middle school classrooms, and also on advancing the use of knowledge building pedagogy in higher education. His most recent article (2013) is entitled ”Tasks and Talk: The Relationship Between Teachers’ Goals and Student Discourse,” in Social Studies Research and Practice. Al has been spending most of his ”spare” time lately as Co-PI of a multi-year NSF Project designed to introduce and interest middle schoolers to engineering conceptsAnnick Jade Dewald Annick Dewald is a first year at Smith College pursuing a Bachelor of Science degree in engineering. As a STRIDE Scholar, she conducts research on computer-supported collaborative learning environments in the field of engineering.Ms. Anjali Karina Desai, Smith College
that I took her course and I have used the knowledge I gained from her already.Student 6My assessment of the Law class is that the class was great. I learned a lot about the subjectmatter in a very productive way. It was good to change gears and read 1000 pages and have biweekly discussions regarding the read materials. I found it very insightful working with the lawstudents in class and on projects because it gave me a view and word choice I hadn't used before.I am considering law school as one of my options after undergraduate and a couple years ofexperience. Next time I would ask the teacher to provide more detailed drawing that patentsinclude. Also would ask to be taught the entire patent writing process and ask to have us write uppractice
Figure 13: Student Survey Results: Question 5Least valuable and most valuable labsThe student rankings of least valuable and most valuable labs are shown in Figure 14. The laterlabs (labs 4-7) were clearly ranked more valuable than the earlier labs. According to studentcomments, the following observations can be made. 1) The first few labs had a steep learning curve. Page 26.1320.16 2) The later labs had a strong correlation to the work done on the students’ final project. 3) The later labs helped understand class theory better than the earlier labs did. 4) Lab 3, which was the least valuable lab, involved an inverted pendulum. Students did
being accomplished through a synergetic collaboration ofexpert staff from the Office of Multicultural Recruitment, Academic Affairs, Student Services,the Outreach Office, and the Commission for Women at our university and seasoned role modelfaculty members. The project team has extensive experience working with female and minorityundergraduate students. Rigorous evaluations were built into the management plan to assesstargeted enrollment goals, retention rates, and the impact of mentor/mentee activities, taking intoaccount the unique characteristics of the targeted groups. This proposal was further strengthenedby leveraging the resources of the Office of Development at Penn State Harrisburg to sustain thiseffort over time. This paper deals with
configurations to achieve proper phase shifts. Open-circuit and short-circuit tests.The first six experiments were also done in fall 2013. Experiment #7, on three-phase transformerconnections, was only done in fall 2014 and it will be performed in the new hardware lab startingin fall 2015. Based on a summer 2014 senior design project, and using single-phase transformersthat were salvaged from the old lab, we are constructing new transformer banks on carts withwiring panels to support this experiment #7, and also to support research in the lab. This was themost complicated and lengthy software experiment, and will work better in the hardware lab.Figure 4: Finite Element Based Actuator Model Interfaced to a Drive Circuit and LoadFigure 5: Brushless
than 150 articles, presentations, books and reviews on software development methodologies, management, organizational change, and program management. Dr. Springer sits on many university and community boards and advisory committees. He received his Bachelor of Science in Computer Science from Purdue University, his MBA and Doctorate in Adult and Community Education with a Cognate in Executive Development from Ball State University. Dr. Springer is certified as a Project Management Professional (PMP), Senior Professional in Human Resources (SPHR & SHRM-SCP), in Alternate Dispute Resolution (ADR), and, in civil and domestic mediation. He is a State of Indiana Registered domestic mediator.Mr. Mark T Schuver, Purdue
projects, putting fun in programming fundamentals, largeclasses, engineering math, and research.2 As a result of these programs, retention to thesophomore year is increasing.Some engineering programs have a common curriculum for all freshmen and sophomore students Page 26.1384.2and then have students choose their major beginning their junior year. Since engineering studentsmay not have identified with a particular engineering major or engineering field of interestduring the first two years, they may become interested in other fields and leave engineering bytheir junior year. In this paper, the term “engineering” shall include both engineering
project-based teamwork and encouraging student entrepreneurship.Dr. Wade H Goodridge, Utah State University Wade Goodridge, Assistant Professor in the Department of Engineering and Technology Education at Utah State University, has taught Solid Modeling, CAD, Introductory Electronics, Surveying, Statics, Assessment and Evaluation, and Introductory Engineering courses at Utah State University. Goodridge has been teaching for the Utah State College of Engineering for more than 15 years. He holds dual B.S degrees in industrial technology education and civil engineering from Utah State University, as well as an M.S. and Ph.D. in civil engineering from Utah State University. His research interests include metacog- nitive
%presented by the instructorfor small group discussionsLaboratory exercises for 20% 20% 60%understanding theimportant course conceptsAssigned projects in which 20% 20% 60%students worked togetherCase studies, simulations 40% 20%% 40%or role playingThis course actively 20% 20% 40% 20%involved me in what I waslearningThe course helped me to 40% 40% 20%think independently aboutthe subject matterI made progress achieving 60% 20
thesuccess of each respective student “type” that will prove useful to faculty, staff, and practitionerswho work with Black male students in STEM.IntroductionThe nation strives to maintain a competitive edge internationally by contributing significant andinnovative advances in science/engineering. However, our postsecondary institutions are notproducing the number of graduates with degrees in science, technology, engineering, and math(STEM) fields, necessary to keep pace with demand. To curb projected shortages, it isimperative that the country invests in developing and educating a talented pool of qualifiedSTEM graduates. It must do so with an increasingly racially/ethnically diverse society andcollege-aged population. Despite the high demand and
. Page 26.296.147 “Occupational employment projections to 2018,” U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, November 2009.8 Langdon, D., McKittrick, G., Beede, D., Khan, B., and Doms, M., “STEM: Good Jobs Now and for the Future,” U.S. Department of Commerce Economics and Statistics Administration, July 2011. 9 Duda, A., “Still the People’s Colleges: The Demographics of the N.C. Community College System,” North Carolina Insight, May 2008. 10 Starobin, S.S. and Bivens, G.M. “The Role of Secondary School and Community College Collaborations to Increase Latinas in Engineering in a Rural Community”. New Directions for Community Colleges, no. 165, 2014.11 Nettles, M.T. and Millett, C.M. “Student Access in Community Colleges,” American Association
pedagogy is the concept of an inverted or “flipped”classroom. Students complete the lecture portion of the class on their own time by using videolessons prepared by the professor, and utilize the textbook and other materials as a study guide.Then, classroom time is dedicated to a more “hands-on” approach. Flipped classroom activitiesinclude guided, independent practice or lab work, and group-based interactive learning activitiesor inquiries. Is a flipped classroom a better instructional technique to enhance student learning?This research project will help solve this question by comparing two sections of a class in astatistically valid manner during the same semester.In the Fall of 2014, two sections of junior-level CVEN 3602 – Transportation
has been a significant shift to move away from aclassical lecture-based paradigm towards a learner-center paradigm 2, 3, 4 . The latter is an umbrellathat covers a wide range of instructional techniques which include but are not limited to active andcollaborative learning, inquiry-based learning, problem-based learning, project-based learning,case-based learning, and research-based learning. The common factor between all these methodsis that the student develops knowledge through the gathering and analyzing of information.Educators who employ the learner-center approach are required to develop activities that meet thegoals of each specific subject while enhancing the learning experience of the student. Thedevelopment of these activities is a
. Tanya D Ennis, University of Colorado, Boulder TANYA D. ENNIS is the current Engineering GoldShirt Program Director at the University of Colorado Boulder’s College of Engineering and Applied Science. She received her M.S. in Computer Engineering from the University of Southern California in Los Angeles and her B.S. in Electrical Engineering from Southern University in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Her career in the telecommunications industry included positions in software and systems engineering and technical project management. Tanya most recently taught mathematics at the Denver School of Science and Technology, the highest performing high school in Denver Public Schools.Nick A. Stites, Integrated Teaching and Learning
identify behaviors, triggerevents, and possible means of automating the analysis. Several other metrics were identified butthe process to automate will require further research and study. For example, in watching videodata, our team noticed that for some individuals and puzzles, there were moments of insightwhich were characterized by a shift in seemingly random placement of objects with no success tosudden intentional rearranging leading to a solution. As an analogy, consider a crossword puzzleor Sudoku puzzle where filling in a critical clue or box leads to a rapid conclusion.Such behavior was noted in this study but writing code to automate this feature is outside of thecurrent project scope. The open source computer vision library OpenCV(http
assigned to provideextra practice and another method to measure performance. Second, a truss project was assignedto each group, in which a 2D truss was to be designed, built, and tested to failure to provide ahands-on application of course concepts. Third, an optional timed practice final exam was madeavailable for students from all three courses to directly compare student performance betweenthe three classes.Research MethodologyIn order to measure student performance between three distinct classes, standardized course coreoutcomes were used. This is the accepted concept inventory for Mechanics of Materials at thisuniversity and is the only feasible method to compare student performance between threedifferent classes. The five assigned homework
students for jobs or as an individual Utilitarian Liberal Students as the least powerful members of academia need safe spaces to be themselves as Sharing Security well as spaces to engage with faculty in order to grow and develop. What we provide students as projects often does Actual Students and Societal Impact not match the lofty language we use to discuss Impact Student
interdisciplinary research with the goal of improving engineering programs at the undergraduate level. Her research interests include cognitive theories, memory, problem solving, theories of the mind, and the role of identity and motivation in education.Mariaf´e Taev´ı Panizo, James Madison University Mariaf´e Panizo is a first year graduate student in JMU’s Graduate Psychology Doctoral program. She has been working on engineering education research projects for two and a half years, focusing on non- cognitive factors that impact engineering student academic success.Dr. Olga Pierrakos, James Madison University Olga Pierrakos is a Founding Faculty and Associate Professor in the Department of Engineering at James Madison
Hurricane Katrina. Previously, he served as an unre- stricted line officer in the U.S. Navy onboard a guided missile destroyer and the second Aegis cruiser.Prof. Dante Dionne, Korean Air Dante Dionne is an Organizational Leadership PhD candidate and a Senior Innovation Technology Man- ager at Korean Air. The past 20+ years of his career has centered on management and professional services consulting. Where, he has specialized in leading multi-national project teams in the design and implementation of digital marketing, mobility and innovative technology solutions. Dante holds an MA in Industrial/Organizational Psychology from the Chicago School of Professional Psychology and a BS in Business Management with a minor in
Tech.Dr. Renee M. Clark, University of Pittsburgh Dr. Renee Clark has 23 years of experience as an engineer and analyst. She currently serves as the Direc- tor of Assessment for the University of Pittsburgh’s Swanson School of Engineering and its Engineering Education Research Center (EERC), where her research focuses on assessment and evaluation of engi- neering education research projects and initiatives. She has most recently worked for Walgreens as a Sr. Data Analyst and General Motors/Delphi Automotive as a Sr. Applications Programmer and Manufactur- ing Quality Engineer. She received her PhD in Industrial Engineering from the University of Pittsburgh and her MS in Mechanical Engineering from Case Western while
and Dweck compiled research conductedon resilience, mindset, and people’s understanding of malleability of intelligence16. Yeager andDweck conclusions included the role parents and educations can take towards positivelyinfluencing a student’s resilience. Parents and educators should reinforce the malleability ofmindset through the guidance provided in discussions.The third theory guiding the research project is Self-Efficacy. Coined by Albert Bandura, Self-Efficacy is a term which has been defined as a person’s belief that he/she can act purposefullytoward achievement of the goal3. Through achievement of goals, people served as agents of theirown future. Professional development is an effective approach for enhancing a professional’sself
and math-driven nature of engineering students.Intuitive learners prefer to investigate possibilities and relationships. These learners are morecomfortable with abstractions and mathematical formulations. Intuitive learners can use the casestudies to investigate “what if” scenarios in their projects. The sequential preference by thestudents would suggest use of cases that present facts where students can use well-establishedmethods such as laboratory procedures to solve a problem that could enhance learning. This isconsistent with the model we chose to use for the cases combined with the laboratory exercises. The majority of the students represented visual learners (95%). The mean score for verballearners was 6.8 and the mean for
a number of times that it was reassuring to know that others were dealing with similar issues. A couple times she mentioned that she was struggling with a graduate student she was working with and how to create incentive to have that student contribute to her project. Walter was having a similar struggle in terms of assigning a graduate student tasks to complete. It was reassuring to her that she wasn’t alone in this struggle. She also got ideas about how to fix it, which aligns with one of our other areas of support. Cheryl talked about, nearly every week, how it was comforting to know that she wasn't
) Underdevelopedhousing projects 2) Homeless and out-of-work individuals, and 3) Working class individualswith no higher education training.” In these living conditions, it’s presumed that kids from tribalreservations are incompetent or incapable of leaving home to pursue a higher education based ontheir poor socioeconomic status. The constant exposure of this attitude set forth by society haslong lasting, and in some cases severe, effects on the mental stability of young Native students.As a result, some students begin to believe that their chances of succeeding in the future are veryslim, so they often flunk out of high school and dismiss the idea of attending college altogether.This is a very damaging self-fulfilling prophecy that is very real to these
. Install LabVIEW™ from the disk that came with your MyDAQ. Hopefully, you did this before coming to lab today since it takes close to 30 minutes to install. 2. While the install is running or you are just getting ready, go to the National Instruments website (http://www.ni.com/academic/students/learn-labview/) You will want to watch the following videos: a. LabVIEW™ environment Video. b. While Loop Video. c. Recommended: Programming Tools d. Optional: For Loops e. Optional: Case Structures 3. Build your first VI. Open “NI LabVIEW” and then “Create Project” and then a “new VI”. This will open up the “Block Diagram” and “Front Panel” windows. Write a
and chemistry classes. He is currently conducting research on NSF projects in two areas. One is studying how strategies of engagement and feedback with support from internet tools and resources affect conceptual change and associated impact on students’ attitude, achievement, and per- sistence. The other is on the factors that promote persistence and success in retention of undergraduate students in engineering. He was a coauthor for best paper award in the Journal of Engineering Education in 2013.Dr. Casey Jane Ankeny, Arizona State University Casey J. Ankeny, PhD is lecturer in the School of Biological and Health Systems Engineering at Ari- zona State University. Casey received her bachelor’s degree in Biomedical
Paper ID #15288How to Develop Alaska Native STEM Students in Middle School and HighSchoolDr. Michele Yatchmeneff, University of Alaska Anchorage Michele Yatchmeneff is Unangax (Aleut) who grew up living a traditional subsistence lifestyle in rural villages along Alaska’s Aleutian chain. She earned a BS in Civil Engineering in 2005 and an MS in Engineering Management in 2009 at University of Alaska Anchorage. After earning her BS she began working in Alaska’s construction and engineering industry, specializing in water and sewer projects in remote villages across the state. She also worked as the Deputy Director of the
States.Dr. Tanya A. Faltens, Purdue University, West Lafayette Tanya Faltens is the Educational Content Creation Manager for the Network for Computational Nanotech- nology (NCN) which created the open access nanoHUB.org cyber-platform. Her technical background is in Materials Science and Engineering (Ph.D. UCLA 2002), and she has several years’ experience in hands-on informal science education, including working at the Lawrence Hall of Science at UC Berkeley. While at Cal Poly Pomona, she taught the first year engineering course, mentored student capstone re- search projects, and introduced nanoHUB simulation tools into the undergraduate curriculum in materials science and engineering and electrical engineering courses