Paper ID #21957Monitoring Motivation Factors for Girls in Summer Robotics ProgramDr. Michele Miller, Campbell University Dr. Michele Miller is a Professor and Associate Dean at Campbell University. Prior to joining Campbell, she was a professor of mechanical engineering at Michigan Tech. She teaches courses in manufacturing and does research on engineering education.Ms. Saeedeh Ziaeefard, Michigan Technological University Saeedeh Ziaeefard is a PhD student and research assistant with Nonlinear and Autonomous Systems Laboratory (NASLab) in the Department of Mechanical Engineering-Engineering Mechanics at Michigan
topics and training along with professional skills development seemedcritical to the overall benefit of the program.MethodsPrevious reports described the program structure and evaluation results in the program’s firstyear [1]. Briefly, the eight-week long program consisted of four modules: (1) soft lithographyand microfluidics, (2) fabrication (photolithography and electron beam lithography, deposition,and etch), (3) characterization (microscopy and electrical probing), and (4) finance andcommercialization. Mornings were spent doing lessons on content area knowledge andexplaining techniques, and afternoons had hands-on training and laboratory activities. One dayper week and non-training times were devoted to a research project which spanned the
system too. Oneof the ABET requirements previously was to prepare students to work professionally in boththermal and mechanical systems while requiring topics in each area. To meet this requirement,we added a standalone Thermal Systems Laboratory course (ME 4350) in fall 2010, in whichseveral thermodynamic systems experiments, designs, and applications are included.Furthermore, the prerequisite to the thermodynamics course, SCI2510 General Physics I,discusses several topics of thermodynamics through lectures on the theoretical aspects and labexperiments. Additionally, the current ABET requirement requires the program to preparestudents to work professionally in either thermal or mechanical systems, and not both, whilerequiring topics in each
, with USB memory stick in place, forces the system to boot from thestick. Installation proceeds using the monitor and the keyboard. The installation “target” is theQotom 32GB internal solid state memory device. Installation steps include specifying a commondesktop environment (e.g., Ubuntu Unity). The Ubuntu website has excellent installationsupport materials [5].After setup, removal of the USB memory stick and reboot, Ubuntu is ready for use. If desired,configure Ubuntu for remote Secure Shell (ssh) or remote desktop protocol (RDP) connections.For usability, a remote connection has its advantages in a small lab. Doing so avoids workingadjacent to the clutter of laboratory equipment.III. Basic Router ConfigurationThe first step is to (1
uniqueresearch experiences must be identified for 100 students in laboratories across campus.Furthermore, the arrangement of internships depends upon strengthening and expanding thenetwork of regional industries, companies, and health services organizations. This requiresconsiderable work, however, our extensive faculty network and alumni have been supportive inproviding resources and opportunities for current WISE students.Preliminary FindingsTo measure the effectiveness of the new WISE curriculum in meeting its goals, incomingfreshmen (N = 58) were surveyed at the end of the fall semester in 2017. Baseline data werecollected to explore the following research question: How does participation in the WISEcurriculum impact students’ self-efficacy, career
Apprentice Award in 2014. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2018 Work in Progress: Content Validation of the Engineering Process Safety Research Instrument (EPSRI)IntroductionChemical processing companies are increasingly dedicated to process safety due to thesignificant number of process safety failures that occur each year. For example, an explosionfollowed by a chemical fire killed four employees while injuring 32 employees, and 28 membersof the public in 2007 at T2 Laboratories Inc. The explosion was a result of a runaway exothermicreaction that was not a recognized hazard from T2.1 This incident led to the addition in 2012 of“consideration of hazards associated with the
development and sensitivity/optimization analyses.For typical single semester thermofluid courses, they were smaller projects in several formats,including: data gathering and evaluations for many case studies, sensitivity analyses and optimization of existing numerical models.In order to provide an appropriate environment for students to conduct their research, the authorestablished the Energy Sustainability Research Laboratory (ESRL) and collaborated with othercolleagues to establish the Fuel Cell Research Laboratory at West Virginia University Institute ofTechnology. These two labs were equipped with the following experimental setups: Wind energy: Small scale horizontal and vertical axis wind turbines and weather station to
programs byexchanging ideas to improve their capstone educational processes, and while applyingsustainability principles.COURSE OVERVIEWSenior Project - Construction (C E 488C) and Senior Project - Structural Design (C E 488D) aretwo capstone courses in the SDCET program at Penn State Harrisburg. SDCET major’s mustenroll in one of these capstone courses, depending on their focus in the program. These coursesare taken in a student’s senior year and are a year-long course. The course begins in the fallsemester for one credit, and then continues in the spring semester for three credits.The course is presented in a dual format with a one-period (50 minute) lecture discussion classand one laboratory class in the fall. The spring semester has two one
cooperative effortbetween the Center for Chemical Process Safety (CCPS) and universities. Initiatives started bySACHE include an on-line certificate that students can earn by completing several modules onsafety and the SAChE Student Design Competition for Safety in Design that recognizes studentswho do an outstanding job considering process safety in their submission to the American Instituteof Chemical Engineers (AIChE) student design competition.However in 2007, a reactive chemical explosion at T2 Laboratories killed four employees andinjured 13 more people, including multiple civilians. Within their final report, the Chemical SafetyBoard emphasized the critical need to improve chemical process safety and hazard recognitioneducation within
,Engineering Disasters, and Technology, Society, and Values). The Civil Engineering departmentat Oregon Tech has a strong laboratory component in its curriculum with a majority ofprogrammatic courses including a laboratory. Given the motivations of these two departmentsand mutual interest of the project faculty in bridges, and Conde B. McCullough (Figure 1) inparticular, the faculty identified the potential for a field course to tour important Oregon bridges.Emphasizing those constructed to complete the Oregon coast highway, the course brings thehistory of these bridges together with their design and construction details. Changes in bridgedesign practice were discussed as an analog to the development of civil engineering moregenerally. Figure
design of Micro Air Vehicles, development of innovative de- sign methodologies and enhancement of engineering education. Dr Jensen has authored over 100 refereed papers and has been awarded over $4 million of research grants.Dr. Kristin L. Wood, Singapore University of Technology and Design (SUTD) Dr. Kristin L. Wood is currently a Professor and Head of Pillar, Engineering and Product Development (EPD), and Co-Director of the SUTD-MIT International Design Center (IDC) at the Singapore University of Technology and Design (SUTD). Dr. Wood completed his M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in the Division of Engineering and Applied Science at the California Institute of Technology, where he was an AT&T Bell Laboratories Ph.D
Paper ID #21119Automated Formation of Peer-learning Cohorts Using Computer-based As-sessment Data: A Double-blind Study within a Software Engineering CourseDr. Ronald F. DeMara P.E., University of Central Florida Ronald F. DeMara is a Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at the University of Central Florida where he has been a faculty member since 1992. His educational research interests focus on classroom and laboratory instructional technology, and the digitization of STEM assessments. He has completed roughly 225 technical and educational publications, 43 funded projects as PI/Co-PI, and es- tablished two
the standalone technical communication courses in the Departments ofChemical Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, and Civil and Environmental Engineering at theUniversity of Texas at Austin [3]. Finally, rather than using a standalone course to teach writing,a number of engineering departments try to interweave the teaching of writing into a sequence ofengineering courses. Such a course sequence occurs with two upper-level laboratory courses inthe Mechanical Engineering Department of Virginia Tech [4]. However, with recent increases in engineering undergraduate enrollments [5], many suchcourses are stretched. Faculty are asked to teach greater loads, often without additional resources.One such example is Pennsylvania State University
college students to expose and increase their interest in pursuing Science Technology Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) fields. For over a decade now, Dr. Astatke has facilitated the donation of 250+ Electrical and Computer Engineering (ECE) portable laboratory instrumentation boards and has conducted capacity-building training workshops for five universities in Ethiopia. This work has improved the education of thousands of ECE students in Ethiopia annually. He has expanded his services to other African countries such as Nigeria, South Africa, and Cameroon. Dr. Astatke is recipient of several awards, including the 2016 Global Engineering Deans Council (GEDC)-Airbus Diversity Award, 2016 Black Engineer of the Year
university, with attendance of over 300+ members, in a 1200square foot space, and is staffed with skilled technicians. Students work one-on-one or in a smallgroup with a technician which allows them to collaborate and develop their teamwork andtechnical skills. Classes can consist of training on various pieces of laboratory equipment,soldering skills, microcontroller implementations, practical electronic components, PCB design,and much more. Once a student has gone through training on the equipment, they are able to useit for their projects, coursework, or research. The classes build on each other to provide acontinuous learning environment that can rapidly build student confidence in being able to tackleengineering problems. By integrating the
investigations such as designing and testing of propulsion systems including design and development of pilot testing facility, mechanical instrumentation, and industrial applications of aircraft engines. Also, in the past 10 years she gained experience in teaching ME and ET courses in both quality control and quality assurance areas as well as in thermal-fluid, energy conversion and mechanical areas from various levels of instruction and addressed to a broad spectrum of students, from freshmen to seniors, from high school graduates to adult learners. She also has extended experience in curriculum development. Dr Husanu developed laboratory activities for Measurement and Instrumentation course as well as for quality control
pursued a Masters degree in Science Education as well as a Master’s degree in Curriculum and Instruction in STEM Education. Jessica is a NASA Endeavor Teaching Fellow and also a graduate of Carnegie Mellon’s Robotics Academy.Miss Rasheda Likely, Drexel University Rasheda Likely received her Bachelors of Science and Masters of Science in Biology from the University of North Florida. Prior to beginning the doctoral program at Drexel University, she worked in Virology (the study of viruses) for the Florida Department of Health for three years. She has also taught ”Princi- ples of Biology” laboratory sections at University of North Florida and Physiology at Drexel University. Rasheda is currently in her second year
valuable addition tothe electrical engineering curriculum.We argue that the reasons behind the technical choices, their impact on the resource consumptionand the performance versus flexibility tradeoffs are relevant for cellular communicationsstandards education. Moreover, project management, team work, development of realisticexpectations and practical solutions are skills that are much demanded by industry in addition todomain-specific technical specialization. We therefore propose a methodology for teachingstandards that creates favorable conditions for developing those skills.The combination of lecture-centered education [2] with laboratory-centered approaches [3], [4],has been adopted in the engineering curriculum when the Conceive, Design
and STEM education.Dr. Karim Heinz Muci-Kuchler, South Dakota School of Mines and Technology Karim Muci-K¨uchler is a Professor of Mechanical Engineering and Director of the Experimental and Computational Mechanics Laboratory at the South Dakota School of Mines and Technology (SDSM&T). Before joining SDSM&T, he was an Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering at the University of Detroit Mercy. He received his Ph.D. in Engineering Mechanics from Iowa State University in 1992. His main interest areas include Computational Mechanics, Solid Mechanics, Biomechanics, Product Design and Development, and STEM Education. He has taught a variety courses at the undergraduate and gradu- ate level, is author or co
Paper ID #21535Assessing the Effects of Authentic Experiential Learning Activities on TeacherConfidence with Engineering ConceptsEmel Cevik, Texas A&M UniversityDr. Michael Johnson, Texas A&M University Dr. Michael D. Johnson is an associate professor in the Department of Engineering Technology and In- dustrial Distribution at Texas A&M University. Prior to joining the faculty at Texas A&M, he was a senior product development engineer at the 3M Corporate Research Laboratory in St. Paul, Minnesota. He received his B.S. in mechanical engineering from Michigan State University and his S.M. and Ph.D. from the
Paper ID #22785Citizen Scientists Engagement in Air Quality MeasurementsProf. Anthony Butterfield, University of Utah Anthony Butterfield is an Assistant Professor (Lecturing) in the Chemical Engineering Department of the University of Utah. He received his B. S. and Ph. D. from the University of Utah and a M. S. from the University of California, San Diego. His teaching responsibilities include the senior unit operations laboratory and freshman design laboratory. His research interests focus on undergraduate education, targeted drug delivery, photobioreactor design, and instrumentation.Katrina My Quyen Le, AMES High School
-level, stand-alone course or in a cleanroom, which maynot be practical in an undergraduate BME curriculum. Furthermore, without these hands-on labsthat take place in a cleanroom, microfluidics classes are often taught as theory-based, conflictingwith literature on the benefits of hands-on learning. Broadly speaking, teaching microfabricationmethods is often limited to the graduate level and/or selectively to advanced undergraduates,making this instruction inaccessible to a large population of students.Educators are beginning to successfully incorporate microfluidics hands-on activities. Forexample, one paper describes the development of a mass conservation laboratory module using amicrofluidic device for undergraduate fluid mechanics education
the needs of a mobile robotics course for students from multiple disciplines. This robot systemcan be programmed in JAVA, Python, Lua or C. It can also be programmed with various devicessuch as smartphones, tablets, or the traditional laptop computer. This mobile robotics coursecurrently uses off the shelf or slightly modified off the shelf robots to teach robotics. The initialresults will indicate that it is possible to use this modular platform in its various modes to createsome of the basic behaviors required for the laboratory assignments.IntroductionThis paper will present the design of a modular educational robotics platform to handle thedivergent skill sets of a multidisciplinary population in an introductory mobile robotics course
and sociocultural norms as well as in classic studies of socialization in scientific andtechnical careers, which don’t mention novices’ existing knowledge, skills, or identities (e.g.,[17], [18], [19]). Despite ongoing critiques of this mindset as inaccurate and a barrier to learningand identity formation (e.g., [20], [21], [22]), some academic communities, such as theengineering research laboratory groups that co-author Wylie studies, continue to talk aboutnovices according to this model. This approach does great injustice to newcomers to expertcommunities as well as robs experts of opportunities to learn from “a wisdom of peripherality”([23] p. 216), i.e., the invaluable perspective of outsiders. In ongoing observations and interviewsof
well as faculty advisor for several student societies. She is the instructor of several courses in the CBE curriculum including the Material and Energy Balances, junior laboratories and Capstone De- sign courses. She is associated with several professional organizations including the American Institute of Chemical Engineers (AIChE) and American Society of Chemical Engineering Education (ASEE) where she adopts and contributes to innovative pedagogical methods aimed at improving student learning and retention.Dr. Vanessa Svihla, University of New Mexico Dr. Vanessa Svihla is a learning scientist and assistant professor at the University of New Mexico in the Organization, Information & Learning Sciences program
-year undergraduate student at Northeastern University, majoring in chemical engi- neering and pursuing minors in mathematics and material science and engineering. Outside of class, Kaeli works as a chemistry tutor and class grader, and she participates in undergraduate research in a materials science laboratory on campus. She also has held co-op positions with Rogers Corporation’s Innovation Center, the National Renewable Energy Lab, and Lockheed Martin Energy Storage.Mr. Bradley Joseph Priem, Northeastern University Bradley Priem is a third year undergraduate student at Northeastern University, majoring in chemical en- gineering and minoring in biochemical engineering. He has been involved in the Connections Chemistry
Texas A&M University. His areas of interest in research and education include product development, analog/RF electronics, engineering education, and entrepreneurship.Dr. Michael Johnson, Texas A&M University Dr. Michael D. Johnson is an associate professor in the Department of Engineering Technology and In- dustrial Distribution at Texas A&M University. Prior to joining the faculty at Texas A&M, he was a senior product development engineer at the 3M Corporate Research Laboratory in St. Paul, Minnesota. He received his B.S. in mechanical engineering from Michigan State University and his S.M. and Ph.D. from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Dr. Johnson’s research focuses on design tools; specifi
. The data showed that itpromoted increased metacognition and career formation, coursework engagement, classparticipation and a sense of belonging. Recommendations on further research are tohighlight specific cognitive aspects of peer teaching.Kim et al. (2014) were interested in understanding the impact of peer teaching on studentlearning in a theory based and laboratory Electric Circuits course. Their case study isdesigned to allow teams of two student Peer Assistants (PAs) to prepare and presentcourse materials for the week they are assigned. Each week a different team presents andby the end of the course each student has become a PA. The authors start the report withintroducing the concept of peer teaching, defining it and describing
people had little interaction with computers at the time [14]. Throughout theeighties and nineties, he continued to explore ways for learners to use computers as “objects tothink with” [20, p. 23] and cofounded the MIT Media Lab, an interdisciplinary research centerwhose members developed and popularized much of the technology that is currently associatedwith Maker Education, from Makey Makey microcontrollers to the kid-friendly, visualprogramming language of Scratch [21].Another off-shoot of the MIT Media Lab was the Center for Bits and Atoms, a group thatemerged out of Neil Gershenfeld’s popular class “How to Make (Almost) Anything” and that ledto the creation of the first Fabrication Laboratories or “Fab Labs”, high-tech workshop spacesthat