arenecessary. In this manner, the process owner ensures that the process improvements remain inplace.PFMEA in Capstone ProjectsPFMEA is used in AT497 Applied Research Project as one standard method to assess risk ofalternate designs for processes. AT497 is a 3 semester credit hour course with 2 hours of lectureand 3 hours of lab each week, and is taught in the spring semester. In the previous fall semester,the students form teams and prepare project proposals in AT496 Applied Research Proposal, aone semester credit hour course. The project proposals follow an outline shown in Table 1. Executive summary Table of Contents (with a page-numbered outline) – I. Introduction – II
Engineering at OSU. He is expected to graduate in 2011.Lynn Franzmann, Stillwater Lynn Franzmann teaches biology at Stillwater Middle School and participated in the TERMS project.Rebekah Reece, Stillwater Rebekah Reece teaches mathematics at Stillwater Middle School and participated in the TERMS project.Karen High, Oklahoma State University Karen High is an Associate Professor in the School of Chemical Engineering at Oklahoma State University. She received her B.S. from University of Michigan and PhD from Penn State University in Chemical Engineering. Her research intersts include Sustainable Process Design, Multicriteria Decision Making, Engineering Education, K-12 Engineering for
An Extended Driving Simulator Used to Motivate Analysis of Automobile Fuel Economy Charles R. Sullivan and Mark J. Franklin Thayer School of Engineering at Dartmouth Session 2: Tools, techniques, and best practices of engineering education for the digital generationAbstract In a senior undergraduate/introductory graduate level interdisciplinary course in energyutilization at Thayer School, students experiment with “driving” a simulated car in differentstyles and measuring fuel economy. To enable this, we modified an open-source automobileracing computer game to include a realistic model of fuel
role, he is focused on programs in the College of Engineering at Penndriving net productivity to achieve stepchange State. A member of the Penn State faculty sinceimprovement to Air Products’ bottom line in 1990, she is professor of engineering design andsupport of the company’s margin goals. engineering science and mechanics, and she Masetti joined Air Products in 1981 has served as executive director of the Schreyeras a participant in the company’s Career Institute for Teaching Excellence. Engel earnedDevelopment Program with engineering a B.S. in Engineering Science from Penn Stateassignments in Applied Research and and
communitycolleges need to be evaluated and assessed before changes are finalized. To facilitate this type ofcollaboration a process needs to be created to assist all institutions involved.For decades California has provided an impressive and effective community college pathway toengineering. As shown in Figure 3, approximately 33% of all UC and CSU engineeringgraduates in 2008 started their Bachelor’s degrees at a community college (individually, 23% ofUC and 41% of CSU graduates). The community college pathway therefore represents asizeable portion of the engineering pipeline in California. For many students, particularly thosefrom underrepresented groups, this pathway to engineering may be the only practical way forthem to access an engineering
academicOctober 2009. In this role, he is focused on programs in the College of Engineering at Penndriving net productivity to achieve stepchange State. A member of the Penn State faculty sinceimprovement to Air Products’ bottom line in 1990, she is professor of engineering design andsupport of the company’s margin goals. engineering science and mechanics, and she Masetti joined Air Products in 1981 has served as executive director of the Schreyeras a participant in the company’s Career Institute for Teaching Excellence. Engel earnedDevelopment Program with engineering a B.S. in Engineering Science from Penn Stateassignments in Applied Research and
undergraduate engineering degrees. 4. Implement a statewide strategy to fully utilize the capacity of all engineering programs.As previous research suggests that students are more likely to persist to graduation if they aresocially and academically integrated into STEM disciplines23, participating schools worked toachieve their goals by implementing a variety of strategies designed to provide academic supportand to create a ‘community’ of engineering and pre-engineering students, specifically targetingwomen and URMs.This partnership between community colleges and universities provides a unique opportunity toexamine how differing institutional settings impact students’ feelings of integration into socialand academic engineering communities. Analysis
in terms of providing classes for 150200 students at a time, not 2050. There is also the issue of faculty skills. With tenure as a practice, the change in skill mix is very slow. Thirty year careers are very common, so only onethirtieth of the resident skills has the possibility of change every year. While practitioners and adjuncts help accelerate this process, in the long run those individuals are not permanent fixtures in the program. The second is that ASCE’s BOK2 “demands” are only one of a larger set of “demands” that current programs face. An example is preparation for graduate school, teaching students how to do scholarly research, about which the BOK2 is silent. Naturally, the BOK2 addresses
Scholarship.Margot Vigeant, Bucknell University Margot Vigeant is Associate Professor of Chemical Engineering and Associate Dean of Engineering at Bucknell University. She is very interested in first-year engineering education.Donald Visco, Tennessee Technological University Don Visco is a Professor of Chemical Engineering at Tennessee Technological University, where he has been employed since 1999. Prior to that, he graduated with his Ph.D from the University at Buffalo, SUNY. His current research interests include experimental and computational thermodynamics as well as bioinformatics/drug design. He is an active and contributing member of ASEE at the local, regional and national level. He is the 2006
% ineffective (“How Companies Utilize,” 24 2001). A surveyconducted by Morgan39 (2000) discovered that about 40% of the responding organizations hadno performance measurement system; another 9% had a PM system but that it wasunsatisfactory; and roughly 60% had implemented some type of measurement system. Onlyabout 60% of the respondents were satisfied with their PMS while almost 40% were unsatisfied(Morgan39, 2000).ScopeThe research design utilized for this study (Loendorf33, 2008) was an exploratory mixed model Page 15.494.5design. The study was primarily qualitative with some quantitative aspects resulting in a mixtureof both models. The quantitative
methodology, consideration of alternative solutions, and designof an optimal steel structure to meet stated functional requirements. CE483, Reinforced Concrete Design, introduces the materials and mechanical propertiesof concrete, and the design of reinforced concrete structures. Mix design and strength testing labsdevelop the concept of proportioning constituents for quality concrete and provide a background Page 15.986.13in techniques of material testing, quality control, and sound construction practices. The study ofreinforced concrete includes analysis and design of simple structures, resulting in an appreciationfor the strength and
University. Douglas serves as the faculty sponsor of the Westlake NSBE Jr. and Engineers Without Borders chapters.Margaret Tarver, Tri-Cities High School Mrs. Margaret Tarver is a chemistry teacher, graduation coach, and NSBE Jr. sponsor at Tri-Cities High School. She received her B.S. in chemistry from Alabama A&M, and her Masters in science education from Georgia State University. She received the Golden Torch Award--PCI Director of the Year from the National Society of Black Engineers in 2010 for her work with the Tri-Cities High School NSBE Jr. chapter.Donna Llewellyn, Georgia Institute of Technology Dr. Donna C. Llewellyn is the Director of the Center for the Enhancement of Teaching and
AC 2010-427: ON THE DIFFERENCES AMONG "EQUIVALENT" LOANPAYMENT PLANSJohn White, University of Arkansas John A. White, PhD, PE, is Distinguished Professor and Chancellor Emeritus at the University of Arkansas. ASEE Fellow, IIE Fellow and Past-President, INFORMS Fellow, member of the National Academy of Engineering, Past-Chairman of AAES, Past-President of the Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award Foundation, Past-President of the National Consortium for Graduate Degrees for Minorities in Engineering and Science, and former Assistant Director for Engineering at NSF, former Dean of Engineering at Georgia Tech, he served on the boards of directors for 5 publicly traded corporations and served
. Page 15.136.9Bibliography1. ASM Consortium; Errington, Jamie; Reising, Dal Vernon; Burns, Catherine; Sands, Nicholas P., ASM Consortium Guidelines: Effective Alarm Management Practices, ASM Consortium, 2009.2. Hollifield, Bill R. and Eddie Habibi, Alarm Management: Seven Effective Methods for Optimum Performance, ISA, Research Triangle Park, NC, 2007, page xvi.3. Mogford, J., Fatal Accident Investigation Report: Isomerization Unit Explosion Final Report, 2005, page 8, available online at http://www.bp.com/liveassets/bp_internet/us/bp_us_english/STAGING/local_assets/downloads/t/final_report.pdf (referenced January 7, 2010).4. Rings, Terry, “Alarm Management Philosophy: A Roadmap to Success,” Presented at PAS Users
. Stage (Eds.), Toward a Scientific Practice of Science Education (pp. 3 – 30). Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. 7. Connolly, P. & Vilardi, T. (1989). Writing to Learn in Mathematics and Science. New York: Teachers College Press. 8. Countryman, J. (1992). Writing to Learn Mathematics: Strategies That Work. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann Educational Books, Inc. 9. Hein, T. L. (1998). Using student writing as a research and learning tool. AAPT Announcer, 27(4), 79. 10. Hein, T. L. (1999). Writing: An effective learning tool for non-science majors. AAPT Announcer, 29(2), 114. 11. Kirkland, W. L. (1997). Teaching biology through creative writing. Journal of College Science Teaching, 26(4), 277
, part manuallygraded, but some caution must be exercised, because not all respondents agree that thesystems can handle this kind of question. For systems that can’t handle them, it is notpleasant to design a workaround. Our workaround was to (1) create separate questions forthe automatically and manually graded parts, (2) assign our own numbers (such as 2a and2b) to these questions, and (3) disable the question-scrambling feature of the testing systemto assure that the questions would be juxtaposed on everyone’s exam. Page 15.927.5Proceedings of the 2010 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition 4Copyright
of the project could havepossibly been swapped for other topics. For example, linearization and state space modelingwere included in the UDM course, but are not central to the learning outcomes. It does, however, Page 15.795.10seem that the UDM students gained more practice with topics early in the semester like modelingand time domain analysis, than they did with later topics like frequency domain analysis andcontroller design because of the requirements and timing of the project.The UFMG course had in the past also included a final project, so the addition of theinternational collaboration did not significantly affect the structure of
AC 2010-2054: STUDENT-PERCEIVED VALUE OF ACADEMIC SUPPORTINTERVENTIONSValerie Young, Ohio University-Athens Valerie Young is Associate Professor and Department Chair in the Department of Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering at Ohio University. She currently serves as Awards Co-Chair for the Chemical Engineering Division of ASEE, and previously served as Division chair. She teaches chemical engineering courses at all levels, from freshmen to graduate. Her research area is atmospheric chemistry and air pollution. Page 15.1118.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2010 Student