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Displaying results 271 - 300 of 873 in total
Conference Session
Engrng Edu;An International Perspective
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Jose Torres
, mostly due to changes in the academic administration at both schools.2. Comprehensive Exchange between the College of Staten Island, City University of New Page 7.1313.5 York (U.S.A.) and several chinese universities. Proceedings of the 2002 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition Copyright © 2002, American Society for Engineering Education The CUNY China Study Abroad program, initially developed in the mid-80's to provide american students with a cultural exchange program with the people's Republic of China, has become a springboard for a number of intiatives
Collection
2002 ASEE North Midwest Section Conference
Authors
Steven B. Zwickel
YOU DEVELOP AN OUTREACH PROGRAM?The Outreach Program Creation ProcessI. Create kit to accomplish purpose(s) and meet audience needs A. Set clear goals 1. Purpose There is no point in doing outreach if you don’t have clear goals. The main purposes of the K–12 Engineering Outreach Program are to showcase new technology and to discuss educational and career opportunities in engineering disciplines. Another important goal of the program is to encourage children (especially girls and minority group members, to stay with math and science in school, even when the subject matter becomes complex and when other activities seem more
Collection
2002 ASEE North Midwest Section Conference
Authors
Murat Tanyel
United Arab Emirates University in Al-Ain, UAE where he helped set up an innovative introductoryengineering curriculum. Dr. Tanyel received his B. S. degree in electrical engineering from Bo_aziçi University,Istanbul, Turkey in 1981, his M. S. degree in electrical engineering from Bucknell University, Lewisburg, PA in1985 and his Ph. D. in biomedical engineering from Drexel University, Philadelphia, PA in 1990. Proceedings of the 2002 American Society for Engineering Education North Midwest Section Annual Conference Copyright ” 2002, American Society for Engineering Education
Conference Session
Interdisciplinary Approach to Env. Engrg
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Wafeek Wahby
Session 2251 THE TOSHKA PROJECT OF EGYPT: A MULTIDISCIPLINARY ENGINEERING EDUCATION CASE STUDY Dr. Wafeek S. Wahby Eastern Illinois University, Charleston, IllinoisAbstractWork is currently underway in southern Egypt to connect Nasser's Lake to a naturaldepression, located westward in Toshka, with a 300 km (185 miles) channel, then directthe lake's surplus water up North towards the Mediterranean Sea. Nasser's Lake is theworld's third largest lake, and the largest man-made freshwater lake in the world, locatedupstream of Aswan High Dam in Egypt. The Toshka
Conference Session
Technology for Learning
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Billy Koen
blanketendorsement, however, because very special psychological strategies were implemented in theweb-based course to ensure that this was true. Although the individual units are password protected for obvious reasons and unavailableto the general public, an overview of the site is currently open and available for a limited period oftime at: http://me205serv.me.utexas.eduA presentation emphasizing the importance of reinforcement contingencies was also delivered atthe International Conference on Information Technology Based Higher Education and Training inKumamoto, Japan. 108. Bibliography[1] Skinner, B.F., The Behavior of Organisms, D. Appleton-Century Com, McGraw-Hill, 1961.[2] Keller, Fred S., Learning : Reinforcement Theory, Random House, 1954
Conference Session
Project Based Education in CE
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Shashi Nambisan
Session 2215 A Team Oriented, Case-based Approach for a Transportation Engineering Course Shashi S. Nambisan, Ph.D, P.E. Professor of Civil Engineering University of Nevada, Las Vegas 4505 Maryland Parkway, Las Vegas NV 89154-4015 Tel: (702) 895-1325, fax (702) 895-4401, E-mail: shashi@ce.unlv.eduAbstract Teamwork and the ability to work with contemporary and emerging technologies thatfacilitate collaboration are critical to the engineering profession today. Team oriented, case
Conference Session
ASEE Multimedia Session
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Oscar R Gonzalez; James F Leathrum; Amit Kumar H; Vishnu Lakdawala; Stephen Zahorian
-thousand-student survey of mechanics test data for introductory physics courses." American Journal of Physics (1998): 64-74.4. Saul, Jeffrey M., Deardorff, Duane L., Abbott, David S., Allain, Rhett J., and Beichner, Robert J., Evaluating introductory physics classes in light of ABET criteria : An Example of SCALE-UP Project , Proceedings of the 2000 Annual meeting of the American Society for Engineering Education.( also visit for related publications http://www.ncsu.edu/PER/articles.htm) Page 7.182.95. Vosniadou, S. (1990). Conceptual development in astronomy. In S. Glynn, R. Yeany, and B. Britton (eds.), The
Conference Session
Assessment of Biomedical Engineering Programs
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Wendy Newstetter; Paul Benkeser
to beanswered, which constitutes the inquiry for the next session. From this list, each student choosesan area that s/he will research and report back to the group. This self-directed learning phaseinvolves tracking down the resources necessary to answer the identified questions, digesting thematerial and bringing information back into the group. This cycle of finding and developingknowledge, bringing it into the problem space, identifying new learning issues and research isrepeated until a solution is reached. Undergraduate students, however, rarely have sufficientexperience in locating appropriate materials to answer the evolving questions. Their search skillsare generally poor; they have no experience reading journal articles and they
Conference Session
Computers in Education Poster Session
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Paul Blowers
materials in non-static formats are just two ways to make supplemental Web-basedmaterials useful.References:1) Short, N. M., "Asynchronous distance educations: a five step approach to eliminate onlint problems before theyhappen", The Journal, 28, 56-65 (2000).2) King, K. P., "Course development on the World Wide Web", New Directions for Adult and Cont. Educ., 78, 25-32 (1998).3) Walters, R. F., and N. E. Reed, "Outcome analysis of distance learning: a comparison between conventional andindependent study instruction", http://horizon.unc.edu/projects/monograph/CD/Science_Mathematics4) Collins, M., "Comparing Web, correspondence and lecture version s of a second-year non-major biology course",British J. Educ. Technol., 31, 21-27 (2000).5) Escoe, G. M
Conference Session
Academic Issues
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Sarah Williamson; Fiona Lamb
Session 1460 Desires of industry, products from academia - Ships that pass in the night? R Eley, S Williamson, F Lamb LTSN Engineering, Loughborough University, UKIntroduction. The UK-wide Learning and Teaching Support Network (LTSN) was launched in January2000 following a British Government review of existing learning and teaching initiatives inhigher education (HE). Recognition that academics best appreciate, assimilate and implement apedagogic approach when presented to them in the context of their own discipline, resulted in
Conference Session
Manufacturing Processes and Systems
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
John Matsson
Page 7.896.5 8. Chandrasekhar, S., "Hydrodynamic and Hydromagnetic Stability". Dover (1981). Proceedings of the 2002 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition Copyright © 2002, American Society for Engineering Education
Conference Session
Product and Venture Creation Curriculum
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Steven Krumholz; Steve Schiffman; Sean Munson; John Bourne; James Krejcarek; Dan Lindquist; Susan Fredholm
Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exhibition Copyright © 2002, American Society for Engineering EducationBibliographic Information1. Adams, S. G. , The effectiveness of the e-team approach to invention and innovation,Journal of Engineering Education, Vol 90, No. 4, p. 597-600, 2001.2. Marchese, A. J. , Schmalzel, J., Mandayam, S, and Chen, J., A venture capital fund forundergraduate engineering students at Rowan University, Journal of Engineering Education,Vol 90, No. 4, p. 589-596, 2001.3. Miller, S. J., Doshi, R. , Milroy, J., and Yock, P. G., Early Experiences in Cross-DisciplinaryEducation in Biomedical Technology Innovation at Stanford University, Journal ofEngineering Education, Vol 90, No. 4, p. 585-588, 20014
Conference Session
NSF Grantees Poster Session
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Simon Ang; Fred Barlow; Alan Mantooth; Sean Mulvenon
, which involve software,presentation format, and evaluation. Each course has specific developmental needs from accessto simulation software to the development of web-based access to the VLCT tester.VIII. Bibliography[1]. J. England, 1998 International Reliability Physics Symposium Keynote Address.[2]. CISM X2000 Program, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, http://cism.jpl.nasa.gov.[3]. S. Tabatabaei, A. Ivanov, “Built-in current monitor for testing analog circuits,” IEEE Int. Symp. Circuits Syst., paper 15.8, Orlando, FL, 1999.[4]. S. Chakrabarti, A. Chatterjee, “Fault modeling and fault sampling for isolating faults in analog and mixed- signal circuits,” IEEE Int. Symp. Circuits Syst., paper 73.7, Orlando, FL, 1999.[5]. J. Hou, A
Conference Session
Women in Engineering: A Potpourri
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Sheryl Gowen; Alisha Waller
defined the direction and scope ofsubsequent education policy and research in terms of gender equity. In 1964, Congress passedthe Civil Rights Act, which, among other things, prohibited racial discrimination in education.As a part of this Act, Congress also commissioned a national study to determine the extent ofracial inequality in terms of access to educational opportunity. With the passage of Title IX, in1972, discrimination on the basis of sex in educational institutions and programs was alsoprohibited, but, unlike the 1964 Civil Rights Act, no research to examine sex discrimination wasincluded in the legislation. In the early 1980’s, national concern about the growing shortage ofscientists and engineers gave rise to policy initiatives
Conference Session
The Modern ChE Laboratory
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Kathryn Hollar; Marvin Harris; Kevin Dahm
concern. Since the exercisewas active and followed by a discussion rather than a lecture it is expected that students willretain more of the information.REFERENCES(1) Pintar, A. J. Proceedings of the ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Charlotte, NC, 1999.(2) Flynn, A. M.; Reynolds, J.; Theodore, L. Proceedings of the 2001 ASEE Conference & Exposition, Albuquerque, NM, 2001.(3) Bell, J. T.; Fogler, H. S. Proceedings of the 2001 ASEE Conference & Exposition, Albuquerque, NM, 2001.(4) Pintar, A. J.; Fisher, E. R.; Schulz, K. H. Proceedings of the ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Albuquerque, NM, 2001.BIOGRAPHICAL INFORMATIONKATHRYN A. HOLLAR is an Assistant Professor of Chemical Engineering
Conference Session
Tricks of the Trade Outside of Class
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Manoj Patankar
Session 1675 Personal-Professional Development: A Formula for Success on the Tenure Track Manoj S. Patankar San Jose State UniversityAbstractMost universities in the United States measure the performance of their tenure-track faculty inthree areas: teaching, research, and service. This paper presents a “formula,” based on personalexperience, which would enable new faculty to better prepare themselves for success on thetenure-track. The central construct of this formula is an understanding of the various factors thatcan positively
Conference Session
Knowing Students:Diversity and Retention
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
John Demel
of the freshmanprograms, a summary of changes accomplished, and the retention statistics for the College ofEngineering.IntroductionIn 1988, at The Ohio State University the retention of engineering students to the junior yearranged between 40 and 50 percent. See Figure 1. This followed the national norms. In the early1990’s the Ohio State College of Engineering became part of the NSF funded GatewayEngineering Education Coalition. The other members of the Coalition were Drexel University,Columbia University, Cooper Union, New Jersey Institute of Technology, University ofPennsylvania, University of South Carolina, and Florida International University. One focus ofthe Coalition’s efforts was to improve retention to the junior year by using
Conference Session
Curriculum and Laboratory Development
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Prasanta Kalita; Peter Lyne; Loren Bode; Alan Hansen
continuing.References1. Bindon, J. P., 1999. The micro steam car, an all embracing practical and theoretical design Project. The International Journal of Mechanical Engineering Education 27(3): 181-194.2. Bindon, J. P., Kaiser, I. and Powell, N., 1996. The micro steam car, technology education by participation. Proc. Third International Conference of the Third World Science, Technology and Development Forum, University of Natal, Pietermaritzburg.3. Ambrose, S. A. and Amon, C. H., 1997. Systematic design of a first year mechanical engineering course at Carnegie Mellon University. Journal of Engineering Education 86(2): 173-181.4. Butterfield, R., 1997. Benefit without cost in a mechanics laboratory. Journal of Engineering
Conference Session
Computers in Education Poster Session
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Patrick Dessert; Subramaniam Ganesan
press, ISBN 0-8186-6537-85. Java for Embedded System, by Ingo Cyliax, Circuit Cellar magazine, December 2000 and January 2001.6. Real Time JVM, New Monics Inc., www.newmonics.com7. Jworks, Windriversystems, Inc, www.wrs.com8. Java Chip, ajile systems inc., www.ajile.com9. Valvano, “ Embedded microcontroller system- real time interfacing” Brooks/Cole publisher10. Ronald Jurgen “ Automotive Handbook”, McGrawHill Handbook, second edition.11. Joseph Lemiux, “Programming in the OSEK/VDX environment”, CMP Books, ISBN 1-57820-081-4, 2001.12. www.real-time.org ---- for articles by Jensen13. www. Thinkingnerds.com/projects/rto s-ws/presentation.html14. WWW.arcom.control.com/prodcutsBiographyDR. SUBRAMANIAM GANESAN, is a Professor in the
Conference Session
Classroom Innovations
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Marilyn Smith
Page 7.799.8 “Proceedings of the 2002 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition Copyright Ó 2002, American Society for Engineering Education”resources developed via the original Digital Libraries Initiative, its successor, DLI -2, and thenewer NSDL, topics related solely to Aerospace Engineering have been extremely hard to find.Utilization of the material found in these Digital Libraries have resulted in the ease of providingdata for design projects, opportunities to examine research data, and applet s to understandphysical concepts.VIII. References1. Labaree, D. F., “Educational Researchers: Living with a Lesser Form of Knowledge,” Educational Researcher, Vol. 27
Conference Session
Computed Simulation and Animation
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Said Oucheriah; Abul Azad
kinetic, potential and dissipated energies. Thus, using the Hamiltonian’s Page 7.415.2 “Proceedings of the 2002 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition Copyright © 2002, American Society for Engineering Education”extended method, the dynamic equation of the flexible manipulator with the associatedboundary and initial conditions can be expressed as 2 ¶ 4 y(x, t) ¶ 2 y(x, t) ¶ 3 y(x, t) EI + r - D S = t (t) (2) ¶x 4 ¶t 2 ¶x 2 ¶t 2
Conference Session
Tools of Teaching
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Robert Carpick
.· The student is then required to answer the question within a reasonable amount of time (usually two minutes). The student is encouraged to “think aloud” on the board..· The student first tries to answer the question alone. Modest hints may be given by the instructor, and limited dialogue between the student and instructor may take place.· If the student is stumped s/he can “ask the audience”, whereby the audience votes but does not comment on which answer they prefer. The votes are recorded by the instructor on the blackboard. The student is then asked to provide their “FINAL ANSWER.”· If the student did not “ask the audience”, then a poll is taken after the student has submitted their answer, to gage the class’ response
Conference Session
Effective Energy Laboratory Ideas
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Ronald Nelson; David Flegel; Brian Johnson; Herbert Hess
voltage waveform zero crossings as shown in Figure 3.An innovative dynamic hysteresis method and an error-reduction algorithm operated on the “firstsignal” and “second signal” values to improve accuracy to within specifications. A secondaryzero-detection, based on current zero crossings, used the same innovations to provide timingsignals after fault initiation, when primary zero detection was lost. Gate drivers were purchasedfrom Enerpro, a decision that saved much design time and gave superbly reliable and accurategating of the thyristors that carried the fault current. Details of this are presented in [1].A software interface was written that allowed the user to enter in the fault data desired and thecommand to start the fault(s). This was
Conference Session
Design for Community
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Brian Thompson; Craig Somerton
Session 2625 Community Outreach for Capstone Design: The Cycle Projects Craig W. Somerton and Brian S. Thompson Department of Mechanical Engineering, Michigan State UniversityIntroductionA current trend in engineering education is the incorporation of a service learning experience.One such example is the EPICS program at Purdue, which involves the volunteer work ofengineering students in the community [1]. Another approach, proposed herein, is to utilize thesenior capstone design experience in community outreach. This approach has been taken duringthe past three years in the mechanical engineering senior
Conference Session
CE Rap Session and Toys in the Classroom
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Ronaldo Luna
undergraduate students with faculty, • expand the level of research activity on the campus, • help recruit superior students into graduate programs, and • demonstrate that teaching and research are compatible and mutually reinforcing.The faculty agrees to supervise the undergraduate student as junior colleagues in their researchprojects, both during the summer session and during the academic year. The faculty member andstudent provide brief synopses of potential research project(s) to the office of academic affairsvia the departmental coordinators. The student signs the two-page proposal and commits tocomplete the research in the form of a scientific paper (see actual proposal, Appendix 1). If thestudent is awarded the OURE project
Conference Session
Energy Programs and Software Tools
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Laura Genik; Craig Somerton
Page 7.1118.2the system Proceedings of the 2002 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition Copyright Ó 2002, American Society for Engineering Education Figure 1. Operation of TEEHouse ******************************************************* * TEEHOUS: Thermal Environmental Engineering * * HOUSe * * Version 2.2 * * Copyright 2000 Craig W. Somerton * * Scott S. Strawn * * Wayne Thelen * * Dan Lewis
Conference Session
NSF Grantees Poster Session
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
James Craddock; Lizette Chevalier
viable solutions.AcknowledgementThis project is funded in part from the National Science Foundation (DUE - CCLI ProjectNumber 9952577), the College of Engineering at Southern Illinois University Carbondale (SIUC),the Department of Civil Engineering at SIUC, the Materials Technology Department and theCollege of Mass Communication and Media Arts at SIUC.Bibliography1. Kohli, G., Maj, S. P., and Veal, D., “Multi-media Technology - An Opportunity for Modern Engineering Education,” American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference Proceedings, St. Louis, MO, June 18- 21, 2000.2. Yew, Tze-Leong, and Gramoll, Kurt “Teaching Multimedia Development to Engineering Students through Web- Based Modules.” American Society for
Conference Session
ASEE Multimedia Session
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Eric Bell
there is a match,the results are stored in a temporary data file. When all of the combinations have beenprocessed, the system then attempts to find the most likely candidate for the error.In the first round of error checking, the system is only trying to find the terms that mustbe in error - not necessarily explain the error(s) to the student. Thus, the system scans thetemporary file for the shortest error. This is the most likely candidate for the error. Thereasoning behind this is that if a student has entered an incorrect solution, then the entireexpression is obviously incorrect, but knowing that is trivially useless. The goal it to findthe smallest set of errors that produce the same result as the student’s mathematicalexpression.An
Conference Session
Computers in Education Poster Session
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Eric Bell
student's entry, as well as the correct entry provided by theproblem designer. Both expressions are evaluated numerically. When there is a match,the results are stored in a temporary data file. When all of the combinations have beenprocessed, the system then attempts to find the most likely candidate for the error.In the first round of error checking, the system is only trying to find the terms that mustbe in error - not necessarily explain the error(s) to the student. Thus, the system scans thetemporary file for the shortest error. This is the most likely candidate for the error. Thereasoning behind this is that if a student has entered an incorrect solution, then the entireexpression is obviously incorrect, but knowing that is trivially useless
Conference Session
Computed Simulation and Animation
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
John Nestor
andsuggestions for future work.2. BackgroundAlgorithm animation and software visualization have been used in teaching softwarealgorithms for a number of years. In the mid-1980’s Brown and Sedgewick developedthe BALSA system4 as a framework for software algorithm animation and used thisframework in courses at Brown University. More recently, many other systems havebeen developed that extend and improve upon this work; a good overview is provided in5.BALSA and similar systems animate software algorithms by presenting views - graphicalrenderings of data structures and execution history. As an animation proceeds, theposition, shape, and color of objects in the view are changed to illustrate data structurechanges, plot historical information about execution