may make faculty feel that they will beforced into teaching topics or skills that may not be comfortable for them. This paper focuses onan ongoing study of attitudes and concerns toward communication begun in the Department ofMechanical Engineering at Michigan State University. Students and faculty were asked tocomment on areas of concern in communication, areas that have received little or no attention orareas that seem to be purposely avoided. The first stage of this study is completed. A report onthe survey’s findings is introduced along with how those findings were used to adapt thecurriculum to a more communication oriented focus. It is hoped that by addressing the generalproblems experienced by both writers and speakers in the
. John Barry DuVall, East Carolina University Dr. DuVall is a Full Professor and facilitator of TECS-TRAIN in the Department of Technology Sys- tems at East Carolina University in Greenville, North Carolina. DuVall currently teaches online classes to practicing professionals at the undergraduate, Master’s and PhD levels in areas such as strategies for technology management and communication and industrial supervision. He served as Director of a NSF/ARPA/TRP research project called The Factory as a Learning Laboratory – A Practice-Based M.S. Degree Program for Black and Decker (U.S.) associates and defense industry scientists and engineers. In 1994 this led to the development of the first Internet programs for East
. His research interests are in the areas of Nanotechnology, Fiber Optic Communications, Faculty Development, Application of Telecom- munications Technologies in Distance Education, and Social and Ethical Implications of Technology. He teaches Wireless Engineering, Network Engineering, Fiber Optic Communications, Science Technology and Society (STS), and Project Management. He also advises students on their senior design projects. He is the author of many educational papers and presentations. He has authored/coauthored the following books: • Nanotechnology: Ethical and Social Implications (2012) • Technology and Society: Issues for the 21st Century and Beyond 3E, (2008) • The Telecommunications Fact Book and
Paper ID #6799Ethics in Engineering Education Using Virtual WorldsDr. Jodi Reeves, National University Dr. Jodi Reeves is an associate professor in the Department of Applied Engineering at National University in San Diego, CA. She teaches courses in design engineering, engineering management, electric circuits, and other applied engineering courses. She is also the lead faculty for the Data Analytics program in the School of Engineering, Technology, and Media at National University. Prior to academia, she worked for almost ten years as a quality control manager, engineering project manager, and senior scientist responsi
examined a casestudy in which a teacher built a do-it-yourself (DIY) interactive whiteboard so that hecould teach middle school mathematics in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico. Using this case studyas a model, a group of two teachers were provided with the materials and supportsnecessary to build their own do-it-yourself (DIY) interactive digital whiteboards, similarto those sold by commercial companies such as SmartBoard and Promethean, but at asmall fraction of the price. Unique components of each teachers experience weredescribed, and then the teachers were compared on individual components of the process.The case studies demonstrated that each teacher had unique facets to their experience, butthere were also common features. These differences helped
Page 23.1220.2fundamentals program and the chosen inverted classroom approach will be explained. Thesubsequent sections will discuss the results pertaining to the three aforementioned questions.Finally, recommendations for future work will be given.MethodsClassroom StructureThe course met for three 125-minute sessions per week and for one 125-minute laboratoryexperience per week. While the inverted approach was applied to both the classroom andlaboratory components, further discussion of the laboratory component is beyond the scope ofthis paper. The classroom experiences were designed studio-style, with one faculty member andtwo undergraduate teaching assistants; seating arrangements encouraged interaction in groups offour and included a
Paper ID #6091Conducting State-of the-art Research in an Institution with a Strong Under-graduate Education FocusDr. Yusuf A Mehta, Rowan University Dr. Mehta is an associate professor at the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Rowan University. Dr. Mehta has extensive experience in teaching pavement materials and pavement systems. Dr. Mehta has published several technical and educational papers in leading professional organizations.Dr. Ralph Alan Dusseau P.E., Rowan University Dr. Ralph Alan Dusseau, P.E., is professor and founding chair of the Department of Civil and Envi- ronmental Engineering at Rowan
fullyequipped are deployed at UNM and NNMC. Online students who are not able to come to labhours at their institutions can borrow the FPGA board and install the ISE WebPACK DesignSoftware on their respective personal computers. For each assignment, students must also submita video showing the operation of their implemented assignment and a report. Students who cometo lab hours must implement the lab assignments which are checked by a teaching assistant.There are at least five lab sessions during a semester as shown in Table 5. Page 23.354.11 Figure 4. FPGA board used for lab experiments in ECE 238 Computer Logic Design. Table 5. Examples
chemicalengineering majors. The course is also open to juniors and other engineering / sciencemajors when space is available. It is a four-credit course, meeting twice weekly for twohours. This block schedule was adopted in order to allow flexibility in the use of classtime, as described below. It is a “permission” course, having no formal pre- or co-requisites listed, although the course relies on students’ coursework in mass and energybalances, heat transfer, thermodynamics, and chemistry to a significant extent.We wanted to have a food-safe laboratory available as part of this course so that studentscould not only prepare and assess food products, but also taste what they had made. Westrongly suggest that anyone wishing to bring this course to their
Paper ID #6416The State of Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs) in Engineering Educa-tion: Where do we go from here?Dr. Flora S Tsai, Singapore University of Technology and Design Dr. Flora Tsai is a lecturer at Singapore University of Technology and Design (SUTD) and an associate lecturer at Singapore Institute of Management (UniSIM). She has over eleven years of teaching experience for undergraduate software engineering subjects. She was a graduate of MIT, Columbia University, and NTU. Dr Tsai’s current research focuses on developing intelligent techniques for data mining in text and social media. Her recent awards
-controllerhardware to illustrate key topics and solution methods (e.g., system modeling and controllerdesign) into a traditional Feedback Controls lecture course. The authors have previously taughtthe course numerous times, so a well-paced course schedule and solid foundation of course notesare already in place. Additionally, hybrid and problem-based learning (PBL) techniques havebeen incorporated into prior offerings, which enhances student engagement and allows bothsufficient time to introduce programming modules and the ability of the instructor/researchassistant (RA)/teaching assistant (TA) team to give necessary assistance and feedback during theprogramming experiences. A hands-on programming toolkit developed by Canfield and Abdelrahman1 for
ability to design experiments? What, exactly, are programevaluators looking for as evidence that the students in a program are demonstrating the ability to“design and conduct experiments”?In this paper, an experiential approach to ensuring that students have some training in design ofexperiments is described along with the responses to a student survey assessing their attitudestoward this approach and how they perceived its effect on their laboratory learning experience.BackgroundA cursory review of the topic of experiment design will inevitably lead one to who manyconsider the “father” of the topic, Sir R.A. Fisher who, in 1935, published likely the first text onthe subject Design of Experiments2. By the 1960’s, several books on design of
tosimulation tools, such as MultiSim. Use of Field Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGA) board iseven a better choice. This helps students to create schematic circuits at ease and also indeveloping Hardware Descriptive Language (HDL) program. The schematic or the HDL codecan simulate a circuit and help to fix any possible problems and finally to download the programon to FPGA board. The whole process is clean, neat, and encouraging to the users. As an addedadvantage, this hands-on process keeps the students engrossed in learning by keeping them awayfrom side-talks, high-tech distracters, such as smart phones and iPads. On another front, we haveintroduced high-end technology in teaching assembly language using microcontrollers. Thereare newer versions of
Paper ID #7412Inquiry-Based Learning Activities in DynamicsDr. Brian P. Self, California Polytechnic State University Dr Self has taught in the Mechanical Engineering Department at Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo since 2006. Prior to that, he worked in the Air Force Research Laboratories before teaching at the U.S. Air Force Academy for seven years. During the 2011-2012 academic year he participated in a professor exchange, teaching at the Munich University of Applied Sciences. His engineering education activities include collaborating on the Dynamics Concept Inventory, developing model-eliciting activities in mechanical
Evaluator for the past 15 years. He is a former Alexander von Humboldt Foundation Research Fellow of Germany. He has over 35 years of teaching, research, and industry experience.Prof. George P Tebbetts, University of Arkansas, Little Rock George Tebbetts, P.E., is an Associate Professor and Chair in the Department of Engineering Technology at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock. Tebbetts holds an M.S. Mechanical Engineering from the University of New Haven, CT; and a B.S. in Mechanical Engineering from Texas A & M University. Page 23.230.1 c American Society for Engineering
Paper ID #5810Experiments for a Freshman Engineering Computing CourseDr. Charles H. Forsberg, Hofstra University Dr. Forsberg is a professor emeritus of Hofstra University in Hempstead, NY where he taught lecture and laboratory courses primarily in the thermal/fluids area of mechanical engineering. He is currently active in the Energy Engineering area. Page 23.575.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2013 Experiments for a Freshman Engineering Computing
MINDS Many new faculty may face challenges related to effective teaching techniques. Student perception of good teaching may often be different from the instructors' opinions. Finding the technique that merges the two perspectives can be challenging and vital. Project-based learning has been documented to be a guaranteed procedure for increasing students' interest in the taught topic, while developing skills that also often reward the instructor with good student evaluations. We present the lessons learned in several capstone courses taught by three instructors at three higher education institutions. Different procedures are used. Although the instructors use different techniques
Paper ID #5783Evaluation of Hybrid Instruction of an Introductory Electronics CourseDr. Catherine Skokan, Colorado School of Mines Dr. Skokan has retired from her tenured position at Colorado School of Mines and is now a half-time research professor. Her research emphasizes engineering education as well as geophysical engineering for underserved communities in humanitarian engineering applications. In the other half of her time, she lectures on cruise ships particularly on the topic of Geology of Central America. Life is good!!!Dr. Ravel F. Ammerman, Colorado School of Mines Ravel F. Ammerman is a Teaching Professor of
Authentic Integration of Mathematics andTechnology in Inquiry-Based Science Instruction,” Journal of Computers in Mathematics and ScienceTeaching, Vol. 20, No. 1, 2001, p. 99.[3] Schlenker, R., and K. Schlenker, “Integrating Science, Mathematics, and Sociology in an Inquiry-Based Studyof Changing Population Density,” Science Activities, Vol. 36, No. 4, 2000, p. 16.[4] Buch, N., and T. Wolff, “Classroom Teaching through Inquiry,” Journal of Professional Issues in EngineeringEducation and Practice, Vol. 126, No. 3, 2000, p. 105.[5] Biernacki, J.J. and C.D. Wilson, “Interdisciplinary Laboratory in Advanced Materials: A Team-OrientedInquiry-Based Approach,” Journal of Engineering Education, Vol. 90, 2001, p. 637.[6] Stahovich, T.F., and H. Bal, “An
began pursuing a Ph.D. degree in Civil Engineering with major in Geotechnical Engineering at the Polytechnic Institute of New York University. He is currently serving as a teaching fellow at the Bedford Village and Langston Hughes Elementary Schools under NYU-Poly’s GK-12 program funded by NSF and CBSI consortium of donors. His experimental research interest is focused on the high strain rate behavior of sands including transparent soils and its application on modeling of rapid earth penetration.Mr. Ryan Francis Cain, PS 3 The Bedford Village School Ryan Cain teaches elementary science in Brooklyn, NY. Since 2010, he has served as a partner teacher in NYU-Poly’s AMPS/CBSI GK-12 Fellows project.Dr. Vikram Kapila
capstoneproject, but meet state requirements for student teaching. Challenges include incorporatingeffective classroom experiences, curriculum development and extracurricular opportunitiesavailable as students in an education program with more typical requirements from engineeringdisciplines such as required laboratories and opportunities for undergraduate research. Seekingaccreditation for the program from the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education(NCATE) as well as ABET affords additional challenge.This paper will describe the unique challenges of establishing this interdisciplinary andinnovative program, including issues related to accreditation of the program from twoperspectives: education and engineering. Further, the paper will
Paper ID #6213Development of a Summer High School Research ProgramDr. Arif Sirinterlikci, Robert Morris University Arif Sirinterlikci is a professor of engineering at Robert Morris University. Besides advising Co-Op, Industrial, and Manufacturing Engineering students, he also serves as the Interim Head of the Engineering Department and Director of Engineering Laboratories. Sirinterlikci has been active in ASEE with K- 12/Pre-college, Manufacturing, Mechanical Engineering, and Engineering Technology Divisions.Miss Selin Frances Sirinterlikci Selin Sirinterlikci is a graduating senior from Moon Area High School in Moon
offerthese courses through its regular curriculum (as electives), or, if preferred, as a separateoffering. In addition, select universities can offer the entire professional HP ExpertOnecertification program as part of their continuous education portfolio to help professionals inthe workforce expand their career opportunities with validated skills in the latesttechnologies, including cloud solutions.Integral to the program is the HP Certified Educator component which validates professorsare qualified to teach these courses. HP Institute students may also spend internship periodsat companies and have access to HP’s vast community of IT experts. HP Institute is one wayof preparing the global engineer through a very unique industry-university
graduate by the end of fall semester (rather than stay to complete the 2 additional corecourses), and some are interested in only learning the fundamentals of nuclear engineering. Impact of NE Minor at COE at UT ArlingtonUT Arlington is a comprehensive research, teaching and public service institution whose missionis the advancement of knowledge and the pursuit of excellence. It is striving to attain nationalresearch university status. As such, the offering of additional engineering curriculum optionssuch as NE is completely in line with the university’s mission. Since its initiation in fall 2009,the UT Arlington NE minor has begun contributing to the nation’s NE education infrastructure. Indications are that interest
Paper ID #6942PERFORMANCE-CENTERED ADAPTIVE CURRICULUM FOR EMPLOY-MENT NEEDSProf. Clara P´erez-Molina, DIEEC - National Distance Education University Clara P´erez Molina received her MSc degree in Physics from the Complutense University in Madrid and her PhD in Industrial Engineering from the National Distance Education University (UNED). She has worked as researcher in several national and European projects and has published different technical reports and research articles for journals and conferences, as well as teaching books. She has received the UNED’s Social Council Award for the best Didactic Materials in
College Riham Mahfouz has more than nine years of experience in teaching at the college level. She is currently working as the department head of the Chemistry department at the Thomas Nelson Community College (TNCC) where she teaches and serves as course coordinator for the following courses: preparatory chem- istry, organic chemistry, and online college chemistry. Mahfouz has extensive training and experience in developing online courses. She has developed online college chemistry courses using the ASSURE Model of instructional design and the standards created by the Quality Matters faculty-centered peer re- view process for certifying the quality of online courses.Ms. Jeanne Peters, Advanced Science and Automation
Paper ID #6807Introducing an Instructional Model in Undergraduate Electric Power En-ergy Systems Curriculum-Part (I): Authoritative vs. Dialogic Discourse inProblem-Centered LearningDr. Jia-Ling Lin, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities Dr. Jia-Ling Lin is a research scientist in the STEM Education Center at the University of Minnesota Twin Cities. Her research interests are in areas of developing and exploring innovative instructional models in undergraduate engineering education and embodied theoretical claims about effective teaching and learning, particularly in discipline-based problem solving.Prof. Paul Imbertson
is my intent to teach you the skills needed to be a residential designer and begin a career in residential architecture. The skills you gain from the courses in the Drafting Program are transferable to almost every profession and can be a source of income for you as you continue your education. I have taught drafting on the college level for ten years with high expectations and rigor. I currently teach Design Engineering courses at both Fremont and Bonneville. I also teach Driver Educa- tion for Fremont High, as well as mathematics and interior design courses for BYUI, architecture courses for Weber State University, and graduate level courses in Business and Education for Argosy University. I am currently the
currently teaches Engineering Statics, Mechanics of Solids, and Civil Engineering Materials. Page 23.600.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2013First Encounters: Statics as the Gateway to Engineering CultureThis paper describes ongoing efforts at Syracuse University to re-engineer the traditionalstatics course. This course forms part of a larger NSF funded project aimed at increasinginnovation and creativity in engineering curricula. The principal aim of the overallproject is to find strategies to foster and reward creativity in engineering students.At Syracuse University, as at many
faculty as the expertise needed to teach each course was developed. Active learning is used in many of the core robotics courses [14]. Progressive increase in level of autonomy in each course. The robots developed in each course progress from tele-operation to line-following to total autonomy. FIGURE 2. Robotics Engineering laboratory late at night Tight integration of laboratory before a term project is due. assignments with lecture material [12]. Community-building. Many activities serve to build a sense of community amongst Robotics Engineering majors. These include