and other information. 4.40 4.04 0.36 I understand science. 4.36 3.88 0.48* I have learned about ethical conduct in my field. 3.96 3.96 0.00 I have learned laboratory techniques. 4.32 4.00 0.32 I
information. 4.40 4.04 0.36 I understand science. 4.36 3.88 0.48* I have learned about ethical conduct in my field. 3.96 3.96 0.00 I have learned laboratory techniques. 4.32 4.00 0.32 I have an ability to read and understand primary literature. 4.40 4.00 0.40 I have skill in how to give an effective oral presentation. 4.40 4.04 0.36 I have skill in science writing. 4.08 3.68 0.40 I
ASEE CIA paper - Google Docs ● Resolve problems at the interface of art and design and computer science through innovative thinking and visual expression. ● Demonstrate an ability to evaluate ethical consequences in creative expression, technical innovation and professional practice. ● Practice lifelong learning, inquiry, and discovery via directed selfresearch and inquiry for artistic and technical projects. These objectives are obtained through the combination of existing courses present in the Computer Science and Art & Design programs, thus requiring little institutional overhead. The