Paper ID #19678Creation of an Internet of Things (IoT)-Based Innovation LabDr. Shiny Abraham, Seattle University Shiny Abraham is an Assistant Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Seattle University. She received the B.E. degree in Telecommunication Engineering from Visveswaraiah Technological Uni- versity (VTU), India in 2007 and Ph.D. from Old Dominion University, Norfolk, VA in 2012. Her research interests span the areas of Wireless Communication, Internet of Things (IoT), Optimization using Game Theory, and Engineering Education Research. She is a member of the IEEE and ASEE, a technical pro- gram
Paper ID #37098Post-Pandemic Faculty Motivation: Causes for Burnout Offset byMotivation or Hygiene FactorsMr. Veto Matthew Ray, Indiana University - Purdue University, Indianapolis Mr. Matt Ray is the Director of the Facilities Management Technology Program and lecturer for both the Facility Management and Construction Management Programs offered through the Purdue School of Engineering and Technology at Indiana University Purdue University Indianapolis. He has been with the school for the past 14 years. He is a graduate of the Purdue School of Engineering and Technol- ogy receiving degrees in Construction Technology
Paper ID #41393Pathways to Entrepreneurship (PAtENT): Addressing the National AcademiesRecommendationsDr. David K. Pugalee, University of North Carolina at Charlotte Dr. David Pugalee is a full professor, and Director of the Center for Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics Education (STEM) at UNC Charlotte. The recipient of millions of dollars in grant-funding, Dr. Pugalee has also published works on STEM teaching and learning.Praveen Ramaprabhu Praveen Ramaprabhu is a Professor of Mechanical Engineering & Engineering Sciences at UNC Charlotte, where he heads the Laboratory for Multiscale Computational
com- pleted his M.S. in Nuclear Engineering at Texas A&M University under Dr. Yassin Hassan working on experimental thermal hydraulics, and completed his B.S. in Mechanical Engineering at West Texas A&M University.Dr. Tracy Anne Hammond, Texas A&M University Dr. Hammond is Director of the Texas A&M University Institute for Engineering Education & Innovation and also the chair of the Engineering Education Faculty. She is also Director of the Sketch Recognition Lab and Professor in the Department of Computer Science & Engineering. She is a member of the Center for Population and Aging, the Center for Remote Health Technologies & Systems as well as the Institute for Data Science
Paper ID #34706Summative Performance Evaluation of a 3-Year NSF-REU Site on Metrology&InspectionDr. Mathew Kuttolamadom, Texas A&M University Dr. Mathew Kuttolamadom is an associate professor in the Department of Engineering Technology & In- dustrial Distribution and the Department of Materials Science & Engineering at Texas A&M University. He received his Ph.D. in Materials Science & Engineering from Clemson University’s Int’l Center for Au- tomotive Research. His professional experience is in the automotive industry including at the Ford Motor Company. At TAMU, he teaches Mechanics, Manufacturing
technologies, the installation, troubleshooting and monitoring ofnetwork devices to maintain integrity, confidentiality and availability of data and devices, andcompetency in the technologies that Cisco uses in its security structure [8]. A CCNA Securitycertified employee is ready for roles such as Network Security Specialist, Network SecurityAdministrator and Network Security Support Engineer. The certification exam is broken into sixparts listed below [3]. 1. Fundamentals of Network Security 2. Secure Access 3. Virtual Private Networks (VPN) 4. Secure Routing and Switching 5. Cisco Firewall Technologies and Intrusion Prevention System Technologies 6. Content and Endpoint SecurityCertified Information
Rice University and recently completed a PhD from the University of Colorado Denver while serving as a graduate research assistant for the Urban STEM Collaboratory. Dr. Howland Cummings’ research focuses on engineering education, K-12 education, and the measurement of latent constructs.William Taylor SchupbachDr. David J. Russomanno, Indiana University - Purdue University, Indianapolis David J. Russomanno is dean of the Purdue School of Engineering and Technology and a professor of electrical and computer engineering at Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI). Be- fore joining IUPUI, he was the R. Eugene Smith ProfessorDr. Stephanie S Ivey, The University of Memphis Dr. Stephanie Ivey is the
, research and services” in the College of Engineering, Technology & Physical Sciences at Alabama A&M University; and the 2015/16 ’Faculty of the Year’ award for ”Excellence in scholarship, research, creativity and other professional contributions,” both at the college level and university wide. Dr. Kassu is an active member of the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), American Society for Engineering Education (ASEE), and a senior member of the International Society for Optics & Photonics (SPIE).Dr. Anup Sharma, Alabama A&M University Anup Sharma a professor of physics at the Alabama A&M University (AAMU). His research interest encompasses several areas of optics including spectroscopy, optics
Information and Graphics Technology in the Purdue School of Engineering and Technology at Indiana University-Purdue University, Indianapolis. She is a Fellow of the Mack Center at Indiana University for Inquiry on Teaching and Learning and an Editor of the Journal of Scholarship of Teaching and Learning. Her research focuses on the scholarship of teaching and learning related to learning with technology.Mr. Jesse Connor Satterwhite, Indiana University Purdue University, Indianapolis c American Society for Engineering Education, 2016 Assessment of STEM e-Learning in an Immersive Virtual Reality (VR) EnvironmentHazim El-Mounayri1, Eugenia Fernandez2, Christian Rogers2, Tamer Wasfy1, Jesse C
is to connect students, specifically Black Americans, to hands-on engineering educationthat will lead to securing occupations in the civil service complex (Hampton University Schoolof Engineering, n.d.). Hampton University’s College of Engineering and Technology makes its purpose forserving the Black community ubiquitous via public records from research initiatives to outreach.The engineering college emphasizes the importance of creating a learning experience wherestudents are given research to practice pedagogies around environment, technology, andtransportation. For example, students and faculty members have access to multiple major grantsfocused on impactful topics such as energy efficiency, pollution control from
Paper ID #40571Waterworks: An exciting venture to promote careers in water/wastewaterutilitiesDr. Kauser Jahan, Rowan University Kauser Jahan, is a Professor and Head of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Rowan University. She received her B.S.C.E. from the Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology, an MSCE from the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville and a Ph.D. from the University of MInnesota. Dr. Jahan is invested in STEM education and pollution prevention research and has received many awards for her teaching and mentoring. She is a Fulbright scholar.Jeong Eun Ahn Jeong Eun Ahn is an Assistant
draws on his own experience as a faculty member in theArab Gulf States; in addition to views and suggestions of: colleagues, students, graduates, andbusiness leaders in the Region.IntroductionEngineering education in the Arab Gulf States (Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Kuwait, United ArabEmirates, Qatar, and Sultanate of Oman) faces many challenges today. Changes in the externalenvironment (e.g. reduced funding, increased costs, demands by industry for well-seasonedgraduates, and rapid advances in technology) coupled with the quest for educational relevance inundergraduate engineering, are forcing colleges of engineering in the Region (the Arab GulfStates) to “rethink” engineering education and to undertake constructive steps towards reformingthe
Policy,Zhejiang University School of Public Affairs,Zhejiang UniversityDr. Yujie Wang, Zhejiang University Wang Yu-jiePostgraduate of Institute of China’s Science,Technology and Education Policy, Zhejiang Uni- versity School of Public AffairsZhejiang University.Dr. chen li, Zhejiang University 1 American c Society for Engineering Education, 2020The Status of University-Industry Collaboration in China, EU and USA ——A Comparative Research on Co-authored PublicationsAbstractThe type of this paper is research. Policymakers and industry strategists in developing countriesare increasingly considering initiatives that foster university-industry
--8653.[3] M. Wagner, B. Christe, and E. Fernandez, “Comparing First-year Engineering Technology Persisters and Non-persisters,” in 2012 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition Proceedings, San Antonio, Texas: ASEE Conferences, Jun. 2012, p. 25.331.1-25.331.9. doi: 10.18260/1-2--21089.[4] M. J. Khan and C. A. Aji, “Development of Engineering Identity,” 2020.[5] D. Dougherty, “The Maker Movement,” Innov. Technol. Gov. Glob., vol. 7, no. 3, pp. 11– 14, Jul. 2012, doi: 10.1162/INOV_a_00135.[6] S. Weiner, M. Lande, and S. Jordan, “Making Identities: Understanding the Factors that Lead Young Adults to Identify with the Maker Movement,” in 2017 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition Proceedings
student populations. Her current research focuses on creating inclusive and equitable learning environments through the development and implementation of strategies geared towards increasing student sense of belonging. American c Society for Engineering Education, 2021 Keep it Simple, Keep it RealWorking towards creating an inclusive makerspace culture Jill Davishahl Director of Pre-Engineering Program Development The good news… • Staffing • Technology • Lower Anxiety Educational Experience
journal papers, and ref- ereed conference proceedings. He has supervised more than 20 Ph.D. and MS students to completion during his tenure, and taught more than thirty (30) different courses related to engineering technology. He has also received many other awards including 1998 outstanding leadership award (IEEE, membership development), best organizer award (World Automation Congress, 2002), best paper award (WAC, 2002), 2003 and 2004 College of Engineering Dean’s awards. He has served as session chair and organizer of many sessions in the international conferences for the past 30 years. Professor Zilouchian is currently an associate editor of the International Journal of Electrical and Computer Engineering out of
completed the infographic assignment. Ten different medical topics wereincluded, including maternal mortality, infant mortality, reproductive health prosthetics, chronicrenal disease, ADHD, diabetes, asthma, and healthcare for native Americans. A large majority ofthe infographics focused on racial and ethnic disparities (9 of the 11).Most survey participants felt that engineers should learn how their designs and technologies impactsociety (91%) and that engineers have a role in informing the public about the impact of theirdesign and technologies on individuals and society (96%). An open-ended question askedparticipants why challenges in health disparities are important. A major theme that arose from theresponses was that equal access to healthcare
this lack of representation in higher education engineeringprograms, the University of Lowell S-STEM program, funded by the NSF Scholarships inScience, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics Program (S-STEM), has the goal torecruit three cohorts of low-income, high-achieving students who wish to pursue a career inhigher education. The UML S-STEM program supports engineering scholars for four years,their last two years of undergraduate school and their first two years of graduate school. Thegoal of the program is to attract and retain diverse engineering S-STEM scholars and preparethem to enter the competitive pool of future faculty candidates. We present our successes and challenges in recruiting the first two cohorts of low-income
received the B.Eng. (Electrical) degree from McGill University, in 1986, the M.Eng. degree (Electrical) from Ecole Polytechnique in 1993, and the Ph.D. (Biomedical Engineer- ing) from McGill in 2002, all in Montreal, Canada. His industry experience includes flight simulation from 1986 to 1988, welding automation from 1991 to 1994, neurosurgical navigation (part-time) from 1995-1997, as well as open-source image analysis software from 2008 to 2011. He also did postdoctoral research at the National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST) in Tsukuba, Japan from 2001-2005 and at Innovation Center Computer Assisted Surgery (ICCAS) in Leipzig, Ger- many from 2006-2008. He has patents in US and Japan on
State University (PSU) student team consisted of students from theConstruction Management and Construction Engineering Technology degree programs. Twoseniors were selected from the CMCET 691 Senior Projects course to serve as project managers.Additional team members included three students enrolled in CMCET 795-03 Special Topics:Disaster Shelter Design and student volunteers8. Students enrolled in the special topics courseassisted the project managers with design development and contextual research. Several of thestudents involved were Brazilian international exchange students attending Pittsburg StateUniversity. The 2015 (PSU) student team again consisted of two seniors from the senior projectsclass and several students either volunteering or
and recruit Qataris toward STEM-related education and careers.The need is great: Some industry leaders estimate that Qatar’s national demand for citizens intechnical professions is more than double the available workforce — Qatar’s national populationis estimated at approximately 300,000 citizens.1 This demand does not account for rapidlyemerging needs in defense and national security as Qatar invests in high-tech defense systemsand weapons; government ministries are actively recruiting Qatari engineers and scientists tosupport deployment, maintenance and oversight of these technologies. As a result, there has beena need to introduce Qatari youth to new notions of the diverse range of engineering disciplinesand to highlight their significance
Pittsburgh. Dr. Altman specializes in optimization algorithms, formal language theory, complex systems and engineering educationProf. Katherine Goodman, University of Colorado Denver Katherine Goodman is an associate teaching professor at the University of Colorado Denver in the College of Engineering, Design, and Computing. She also serves as the University’s Director of the Center for Excellence in Teaching and Learning. Her research focuses on transformative experiences in engineering education. She has served as program chair and division chair of the Technological and Engineering Literacy - Philosophy of Engineering (TELPhE) Division.Dr. Heather Lynn Johnson Heather Lynn Johnson is a mathematics educator who
- Biology, Chemical Computer Computer Electrcial Information Math, Mechanical engineering Earth Engineering Engineering Science Engineering Systems, Applied Engineering Science Information Math Technology 2016 1 1 1 1 2 2 1 1 2017 4 1 2 3 2018 1 1 3 1 2 2 2 Total 5 2 1 4 7
Management) from the University of Northern Iowa.Rico Kelley Jr., North Carolina A&T State University Born on 26 January, 1993 in Athens GA, Kelley graduated from Clarke Central High School in 2011. In fall 2011, Kelley enrolled at North Carolina A&T State University in Greensboro, NC. He studied Civil Engineering in the College of Engineering for three years before transferring to the College of Science and Technology. Since spring 2016, he has been conducting research within the Department of Built Environment.Dr. Evelyn R. Sowells, North Carolina A&T State University Dr. Evelyn R. Sowells is an assistant professor in the Computer Systems Technology department at North Carolina A&T State University’s
Paper ID #24922Near-Peer Mentoring as a Tool for Increasing Interest in STEMMs. Margaret Hart, Johns Hopkins University Margaret Hart, Ed. M is the STEM Outreach Advisor at the Johns Hopkins Whiting School of Engi- neering’s Center for Educational Outreach. She works closely with student groups and leads our robotics outreach efforts. Margaret has a bachelor’s degree in Astronomy from Boston University and a Masters in Teaching and Curriculum from Harvard University. She has worked as a software test engineer, run a high-school outreach program at the MIT Kavli Institute for Astrophysics and Space Research, and taught
, in 2005 and 2011, respectively. In 2013, he served as an Adjunct Professor with the American University of Kuwait and the Gulf University of Science and Technology. He is currently a lecturer at with Purdue University. His research has been concerned with power and energy systems, electromechanical energy conversion devices, modeling and simulation and engineering education.Mr. Srinivas Mohan Dustker, Purdue University at West Lafayette (COE) Srinivas Dustker is a Ph.D. student in Engineering Education at Purdue University. His research interests include community engaged learning, integration of service-learning in engineering curriculum, faculty development, curriculum development, education policy and
mention all or most of the fiveepistemic frame elements (Knowledge, Skills, Identity, Values, and Epistemology), that theseframe elements co-occur with enough frequency to create epistemic networks, and that theseepistemic networks align with the student writing and provide insight on how students areintegrating their learning.References[1] L. A. Perry and J. S. London, ‘The Transfer of Learning Between School and Work: A New Stance in the Debate About Engineering Graduates’ Preparedness for Career Success Abstract’, in 2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access, 2021.[2] F. Kjærsdam, ‘Technology transfer in a globalised world: transferring between university and industry through cooperation and education’, World
Watford is Professor of Engineering Education, Associate Dean for Academic Affairs and Executive Di- rector of the Center for the Enhancement of Engineering Diversity.Dr. Walter C. Lee, Virginia Tech Dr. Walter Lee is an associate professor in the Department of Engineering Education and the director for research at the Center for the Enhancement of Engineering Diversity (CEED), both at Virginia Tech.Dr. Jacob R. Grohs, Virginia Tech Jacob Grohs is an Assistant Professor in Engineering Education at Virginia Tech with Affiliate Faculty status in Biomedical Engineering and Mechanics and the Learning Sciences and Technologies at Virginia Tech. He holds degrees in Engineering Mechanics (Dr. Teri Kristine Reed, University of
Technology, New Delhi.Dr. Janet Callahan, Boise State University Janet Callahan is the Chair of Materials Science and Engineering at Boise State University. Dr. Callahan received her Ph.D. in Materials Science, M.S. in Metallurgy, and B.S. in Chemical Engineering from the University of Connecticut. Her educational research interests include materials science, freshman engineering programs, math education, and retention and recruitment of STEM majors. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2016 Lessons Learned from S-STEM Transfer Student Scholarship ProgramAbstractThis paper describes how the College of Engineering at Boise State University utilized
how social and political factors drive technological innovations; in their teaching, Koh encourages students to seek connections between what they are learning in the engineering classroom and what they know from elsewhere. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2020 Engagement in Practice: A Community Engaged Capstone Design Experience Rachel Koh, Smith CollegeAbstractService learning in engineering has been criticized on the basis that it often reproduces colonialand globalist tendencies that ultimately undermine already-marginalized communities. A majorproblem with sending engineering students into communities of