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Displaying results 3331 - 3360 of 30695 in total
Conference Session
New Research on Retention of URM Groups in STEM
Collection
2009 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Rafic Bachnak, Texas A&M International University; Rohitha Goonatilake, Texas A&M International University; Juan Lira, Texas A&M International University; Conchita Hickey, Texas A&M International University
Tagged Divisions
Minorities in Engineering
it. Homework and laboratory projects will be used to help students understand concepts and build problem solving skills. 4. Professional Development Plan: The professional development plan includes offering professional development workshops for faculty in the STEM fields at TAMIU. Our goal is to increase the proportion of students who complete introductory mathematics, engineering, biology and chemistry courses with a grade no lower than a C and return the following year to continue their program of study. 5. Model Transfer Agreement and Student Advising: To increase the number of students in STEM disciplines, a TAMIU STEM Academic Advisor(STEM AA) will identify likely candidates through
Conference Session
Professional Graduate Education and Industry
Collection
2009 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Thomas Stanford, University of South Carolina; Donald Keating, University of South Carolina; Roger Olson, Rolls-Royce Corporation
Tagged Divisions
Graduate Studies
Leadership_____________________________________________________________________________________Stages of Growth Typical Responsibilities-Autonomy-JudgmentENGINEER IX An engineer-leader at this level is in responsible charge of programs so extensive and complex as to require staff and resources of sizeable magnitude to meet the overall engineering objectives of the organization.ENGINEER VIII An engineer-leader at this level demonstrates a high degree of creativity, foresight, and mature judgment in planning, organizing, and guiding extensive engineering programs and activities of outstanding novelty and importance. Is responsible for deciding the kind and extent of engineering and related
Conference Session
Curriculum Development and Applications
Collection
2009 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Claude Villiers, Florida Gulf Coast University
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Design Graphics
course materials. Selection of the design project has become crucial tomaximizing the student learning outcomes. The instructor challenges the students by selecting adesign project with real life parameters; in this case, the new buildings being constructed oncampus. Students are provided with only a text file of the proposed plan of one of the futurecampus buildings. Students are divided into groups of two to four and required to use theircombined imaginations and engineering abilities to produce a design that meets the minimumexpectations outlined by the instructor. On the last day of class, students showcase their finaldesigns in a poster presentation. Grades are assigned by invited guests. Surveys, feedback fromthe judges, and performance by
Conference Session
Infusing Engineering Content Through Curricular Innovation
Collection
2009 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Austin Talley, University of Texas, Austin; Kathy Schmidt, University of Texas, Austin; Richard Crawford, University of Texas, Austin
Tagged Divisions
K-12 & Pre-College Engineering
assist students and teachers in building prototypes with LEGOs. A limitedset of functions for designing with LEGO Technics, called the LEGO Functional Common Basis,was developed. The “Design with LEGO” web tool is based on the LEGO Functional CommonBasis. The tool has been evaluated during teacher professional development institutes (PDI) thatprovide hands-on introduction to engineering design. Survey analysis of the tool indicates thatteachers exposed to the tool plan on using it in the future. This paper provides an overview ofthe research on functional modeling with LEGOs, how functional modeling for LEGOs was usedas the basis for the web-based tool, and a discussion of the findings that indicate positive resultswhen the tool is used to
Conference Session
Sustainable-energy Education: Lessons Learned
Collection
2009 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Linfeng Zhang, University of Bridgeport; Xingguo Xiong, University of Bridgeport; Junling Hu, University of Bridgeport
Tagged Divisions
Energy Conversion and Conservation
encourage a wide range of alternative energysources, President Obama voted in favor of the Energy Policy Act of 2005, proposed a NewEnergy for America plan, and signed American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA). Thekey points in these policies are as following:≠ Reduce the overall U.S. oil consumption by at least 35%, or 10 million barrels per day, by 2030 in order to offset imports from OPEC nations.≠ Help create five million new jobs by strategically investing $150 billion over the next ten years to catalyze private efforts to build a clean energy future.≠ Ensure 10 percent of our electricity comes from renewable sources by 2012, and 25 percent by 2025.≠ Implement an economy-wide cap-and-trade program to
Conference Session
Graphics and Visualization
Collection
2009 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Magesh Chandramouli, Purdue University; Gary Bertoline, Purdue University; La Verne Abe Harris, Purdue University
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Design Graphics
project has specific purposes or objectives to meet; for instance, anoffice would have certain requirements, such as space for a set number of computers,reception, meeting rooms, and washroom. A restaurant would accommodate a particularnumber of patrons, should have spaces for spreading buffet, restrooms, etc. Similarly,every construction inherently should be driven by the needs of the consumer and thereshould be a means to verify if the proposed plan will meet all the demands. It amounts toa tremendous waste of time, effort, and money to build some project and finally realizethat it falls short or fails to meet the objectives. Hence, considerable care has to be takenin planning and designing phases. Visualization is a very useful tool that holds
Conference Session
Design Methods and Concepts
Collection
2006 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
S. Balachandran, University of Wisconsin-Platteville
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education
ofScience in Project Management Program.MIE 7440 Taguchi Methods of Designing Experiments This course was developed in 2001 and made available online with the assistanceprovided by the University of Wisconsin Learning Innovations (UWLI). It was taughtusing the Prometheus course management system once. In 2002, the course was move tothe Blackboard course management system. It was taught using the Desire-to-Learn(D2L) course management system from 2003. This DOE course provides experience in planning, conducting, and analyzingstatistically designed experiments using the Taguchi methods. The primary objective ofthe course is to educate and train students in the quantitative and qualitative methods forquality planning, measurement
Conference Session
Manufacturing Education Innovation and Assessment
Collection
2006 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Priya Manohar, Robert Morris University
Tagged Divisions
Manufacturing
. This balancing act then becomesquite a challenge. To address this challenge, a two-tier approach was developed and delivered duringthe Fall 05 term at Robert Morris University to deal with the differing expectations of thestakeholders in the teaching/learning environment as described in Figure 1. This approachis further discussed in this article.3. The Two-Tier Approach The first tier of the teaching plan, called the ‘essential teaching plan’ includes all ofthe essential teaching elements. These elements consist of the following: • Set teaching method(s): The options are lecture, discussion, tutorial, laboratory, mutli-media resources. For different topics, the instructor identifies appropriate teaching methods and
Conference Session
Practice/Partnership/Program Issues
Collection
2006 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Daniel Davis, University of Hartford
Tagged Divisions
Architectural
experiences. This variety of people and experience makes the meetingsmuch more productive and the board much more effective. Finding and attracting the rightoutside advisors is not as easy as it seems, and it is not always possible to cover every area with aparticular group of advisory board members. Regardless of who is on your board, it is importantthat they can be relied upon for good advice and direction.Advisory Board FundamentalsMany university programs are now beginning to discover that an advisory board can serve as avaluable complement to the program’s leadership team. In today’s increasingly complex andcompetitive world, the proliferation of advisory boards is helping university programs developspecific plans with clear and effective
Conference Session
Innovative Curriculum & non-Technical Skills
Collection
2006 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
JoDell Steuver, Purdue University
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Technology
reality for the student volunteers. While information technology internsat for-profit companies normally worked in a specific department, these interns were able towork from the corporate vantage point. The experiences emphasized the importance ofintegrated systems and provided project planning experiences.Historic House Museum Arts Council Computer Recycling ProjectTeam of three students One IT and one OLS student One studentAcquired as a public property Consortium of member Project founded in 1997 by amuseum in 1955 agencies providing a variety of person concerned about the performances and arts environment and the
Conference Session
Digital System Design
Collection
2006 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Joanne DeGroat, Ohio State University
Tagged Divisions
Electrical and Computer
= '0' THEN C <= Cint; ELSE C <= HighZ; END IF; END PROCESS drive_out; END behavioral; Figure 2 (continued). Floating Point Adder Behavioral Code The students start this project by writing a test plan which outlines the tests to beapplied, the expected result of the test, and outlines the methodology of how the tests areto be applied and checked. Students then must write the testbench which both applies the Page 11.1425.6tests and checks the results. They must also generate the tests to be applied. They areprovided with the tests
Conference Session
Emerging EM Areas
Collection
2006 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Robert Parden, Santa Clara University
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Management
systems approach creates the greatest productivity improvements.4. The best approach is to deal with counterproductive factors.These include: Insufficient management attention to productivity Ineffective planning, direction and control Poor communications Limited knowledge sharing Technological obsolescence Operational over-complexity--red tape Lack of people-orientation in management Lack of manager developmentORGANIZATIONAL GOALS Page 11.975.3The following goals are typical for most knowledge-intensive organizations:CreativityTo bring into being from one's thoughts. The current leadership challenge
Conference Session
A Serving Profession: Service Learning in Civil Engineering Education
Collection
2006 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Warren Cambell, Western Kentucky University; Shane Palmquist, Western Kentucky University; Greg Mills, Western Kentucky University
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
gages to him and then decided that it would make a good projectfor this class. Incomplete plans were downloaded from the Rickley Hydrological Company(2006) web site. The plans were not complete, so details were worked out by experiment. Thegage consists of a 5 cm (2 in) galvanized pipe with both ends capped. Holes are drilled in theside of the bottom end cap to allow water in, and another hole is drilled in the upper cap forventing of air. A stick with a cup containing granulated cork is placed in the pipe. As the waterrises, so does the granulated cork. When the water falls, the cork adheres to the stick leaving aclear high water mark. Figure 5 shows one of the crest gages installed in a manhole during astorm and details of the recording stick
Conference Session
Engineering Transfer Issues: Two-year College to Four-year College
Collection
2017 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
David I. Spang, Rowan College at Burlington County; Eric Constans, Rowan University; Edem G Tetteh, Rowan College at Burlington County
Tagged Divisions
Two Year College Division
necessary and are all planned as part of the current project.Additionally, RCBC’s Workforce Development Institute and the Burlington County WorkforceDevelopment Board allow for the streamlined interaction between the college and industrypartners. This collaboration allows for the aligning of local, state, and federal resources underone umbrella. The WDI provides a unified, integrated workforce development system forBurlington County to identify and provide skills, training, and the education needed for theworkforce of today and tomorrow. The WDI diligently works to help prepare individuals foracademic success, for employment, and to gain critical new career skills meeting the needs ofindustry. The WDI accomplishes its mission through a mix of
Conference Session
Engaging Faculty Across Disciplines, Colleges, and Institutions
Collection
2017 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
James D. Sweeney, Oregon State University; Michelle Kay Bothwell, Oregon State University; Milo Koretsky, Oregon State University; Susan Bobbitt Nolen, University of Washington; Devlin Montfort, Oregon State University
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Multidisciplinary Engineering
administrative offices working in the areas of diversity,inclusion, social justice, equal opportunity, and access so that each office can better focus on itsmission and goals. As part of this effort, OSU has established three new positions—SpecialAssistant to the President for Community Diversity Relations, Vice President and ChiefDiversity Officer, and Executive Director of the Office of Equal Opportunity and Access, as wellas formed a new Leadership Council for Equity, Inclusion and Social Justice. All of these entitiesare working collaboratively to bring focused energy to university-wide planning andimplementation of equity and diversity efforts.Professional Development Opportunities. While there are many professional developmentopportunities at OSU
Conference Session
Architectural Division Technical Session 2
Collection
2017 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Carisa H. Ramming, Oklahoma State University; Steven E. O'Hara, Oklahoma State University
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Architectural
(Architecture Students TeachingElementary Kids):The longest-running outreach program at the schoolwas developed by the local chapter of the AmericanInstitute of Architecture Students (AIAS) in 1999.ASTEK began with donated materials and limitedtime outside of the classroom and studio. Thisprogram partners with the local public school districtto engage fifth grade students in architecture,planning, and structures. The ten-week program hasarchitecture students from the university visit the sixlocal elementary schools to advocate for theprofession and community. Weekly assignmentsand activities are: A Story and VisualizationExercise, Textures and Materials, Urban Planning,Scale Sketching, Geometry in Architecture, TheArchitect’s Floor Plan, Structures in
Conference Session
Pre-College: Robotics
Collection
2017 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Lynn A. Albers, Campbell University; Jenna P. Carpenter, Campbell University; Marie E. Hopper, FIRST North Carolina
Tagged Divisions
Pre-College Engineering Education Division
Engi- neering Education and Energy Engineering. In addition, she has been lead mentor of FRC Team SUM #6003 for the past two years.Dr. Jenna P. Carpenter, Campbell University Dr. Carpenter is Founding Dean of Engineering at Campbell University. She is Chair of the ASEE Long-Rangge Planning Committee and the ASEE Strategic Doing Governance Team. She is a past Vice President of Professional Interest Councils for ASEE and past President of WEPAN. Currently Chair of the National Academy of Engineering Grand Challenge Scholars Program Steering Committee and an ASEE PEV for General Engineering, Dr. Carpenter regularly speaks at the national level on issues related to the success of women in engineering and innovative
Conference Session
Community Engagement Division Technical Session 1
Collection
2017 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Jay B. Brockman, University of Notre Dame; Maria Krug, University of Notre Dame; Alicia Czarnecki, Bowman Creek Educational Ecosystem; Ryan M Nell, Bowman Creek Educational Ecosystem; Gary Allen Gilot P.E., University of Notre Dame; Victoria E Goodrich, University of Notre Dame
Tagged Divisions
Community Engagement Division
Master Plan identified streetscape enhancements as a neighborhoodpriority, interns were initially going to support a City project to implement new lighting, streettrees, and aesthetic enhancements near a neighborhood high school. Due to delays in the project,the team pivoted from its original scope to instead make improvements to a neighborhood parkincluding a little free lending library, a drinking fountain, playground equipment refurbishingand over 500 feet of new road and sidewalk. In collaboration with a University of Notre Damestudent chapter of the American Society of Civil Engineers, BCe2 interns also worked on thedesign of a pedestrian bridge to replace a ruin in the park over Bowman Creek. By working inpartnership with several City
Conference Session
Professionalism and Preparations Developed by Graduate Study Programs—Graduate Studies Division Technical Session 7
Collection
2017 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Valerie N. Streets, University of Tulsa; Bradley J. Brummel, University of Tulsa; Michael Wade Keller, University of Tulsa; Rami M. Younis, The University of Tulsa
Tagged Divisions
Graduate Studies
from the organizational sciences andengineering education literatures, nine professional competencies were selected as the structurefor the program. The competencies consisted of non-technical skills that are critical to one’semployability in most high-level jobs: conflict management, creativity, cultural adaptability,leadership, oral communication, planning, problem solving, teamwork, and writtencommunication (see Table 1). Competencies, or soft-skills, recommended in the literature [7]were discussed with engineering faculty members, industry professionals, graduate students, anddepartmental advisory boards to determine a final list for inclusion in the professionaldevelopment program.The individual competencies can be grouped into three
Conference Session
Military and Veterans Constituent Committee Division Technical Session 2
Collection
2017 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Carol L. Considine, Old Dominion University; Michael W. Seek P.E., Old Dominion University; Jon Lester, Old Dominion University; Anthony W Dean, Old Dominion University
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Military and Veterans
, providingcommunity assistance, funding, training, development of metrics to assess performance of greeninfrastructure, and promotion of best practices.5The City of Norfolk, the Green Infrastructure Center, Inc., and Old Dominion University havecollaborated on a National Fish and Wildlife Federation Grant titled “Developing a GreenInfrastructure Plan and Network for the Lafayette River Network”. As part of the project OldDominion University provided a training program to prepare veterans for the jobs in greeninfrastructure. Green infrastructure projects can provide business and employment opportunitiesfor veterans. This project includes a 20 hour educational course for veterans to educate them aboutthe green infrastructure industry, business and employment
Conference Session
Teams, Capstone Courses, and Project Based-Learning
Collection
2017 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
David E. Schmidt, University of Pittsburgh; Renee M. Clark, University of Pittsburgh
Tagged Divisions
Mechanical Engineering
inkey capstone exercises, including a mid-semester, peer-based design review as well as a final symposium.This student engagement and undergraduate networking has far reaching benefits, as the studentsinvolved enrich their own experiences and become resources to pass information and critiques along toone another.Our plan for assessing this program and its students involves following the participating studentsthroughout the sophomore, junior and senior years. Students, at varied stages in the curriculum, alongwith their mentors and industry sponsors, will be interviewed to assess the effectiveness of theintroductory course and the influence of early exposure to the capstone experience on their capstoneprojects. Project performance will also be
Conference Session
ETD Curriculum
Collection
2017 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Nebil Buyurgan, Missouri State University; Kevin M. Hubbard Ph.D., Missouri State University; Martin Price Jones, Missouri State Univiversity
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Technology
. Students complete an integrative design project in each courseand apply presented theory into real-world engineering problems. Course deliverables includewritten reports with detailed design data and analysis, group and individual presentations, andone or more working, physical product prototypes. Projects are also used to introduce enterprisesoft skills, including various levels of communication, teamwork, professionalism, andrecognizing ethical values. The sequence is finalized by a senior level capstone “Senior Design”course that requires student participation in interdisciplinary teams to bring a product fromconceptual design through manufacture. Activities include detail design, material selection, costestimation, process planning, schedule
Conference Session
ETD Capstone Projects
Collection
2017 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
David J. Broderick, Central Connecticut State University
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Technology
process used by the National Aeronautics andSpace AdministrationExamining the outputs of the NASA process reveal varied types of output in all of the stages. Theoutputs of that process can be broadly grouped into the following headings: 1. Proposal of Program/Project Goals 2. Development of Requirements 3. Formation of Planned Activities 4. Documentation of ResultsEach design phase culminates in a set of formal reviews. The formal design reviews areubiquitous in engineering design and are often overlooked in other areas of engineering andtechnology education. The CCSU process aims to cover the types of output produced throughoutall design phases and introduce the students to the work flow around formal design reviews. TheCCSU process is
Conference Session
Military and Veterans Division Technical Session 3
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Richard Wayne Freeman P.E., U.S. Coast Guard Academy
Tagged Divisions
Military and Veterans
average, 45% of the accepted applicants. Student retention for the pre-collegesummer program is 95%, compared to an overall retention of 90%.The United States Coast Guard Academy hosts three six-day sessions during July.Each session begins with participant arrival on Sunday. The formal program beginsMonday morning and ends Friday afternoon. Engineering activities are scheduled forMondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Fridays. Monday’s session is an introduction toUnited States Coast Guard Academy Engineering. Tuesday and Wednesday sessionswere design and build sessions for Friday’s ARoW competition. This past summer, theengineering team requested, planned and implemented a major change in activities.In addition to the engineering team, two groups
Conference Session
International Division Technical Session 5
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Kseniya Zaitseva, Tomsk Polytechnic University/ Association for Engineering Education of Russia; José Carlos Quadrado P.E., Porto Polytechnic Institute
Tagged Divisions
International
and transparency for the systems of higher educationand its qualifications. They are important clarification tools for the students, citizens, employersand the educators themselves [4].For the university it is a very useful tool for planning and organizing learning since it makesevident the expected results of the teachings and allows them to be easily understood byprofessors, students, employers and other stakeholders of the educational system. On the onehand it helps the professor to guide his teaching towards the achievement of certain objectivesthat have been made explicit in terms of knowledge and skills. On the other, allows the student toknow in advance the challenges that he or she will face throughout his/her training, that is
Conference Session
ENT Division Technical Session: Competitions, Challenges, and Teams
Collection
2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Ryan Striker P.E., North Dakota State University; Enrique Alvarez Vazquez, North Dakota State University; Mary Pearson, North Dakota State University; Lauren Singelmann, North Dakota State University; Ellen M. Swartz, North Dakota State University
Tagged Divisions
Entrepreneurship & Engineering Innovation
focused in the area of bioelectromag- netics, specifically designing electronics that can be used as medical devices. She obtained her B.S. and M.S. degrees at NDSU in electrical and computer engineering. Mary is also interested in STEM education research.Ms. Lauren Singelmann, North Dakota State University Lauren Singelmann is a Masters Student in Electrical and Computer Engineering at North Dakota State University. Her research interests are innovation-based-learning, educational data mining, and K-12 Out- reach. She works for the NDSU College of Engineering as the K-12 Outreach Coordinator where she plans and organizes outreach activities and camps for students in the Fargo-Moorhead area.Ms. Ellen M Swartz, North
Conference Session
Beyond the Capstone: Integrating Authentic Experiences that Promote Learning and Excitement
Collection
2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Brad Wambeke P.E., United States Military Academy
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
audiences 4. an ability to recognize ethical and professional responsibilities in engineering situations and make informed judgments, which must consider the impact of engineering solutions in global, economic, environmental, and societal contexts 5. an ability to function effectively on a team whose members together provide leadership, create a collaborative and inclusive environment, establish goals, plan tasks, and meet objectives 6. an ability to develop and conduct appropriate experimentation, analyze and interpret data, and use engineering judgment to draw conclusions 7. an ability to acquire and apply new knowledge as needed, using appropriate learning
Conference Session
Computing & Information Technology: Curriculum and Assessment
Collection
2018 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Masoud Naghedolfeizi, Fort Valley State University; Xiangyan Zeng, Fort Valley State University; Chunhua Dong, Fort Valley State University
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Computing and Information Technology
. 1,2017- Oct. 1. 2020) in September 2017. This paper describes the project goals,objectives, and expected outcomes as well as the steps taken to implement some of theproject activities. It should be noted that the project is a work in progress and thus itsimpact on the students and our CS program could not be currently evaluated due toinsufficient data. The effectiveness of the project will be measured annually by Octoberof each project year. We are planning to present the assessment results of this project in afuture article by 2020.Goal StatementThe primary goal of this project is to enhance the retention and graduation rates ofcomputer science students at FVSU through revising curriculum, implementing a peer-to-peer tutoring/mentoring, and
Conference Session
ET Administrative Issues
Collection
2018 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Elizabeth Freije, Indiana University-Purdue University of Indianapolis; Barbara L Christe, Indiana University-Purdue University of Indianapolis; Elaine M. Cooney, Indiana University-Purdue University of Indianapolis
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Technology
fell into two areas: earning acollege degree or affinity for their major. This finding was surprising given that most earlylearners are uncertain of academic goals [4]. Driven by this evidence, self-reflection shoulddeepen student discipline-specific understandings.Research activities centered on a university-specific electronic portfolio: the PersonalDevelopment Plan (ePDP), enabling students to more effectively map out and navigate theiracademic and co-curricular experiences, as well as their subsequent careers. The ePDP is apersonalized planning process that enables students to understand, implement, and chart progresstoward their degree and college goals. For more than 10 years, the university has integratedpersonal development planning
Conference Session
College Industry Partnerships Division Technical Session 1
Collection
2018 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Julanne K. McCulley, Weber State University
Tagged Divisions
College Industry Partnerships
experiences that are essential in thetechnology programs.All educational entities involved in the process recognized worth in their efforts for theirinstitution such as an increase in enrollment, curriculum development around new technologies,and opportunities for funding of new equipment. Faculty workload increase is minimal due to asmall rise in class sizes.The Utah State Board of Education (USBE) recommended upon the approval of the AASControls Technology degree that all post-secondary institutions develop similar pathways as partof the USBE strategic plan, Education Elevated, that result in credentials with labor marketvalue.CollaborationNorthern Utah manufacturing is a diverse group that includes industries in aerospace anddefense, energy and