: Using a Qualitative Approach to Connect Homes and Classrooms. Thry into Prtce. vol. 31, num. 2. 1992.7. J. P. Martin, M. K. Miller, & D. R. Simmons, “Exploring the Theoretical Social Capital ‘Deficit’ of First Generation College Students: Implications for Engineering Education,” IJEE, vol. 30, no. 4, pp. 1–16, 2014.8. S. Brown, L. Flick and T. Fiez, “An investigation of the presence and development of social capital in an electrical engineering laboratory”, JEE, vol. 98, num. 1, pp. 93-102, 2009.9. P.W. Jackson. Life in classrooms. New York, NY. USA, Teachers College Press. 1990.10. R. Dreeben, “Social relations in a secondary school,” Scil Frcs, vol. 47, num. 2, pp. 235- 236. 1968.11. C. S. Rea, K. Shiekh,, Q Zhu, &D
: Departmental contexts that matter in faculty careers. Research in Higher Education, 55(1), 49-74.Cross, T. M. (2014). The gritty: grit and non-traditional doctoral student success. Journal of Educators Online, 11(3), n3.Davies, C., Arbeit, C. A., & Yamaner, M. (2022). Assessing the Impact of COVID-19 on Science, Engineering, and Health Graduate Enrollment: US Part-Time Enrollment Increases as Full-Time Temporary Visa Holder Enrollment Declines. InfoBrief. NSF 22- 317. National Science Foundation.Gardner, S. K., & Gopaul, B. (2012). The part-time doctoral student experience. International Journal of Doctoral Studies, 7, 63.Graham, C. D., & Massyn, L. (2019). Interaction equivalency theorem: Towards
Navigating STEM Identity,” J. ofNegro Educ., vol. 88, no. 3, pp. 358–378, Summer, 2019.[9] K.A. Callwood, M. Weiss, R. Hendricks, and T.G. Taylor, “Acknowledging and SupplantingWhite Supremacy Culture in Science Communication and STEM: The Role of ScienceCommunication Trainers,” Frontiers in Com., vol. 7, pp. 1–8, Feb. 2022, doi: 10.3389/fcomm.2022.787750.[10] N. Hatfield, N. Brown, and C.M. Topaz, “Do introductory courses disproportionately driveminoritized students out of STEM pathways?” PNAS Nexus, vol. 1, no. 4, pp. 1–10, Sep. 2022,doi: 10.1093/pnasnexus/pgac167.[11] S. Fries-Britt and D. White-Lewis, “In pursuit of meaningful relationships: How Blackmales perceive faculty interactions in STEM,” The Urb. Rev., vol. 52, no. 3, pp. 521–540, Feb
curriculum that promotes students' confidence in both design and projectprocess and practical aspects of mechanical and electrical fabrication, integration, andtroubleshooting.References[1] ABET EAC, “Criteria for Accrediting Engineering Programs,” Baltimore, MD: ABET, 2023.[2] El-Abd, M., Preparation of Engineering Students for Capstone Design through a Microprocessors Course, International Journal of Engineering Pedagogy, Vol. 7, No. 4, 2017.[3] Goldberg, J., Preparing Students for Capstone Design, IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Magazine, November/December, pp. 98-99, 2009.[4] Rutherford, A. Stanton, B., Turoskiu, S. and Varnes, E., Designing a Comprehensive Project for a Junior-level Multidisciplinary Engineering Design Course
The computer science program is ABET accredited and has built-in assessments in all core courses in computing. CS I TABLE VII and CS II are a part of these core courses. C OURSE NUMBER TRANSLATIONS ABET states specific proficiencies that students must pos- sess at the conclusion of the semester. They are abilities to: Course # Name Semester COMP 1000 Computer Science I Fall 1) Choose the appropriate data type(s) for implementing a
international perspective,” J. Nanoparticle Res., vol. 21, no. 11, 2019, doi: 10.1007/s11051-019-4638-7.[2] L. Wright, S. D. Eigenbrode, and T. A. Martin, “Architectures of adaptive integration in large collaborative projects,” vol. 20, no. 4, 2015.[3] B. Akbar, J. Brummet, S. Flores, A. Gordon, B. Gray, and J. Murday, “Global perspectives in convergence education,” J. Nanoparticle Res., vol. 21, p. 229, 2019.[4] S. Anwar, N. A. Bascou, M. Menekse, and A. Kardgar, “A systematic review of studies on educational robotics,” J. Pre-College Eng. Educ. Res., vol. 9, no. 2, pp. 19–42, 2019, doi: 10.7771/2157-9288.1223.[5] I. M. Verner, D. Cuperman, and M. Reitman, “Exploring robot connectivity and
inclusive and diverse STEM community.7. References[1] M. Riojas, S. Lysecky, and J. Rozenblit, “Educational Technologies for Precollege Engineering Education,” IEEE Transactions on Learning Technologies, vol. 5, no. 1, pp. 20–37, 2012, doi: 10.1109/TLT.2011.16.[2] N. Kerimbayev, N. Beisov, А. Kovtun, N. Nurym, and A. Akramova, “Robotics in the international educational space: Integration and the experience,” Educ Inf Technol (Dordr), vol. 25, no. 6, pp. 5835–5851, Nov. 2020, doi: 10.1007/s10639-020-10257-6.[3] S. Anwar, N. A. Bascou, M. Menekse, and A. Kardgar, “A systematic review of studies on educational robotics,” Journal of Pre-College Engineering Education Research, vol. 9, no. 2. Purdue University Press
Conference, 2008.[10] A. L. Campbell, I. Direito and M. Mokhithi, “Developing growth mindsets in engineering students: a systematic literature review of interventions”, European Journal of Engineering Education, vol. 46, no. 4, pp. 503-527, 2021, DOI: 10.1080/03043797.2021.1903835[11] A.J. Elliot, H.A. McGregor, and S. Gable, “Achievement goals, study strategies, and exam performance: a mediational analysis,” Journal of Educational Psychology, vol. 91, no. 3), pp. 549-563, 1999.[12] P. Hsieh, , J.R. Sullivan, and N.S. Guerra, “A closer look at college students:Self-efficacy and goal orientation,” Journal of Advanced Academics, vol. 18, no. 3, pp. 454–476, 2007, DOI: 10.1037/0022-0663.91.3.549[13] A. Vrugt
introducing a smalllottery-based compensation for survey participation. (These amendments to the survey protocolare subject to IRB approval.) Additionally, the 360 Coaching program will continue to seekfeedback from the 360 Coaches throughout the year and respond to these by considering andimplementing improvements.References[1] S. Tantum, S. T. Santillan, L. Temiquel-McMillian, and J. Ganley, “Work-in-Progress: 360 Coaching to support whole-student advising in the first-year,” presented at 2022 ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition, Minneapolis, MN, June 26–29, 2022.[2] K. Bartimote-Aufflick, A. Bridgeman, R. Walker, M. Sharma, and L. Smith, “The study, evaluation, and improvement of university student self-efficacy,” Studies in Higher
and satisfaction. The formative evaluation helps determinewhether project goals were met and what hampered their implementation. A summative reviewassessed this program's impact on student's professional abilities for global employment. TheGlobal Perspective Inventory [20] and Engineering Global Preparedness Index were used tocreate a survey (e.g., the belief that one can make a difference through engineering problem-solving). The evaluator used a Likert scale to poll students before and after IRES. The surveytool examined research skills and global perspective inventory professional skills. Research Skill Development - Pre v/s Post Survey Peer review and publication process Report writing and poster presentation Result
&M University Victor Ugaz is the Carolyn S. & Tommie E. Lohman ’59 Professor in Engineering Education in the Artie McFerrin Department of Chemical Engineering at Texas A&M University. He joined the faculty in Jan- uary 2003. His research focuses broadly on harnessing the unique characteristics of transport and flow at the microscale, with specific interests in microfluidic flows (both single-phase and nanoparticle suspen- sions), microchip gel electrophoresis, PCR thermocycling in novel convective flow devices, and construc- tion of 3D vascular flow networks for biomedical applications. Ugaz earned B.S. and M.S. degrees in Aerospace Engineering at The University of Texas at Austin, and a Ph.D. in
. Didion, N. L. Fortenberry, and E. Cady, Colloquy on Minority Males in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics. 2012, Washington, DC: The National Academies Press.[3] Y. E. Pearson, Inclusion, Diversity Now Factor Into Accreditation Standards. PE Magazine, 2019.[4] NSPE Adopts New Policy on Diversity. 2017: NSPE Today.[5] Transforming Undergraduate Education in Engineering Phase III: Voices on Women's Participation and Retention. 2017.[6] R. Reisberg, The University Experience: Retention to Degree, in ASEE-TUEE-WIE Discussion Starter. 2015, ASEE.[7] C. Corbett, and C. Hill, Solving the Equation: The Variables for Women's Success in Engineering and Computing. 2015: AAUW[8] L. L. Long III, T. S
integration of this in the Laplace domain becomes Va/s.Omega represents Va(s) multiplied by the transfer function, and this equation can be solved to determinethe response to a step function (such as a flipped switch which allows current to flow). The graph shown in Figure 6 shows a system with a step input Va and a DC motor’s resultingoutput (omega). Eventually, omega becomes a constant as steady state operation is reached, but intransient responses it is a first order system. Figure 6: Voltage represents a step function, while omega is a DC Motor’s response to that step.Stove Types Figure 7: Gas (left) and electric (right) stoves Consider two different stove types – gas and electric – as shown in
. What question(s) do you still have? 4. How can you incorporate what you learned in the zoom discussion in your report for the project?Then each student had to reply to at least two peers’ posts and do one of the following tasks: 1. Give ideas for how they can answer their question(s). 2. Share some feedback to their thoughts about their project.Finally, for one of the projects, the students completed peer reviews of each other’s reports. Eachstudent read, graded and gave feedback on two other reports. The purpose of the peer reviews wasto allow the students to learn about topics they did not choose and to learn from their colleagues’reflections and change sections.Mechanical Systems Design: Module 1 DescriptionTo date, one
, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, 2017.[8] G. D. Hoople, D. A. Chen, S. M. Lord, L. A. Gelles, F. Bilow, and J. A. Mejia, "An Integrated Approach to Energy Education in Engineering," Sustainability, vol. 12, no. 21, p. 9145, 2020.[9] L. A. Gelles, S. M. Lord, G. D. Hoople, D. A. Chen, and J. A. Mejia, "Compassionate Flexibility and Self-Discipline: Student Adaptation to Emergency Remote Teaching in an Integrated Engineering Energy Course during COVID-19," Education Sciences, vol. 10, no. 11, p. 304, 2020. [Online]. Available: https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7102/10/11/304.[10] University of San Diego. "Courses - Integrated Approach to Energy." https://www.sandiego.edu/engineering/programs/integrated
%20NSF_RAPID_GraduateStudentExperiences_Covid19_White_Paper.pdf[2] N. Winstone et al., “Who stands to benefit? Wellbeing, belonging and challenges to equity inengagement in extra-curricular activities at university,” Act. Learn. High. Educ., Feb. 2020.[3] S. K. Gardner and B. J. Barnes, “Graduate student involvement: Socialization for theprofessional role,” J. Coll., vol. 48, no. 4, pp. 369-387, 2007.[4] K. Farley, M. McKee, and M. Brooks, “The Effects of Student Involvement on GraduateStudent Satisfaction: A Pilot Study,” Alabama Counseling Association Journal vol. 37, no. 1, pp.33-38, 2011.[5] J. A. Austin, “Flourishing Elements: Psychological, Social, Contemplative, Physical, andEmotional Well-Being: COVID-Impacted,” Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA, 2020.[6] A. E. Lundquist and L. Carter
hoped that this study inspires a much broader research on GGPL with both collaborating and/or competing groups addressing a much larger set of groups and their interactions ranging from small teams to the entire human race. Bibliography[1] J. Dewey, Experience and Education, Macmillan, N.Y., 1939.[2] D. A. Kolb, Experiential Learning: Experience as the Source of Learning and Development, Prentice Hall, Englewood Cliffs, N.J., 1984.[3] J. N. Harb, S. O. Durrant, and R. E. Terry, ”Use of the Kolb Learning Cycle and the 4MAT System in Engineering in Education,” Journal of Engineering Education, Vol. 82, April 1993, pp. 70-77.[4] J. N.Harb, R. E. Terry, P. K. Hurt, and K. J. Williamson, Teaching Through the Cycle: Application of
. During the six weekly in-classsessions, a total of 85,058 telemetry events were recorded. Telemetry data contain timestampswith events, which are listed together with their associated parameters in Table 1.Table 1. Subset of telemetry events as captured in the research version of codeSpark Academywith their visualization. The column “Visualization Markers” contains markers that will be usedin our visualizations, which will be discussed in the Methods section. Telemetry Event Marker PuzzleStart: Sent at the beginning of every puzzle level s PuzzleResult: Sent at the end of every puzzle level *,2*,3* CommandAdded: A
, statistical analysis, simulation processes, optimization techniques, and risk analysis at the strategic and network management level. Among his research sponsors are the National High- way Cooperative Research Program (NCHRP), Metropolitan Transportation Commission in California (MTC), the Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT), the El Paso Metropolitan Planning Organiza- tion (MPO), and the City of El Paso. His academic work is documented in more than 100 publications in peer- reviewed national and international journals, conference proceedings, books, and technical reports. Dr. Chang also serves as the Chair of the ASCE Infrastructure Systems Committee, and Vice President of isMARTI in the U. S Research Coordinator
diversity & inclusion in the engineeringcurriculum and advocating for more women and minority groups in faculty, staff, and student body.ReferencesAntonio, A. L., Chang, M. J., Hakuta, K., Kenny, D. A., Levin, S., & Milem, J. F. (2004). Effects ofracial diversity on complex thinking in college students. Psychological Science, 15(8), 507-510DeAngelo, Linda, Ray Franke, Sylvia Hurtado, John H. Pryor, and Serge Tran. (2011). CompletingCollege: Assessing Graduation Rates at Four-Year Institutions. Los Angeles, CA: Higher EducationResearch Institute. http://heri.ucla.edu/DARCU/CompletingCollege2011.pdfFutrelle, David. (2013, Feb 19). Discrimination Doesn’t Make Dollars, or Sense. Time Feb 2013).Retrieved from https://business.time.com/2013/02/19
; Yuksek, B. Z., & Dakeev, U., & Baltaci, K. (2012, June), Design andImplementation of a 10 kW Wind Power and Instrumentation System Paper presented at 2012 ASEEAnnual Conference & Exposition, San Antonio, Texas. 10.18260/1-2—21148.[9] Ramirez, E. J. (2008). Engineering Design, Construction, Operation and Analysis of the 2007 TexasA&M University Solar Decathlon House. Energy Systems Laboratory. Available electronically fromhttp://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/85723.[10] Bdwawi, A., Al Ahbabi, H., Al Shamsi, S. A., Hussein, A.A., “Modular PV Charging Station forUAE University Golf Carts”, Elsevier, Energy Procedia, Vol. 75, August 2015, pp. 314-318.https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1876610215011303.[11] Esfandyari, A
moreclosely with industry partners in order to meet their workforce expectations and develop curriculathat align with the workforce of tomorrow based on cloud computing job roles.AcknowledgementsThis material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant No.1801024. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this materialare those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National ScienceFoundation.References[1] S. Fayer, A. Lacey and W. Watson, A. “BLS spotlight on statistics: STEM occupations- past, present, and future,” U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistic, 2017. [Online]. Available: https://www.bls.gov/spotlight/2017/science-technology
and support aimed at improvingrecruitment, retention, and graduation for women in engineering and computing. Alumni whoidentify as women were recruited as volunteers to form and direct the advisory committee.Members include representation from each decade including alumnae from the 1970’s to the2010’s.This paper begins by explaining the origins of the committee and the evolution of thecommittee’s mission. Next the efforts to develop a strategic plan are discussed. Included is adiscussion of the methodology used to create the strategic plan, along with details regarding howthe process evolved as it included committee members from across the United States. Finally, theresults to date of the work are detailed and suggestions are provided for
-2017). She is also a judge for the Reimagine Education Awards (2016 – present). In May 2017 she won the ”Inspiring Professor Award” at Tec de Monterrey. She has organized successful Summer Programs in UK, Japan, China and Thailand. She has presented her Research and work at dif- ferent international forums: ASME, Pittsburgh, U.S. 2018 / The Festival of Teaching at Birmingham City University, 2017 / Hayashi Genjuro Art Gallery, Kurashiki, Japan 2016Dr. Gibr´an Sayeg-S´anchez, Tecnol´ogico de Monterrey American c Society for Engineering Education, 2021 Paper ID #33318Dr
internships. These results aredemonstrated in Figure 1. The vertical axis indicates the total number of learning behaviors (orfine codes) demonstrated in an internship and each bar indicates the number of learningbehaviors under each style. In this study, three learning styles dictated students’ internshipexperiences as demonstrated by subordinating learning behaviors. 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 ex ias y s t ax hn yn ley ecca na il y Ki m Al b elb ar
Undergraduate Engineering Students Enhance Novel Instrumentation to Detect the Mach Effect Peter Mark Jansson PE PhD and Peter S. Kaladius Bucknell UniversityAbstract – Undergraduate electrical engineers performing summer research have enhanced thereal-time data collection system of one of their professor’s novel detectors to uncover someremarkable results. Over the past two summers at Bucknell University students in engineeringhave been working on an innovative detector that has repeatedly produced results indicative of areal Machian like reaction force to inertia. Each summer (2018 and 2019) multiple studentscontinued to make electrical enhancements and
initiative is the first, and currently the only one of its kind,which makes college credit available at scale, worldwide. It also provides a pathway toadmission to the university for students who may not otherwise qualify. The MOOC explores theNational Academy of Engineering (NAE)’s Grand Challenges for Engineering and related globalchallenges. This course, based on an on-ground counterpart offered at ASU, is designed to alsohelp students develop the necessary interdisciplinary systems perspective and entrepreneurialmindset to solve the complex global challenges presented. This course fuses engineering with thesocial sciences, asking students to explore the interactions between society and technology,including the influences of human behavior
surveyed on their perception of the effectiveness of the CW. Cohort 1was polled as the course was ending while Cohorts 2 and 3 were emailed a survey link at thebeginning of the following semester. Cohort 1 had a 100% response rate with all 14 studentswhile Cohorts 2 and 3 were emailed a survey link that yielded 116 responses, 34% of theenrollment. Cohort 1 responded to a prompt that included all teaching exercises utilized by theinstructor while Cohorts 2 and 3 responded to the following prompt which asks about the CWspecifically. Tables 2 and 3 chart the breakdown of the responses. Table 2 is a reflection ofCohort 1’s response to the CW, specifically with a rating of 4.1/5.0. Cohorts 2 and 3 were notpolled separately and are shown combined in
examine these changes on student performance as well, and a morein-depth analysis with an automated tool needs to be conducted on how student code quality isimpacted. Also, future studies could look at developing methods to better enforce code qualityand good style practices in short exercises. In addition, future studies should confirm the Bloom’sTaxonomy level of CS exercises before their use, and perhaps they should even aim to work withother instructors to create a bank of CS exercises and come to a consensus on how to map CStopics to BT.References [1] S. Zweben and B. Bizot. The taulbee survey. Computing Research Association, 2018. URL https://cra.org/resources/taulbee-survey/. [2] Vincenzo Del Fatto, Gabriella Dodero, Rosella Gennari
Society for Engineering Education, 2020 Educating Civil Engineering TechnologistsIntroduction Civil engineering work has evolved to encompass the distinctive roles and competencies of professional engineers, technologists and technicians. A civil engineering technologist is a specialist trained to work in one or more technical areas within the civil engineering field. Engineering technologists often work under professional engineers, yet they are expected to demonstrate competency for completion of independent activities within their particular area(s) of specialty. In many cases, civil engineering technologists acquire unique skills and knowledge that complement those of a professional engineer. In contrast, civil