laws to obtain the system model(i.e., ordinary differential equation) for one and two degree of freedom systems (this activity isidentical to initial HW assignments in previous offerings) and manually solve the system ofequations to determine the time response using Laplace transforms and partial fraction expansion(or the equivalent), for overdamped and underdamped cases/scenarios. Activity 2: Time Response/Experimental determination of transfer function/Model Verification(Chapter 4) Students will investigate the transient and equilibrium responses of the systems investigatedin Activity 1 using the final value theorem and system time constant(s) or damping ratio andnatural frequency values, similar to activities conducted in prior course
computerscience while attending the Academic Success class as undergraduates with a CSEMS or SSTEMscholarship. This paper will briefly describe the program and assignments required in theASAP class. About half of the students in the class have scholarships from a National ScienceFoundation S-STEM or STEP grant and are required to take the class each semester they have thescholarship. Class challenges include varying the assignments for students who repeat the classseveral times and to differentiate the undergraduate and graduate student assignments. The paperwill describe the graduate student activities of the last year. These activities suggest innovativeways that graduate students can have their education enhanced and, at the same time, how theycan
of taking the early morning section. Page 24.1407.10Identifying the instructors’ teaching styles and other characteristics that may decrease theconsequences of early morning sections is another way to continue this research. These teachingstyles and characteristics can be shared/promoted among faculty members (e.g., via professionaldevelopment workshops).Bibliography1. Barker, M. S. An Investigation of the Relationship between Selected Demographic Variables and Dual Enrollment Participation on Postsecondary Success for First Time Freshmen. ProQuest LLC. 789 East Eisenhower Parkway, P.O. Box 1346, Ann Arbor, MI 48106. Tel: 800-521
educator with a long history as a teaching professor in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology. My expertise is in teaching and learning in STEM, peer education, international programs, assessment, and building networks and collaborations.Dr. Lisa Schneider-Bentley, Cornell University Lisa Schneider-Bentley has been the Director of Engineering Learning Initiatives in Cornell Univer- sityˆ C™s College of Engineering since 2002. Learning Initiativesˆ C™ programs enhance the educa- a a tional environment of the College by facilitating opportunitie ©American Society for Engineering Education, 2024 Disaggregating data from peer-led
. ReferencesBalsam, K. F., Molina, Y., Beadnell, B., Simoni, J., & Walters, K. (2011). Measuring multiple minority stress: the LGBT People of Color Microaggressions Scale. Cultural Diversity and Ethnic Minority Psychology, 17(2).Bruning, M. J., Bystydzienski, J., & Eisenhart, M. (2015). Intersectionality as a framework for understanding diverse young women’s commitment to engineering. Journal of Women and Minorities in Science and Engineering, 21(1), 1-26. https://doi.org/10.1615/JWomenMinorScienEng.2014007345Camacho, M. M., & Lord, S. M. (2011). "Microaggressions" in engineering education: Climate for Asian, Latina and White women. Proceedings - Frontiers in Education Conference, FIE, 1-6. https://doi.org
-first-year engineering programs," in ASEE Southeastern Section Conference, Fairfax, VA, Mar. 2023.[2] R. E. Barr, T. J. Krueger and T. Aanstoos, "Addressing program outcomes in a freshman introduction to engineering course," in ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Portland, OR, June 2005.[3] R. Rojas-Oviedo, "Improving retention of undergraduate students in engineering through freshman courses," in ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Montreal, Canada, June 2002.[4] S. Edington, C. G. Cameratti-Baeza, R. Knudsen and F. J. Marsik, "Choose your own adventure: Introducing student choice into a first year experience course," in ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access, online, June 2020.[5] O. Pierrakos, M. Alley and
an opportunity to create computer based art. Assessment of learning was through pre- and post-testquestions . A total of eight students were involved in this study; four from middle school (grades 6, 7 and 8)and four from high school (grades 9 to 12).Assembly VLEsTen students interacted with the Assembly VLEs (5 middle school s, 5 high school). Among the middle schoolparticipants, 3 students were able to understand the target assembly concepts in the first round of learninginteractions; two of the students needed an additional round of learning interactions for learning the sameconcepts. Among the high school students, four students were able to demonstrate an understanding of allconcepts after one round of interactive sessions with the VLEs
2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Jun. 2011, p. 22.684.1-22.684.21. Accessed: May 07, 2023. [Online]. Available: https://peer.asee.org/exploding-pipelines-mythological- metaphors-structuring-diversity-oriented-engineering-education-research-agendas[4] S. M. Lord, M. W. Ohland, R. A. Layton, and M. M. Camacho, “Beyond pipeline and pathways: Ecosystem metrics,” Journal of Engineering Education, vol. 108, no. 1, pp. 32– 56, 2019, doi: 10.1002/jee.20250.[5] S. Lancaster, Connect! Blink Publishing, 2022.[6] A. L. Pawley, “Universalized Narratives: Patterns in How Faculty Members Define ‘Engineering,’” Journal of Engineering Education, vol. 98, no. 4, pp. 309–319, 2009, doi: 10.1002/j.2168-9830.2009.tb01029.x
credit in the modifiedproblems (Understand, Analyze, and Evaluate). * represents a significant difference at 95%confidence (p < 0.05).ExamThe final exam was comprehensive, consisting of problems on various topics covered over theduration of the semester, including viscous flow in pipes. Since the final exam was scheduled ona different day for each section, the exam problems (all at the Apply level) were different butdesigned to be at a similar difficulty level. The average score of the problem(s) covering thefocused topic was compared and has been shown in Figure 4. There is no significant differencebetween the exam scores of the two student sections. This finding is consistent with the result ofthe formative assessment (Figure 3A). Both
. Frieske, T. Yu, D. Su, Y. Xu, E. Ishii, Y. J. Bang, A. Madotto, and P. Fung, “Survey of hallucination in natural language generation,” ACM Computing Surveys, vol. 55, no. 12, pp. 1–38, 2023. [2] H. Alkaissi and S. I. McFarlane, “Artificial hallucinations in chatgpt: implications in scientific writing,” Cureus, vol. 15, no. 2, 2023. [3] B. McMurtrie, “Teaching: Will chatgpt change the way you teach,” The Chronicle of Higher Education, 2023. [4] J. Rudolph, S. Tan, and S. Tan, “Chatgpt: Bullshit spewer or the end of traditional assessments in higher education?” Journal of Applied Learning and Teaching, vol. 6, no. 1, 2023. [5] B. S. Bloom, M. D. Engelhart, E. Furst, W. H. Hill, and D. R. Krathwohl, “Handbook i: cognitive domain,” New
Exercise: An evaluation of the effectiveness of information assurance education. The Journal of Information Security 1(2).6. Anisetti, M., Bellandi, V., Colombo, A., Cremonini, M., Damiani, E., Frati, F., Hounsou, J. T. and Rebeccani, D. (2007). Learning Computer Networking on Open Paravirtual Laboratories. IEEE Transactions on Education 50(4), 302-311.7. Bhosale, Y. S. and Livingston L M, J. (2014). V-Lab: A Mobile Virtual Lab for Network Security Studies. International Journal of Computer Applications 93(20), 35-38.8. Briner Jr, J. V., Roberts, J. E. and Worthy, F. (2005). Teaching Computer Science at a Small University. Association of Small Computer Users in Education (ASCUE).9. Bullers, W. I., Burd, S. and
Item 4 5a. The teacher provides opportunities for from multiple STEM Cognitive Engagement in The teacher requires students to integrate content students to learn S/T/E/M concepts. disciplines to complete an from multiple disciplines. STEM activity. 5b. The teacher integrates content from
’s (Lorenz 1963; Baker and Gollub 1996; Flake 2001). The dictionary meaning of the word “chaos” is complete disorder or confusion. Chaosin science and engineering refers to an apparent lack of order in a system thatnevertheless obeys certain laws and rules. This understanding of chaos is the same as thatof dynamical instability. Deterministic system can produce results which are chaotic andappear to be random. But these are not technically random because the events can bemodeled by a nonlinear procedure/formula. The pseudo-random number generator in acomputer is an example of such a system. A system which is stable, linear or non-chaoticunder certain conditions may degenerate into randomness or unpredictability (may bepartial) under other
some period of time, until the protégés are capable of making expertise-relatedchoices autonomously.There are many cases where the duration of the mentoring relationship is just a few hours,typically at an outreach, i.e., recruiting-type event, with contact between mentor and protégé ofshort duration, often less than eight hours [9]. In many cases, the mentor vis-à-vis role model andprotégé(s) will most likely never meet again, so first impressions often become ONLYimpressions. The member volunteers who interact during these “one and done” events withstudents and the adults who accompany them are defined as “role models” for this study.Overview of studySince 2010, in collaboration with Exxon Mobil, Design Squad, and the Girl Scouts of the
meeting that we video recorded. In this meeting, Team2 spent the majority of their time planning their final presentation. This was the next coursedeliverable following the meeting, and Team 2 focused heavily on creating a presentation that fitthe course requirements but was also memorable. This clip presents the first decision the teammade around their presentation structure and medium – What medium(s) should the team use toconvey their design? Seated from left to right around the table at the start of the clip shown inFigure 5-3 are: Yin, Meghan, Jing, Analyn, Zoya, and Wu.Figure 5-3
, or stretch, assignments are critical levers of mobility [1].Organizations and managers curate and allocate these types of assignments informally, usingthem as a means to develop leadership skills, identify people ready for promotion and the “fasttrack”, and build succession plans [2], [3]. Software engineering managers in Tobias Neely etal.’s [1] case flagged that stretch assignments need to have an element of building new skills andcapacities (stretches were routinely described as “getting out of your comfort zone”) and anelement of visibility in the organization and to managers and leaders. Career advancement forthese engineers, in other words, revolved around proving competence in novel areas that hadstrategic importance to the business
-building outcomes.Together, prior findings that suggest support programs enhance students’ social capital and socialcapital’s relevance for persistence in CS motivate our study into whether students acquired socialcapital from CSSI, how CSSI’s design and environment influenced students’ access to socialcapital, and whether participants’ outgoing social capital impacted their persistence in CS. ● RQ1: What form(s) of social capital in CS did students acquire from CSSI? ● RQ2: What were features of CSSI that influenced students’ access to social capital in CS? ● RQ3: How did access to social capital from CSSI impact students’ persistence in CS?MethodsHosted by Google and first launched in 2008 [51], CSSI’s name recognition and maturityenabled
me because I am too… Blond? [S Contractions o you are breaking up with me because I am too…✨Neurodive rgent✨] Remove So you are breaking up with me because I am too Blond So y Punctuation and ou are breaking up with me because I am too Neurodivergent Symbols Convert to Lower so you are breaking up with me because i am too blond so y Case ou are breaking up with me because i am too neurodivergent Remove breaking blond breaking neurodivergent Stopwords Lemmatize break blond break neurodivergent Tokenize WordList(['break', 'blond', 'break', 'neurodivergent'])5.4.3. Describing the CorpusPrior to training the LDA model, we first explored the contents of
viewtransfer students through a variety of accumulated capital in an assets-based perspective. It alsohas the ability to illuminate new more accessible and diverse pathways into STEM andengineering baccalaureate education and fields of practice.AcknowledgmentThis material is based upon work support by the National Science Foundation under Grant No.EEC 2144213. References[1] F. Laanan, S. Starobin, and L. Eggleston, “Adjustment of community college students at a four-year university: Role and relevance of transfer student capital for student retention,” J Coll Stud Ret, vol. 12, no. 2, pp. 175–209, Jan. 2010, doi: 10.2190/CS.12.2.d.[2] The College Board, “Improving student transfer from
), Impact of Elementary School Teachers' Enacted Engineering Design-Based Science Instruction on Student Learning (Fundamental) Paper presented at 2016 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, New Orleans, Louisiana. https:/doi.org/10.18260/p.25540Cunningham, C. M., Lachapelle, C. P., Brennan, R. T., Kelly, G. J., Tunis, C. S. A., & Gentry, C. A. (2020). The impact of engineering curriculum design principles on elementary students’ engineering and science learning. Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 57(3), 423-453. https://doi.org/10.1002/tea.21601Dare, E. A., Ellis, J. A., & Roehrig, G. H. (2014). Driven by beliefs: Understanding challenges physical science teachers face when
findings from a longitudinal study of engineering students," in Proceedings of the Research in Engineering Education Symposium. Presented at the Research in Engineering Education Symposium (REES), Davos, Switzerland, 2008.[4] N. Mentzer, K. Becker, and M. Sutton, "Engineering design thinking: High school students' performance and knowledge," Journal of Engineering Education, vol. 104, no. 4, pp. 417- 432, 2015.[5] J. Strobel, J. Wang, N. R. Weber, and M. Dyehouse, "The role of authenticity in design- based learning environments: The case of engineering education," Computers & Education, vol. 64, pp. 143-152, 2013.[6] S. Papert and I. Harel, "Situating constructionism," in Constructionism, S. Papert
York: McGraw-Hill, 2009.[3] I. Van de Poel and L. Royakkers, Ethics, Technology, and Engineering: An Introduction. Malden: Wiley-Blackwell, 2011.[4] C. E. Harris, M. Davis, M. S. Pritchard, and M. J. Rabins, “Engineering Ethics: What? Why? How? And When?,” J. Eng. Educ., vol. 85, no. 2, pp. 93–96, 1996, doi: 10.1002/j.2168-9830.1996.tb00216.x.[5] J. L. Hess and G. Fore, “A Systematic Literature Review of US Engineering Ethics Interventions,” Sci. Eng. Ethics, vol. 24, no. 2, pp. 551–583, 2018, doi: 10.1007/s11948- 017-9910-6.[6] M. A. Holsapple, T. S. Harding, D. D. Carpenter, J. A. Sutkus, and C. J. Finelli, “Framing Faculty and Student Discrepancies in Engineering Ethics Education Delivery,” J. Eng
such empirical evidence, faculty and administrators are often left with little more thananecdotal insights to guide the development of curricula and programs. To address this gap, inS. Claussen and S. Howland contributed equally to this paper and share joint first-authorship.2015 we initiated an NSF-sponsored, mixed-methods study that used multiple measures andtheoretical frameworks to explore how understandings of social and ethical responsibility changeamong undergraduate engineering students during a four-year engineering degree program, bothin general and in relation to specific learning environments and experiences.Our study design included interviews and surveys in Year 1, a repeat survey administration in thestudents’ fifth semester
Technology. Georgia Tech’s record of training Armyengineers and aviators since WWI was probably the deciding factor, and it was with theinitiative of Army officers deputed to the Guggenheim Foundation, that the final schoolselection was madex. A grant of $300,000 was used to construct a building around anine-foot wind tunnel and invest in bonds for the future. In the following sections moredetails on the evolution of each of the seven schools to their present state will bepresented.New York University As mentioned in the introduction New York University (NYU) was the firstGuggenheim School, and the recipient of the largest grant. NYU developed excellentfacilities and was a renowned center for years. In the 1940’s it was joined by its cross-town
facilitator was aloneduring the second focus group. Although a small group, we gained valuable insights into ourquestions as the participants engaged in conversations with one another as well as the facilitator.During each session, notes were taken including verbatim comments as well as the nature of theconversation. A voice recorder was used as back up and furnished the ability to transcribehighlighted sections of the focus group that corresponded to emergent themes from the surveyfor the analysis.18 These qualitative data were added to the open-ended responses on the surveyand descriptively coded19 with the assistance of NVIVO software. Where we have excerptedquotes from the data, survey narratives (S) or focus group (F) are indicated for
⇤ ⇤ ⇤ ⇤ ⇤ Q3: The scenario presented in this problem seems realistic.Figure 6 shows the electrical modeling problem presented to the system dynamics class. For thisproblem, the context-rich version contained narrative placing the problem-solver in the role of astudent dealing with data being contaminated by 60 Hz line noise and also identified the circuitas a band stop filter.A) Consider the circuit shown in the figure below. L Vin C R Vout (a) Write a transfer function that relates the input voltage Vin to the output voltage Vout . (b) Of the three circuit components, which one(s) might be changed to alter the natural frequency of this circuit?B) Please answer the following
-class, and homosexual men and women. Therewere some exceptions belonging to bisexuals in the same demographic groups. Largely, thistheme described older works (late 1990’s to early 2000’s), and this body of work constituted thefoundation of what researchers know about the experiences of the LGBTQIA+ community(D’Augelli, 1992; Dilley, 2002). Privileged members of the LGBT community are largely white,male, cisgender, and middle-class. Ongoing research on this group is likely enforced bysampling. As Renn (2010) mentioned, “there is no longer a gap in the literature” with regard toLGB research in higher education. This trend seems to be reflected in other disciplines. Renndid, however, mention that as of 2010, there was still a gap in the
MD Anderson Cancer Center, and UT HSC Houston, and is also a former Chairman of the Department of Mechanical Engineering. Dr. Diller is an internationally recognized authority in heat and temperature related processes in living tissues and how they may be applied in the design of therapeutic devices. His first studies in the 1960’s were related to the frozen banking of cells and tissues for transplantation. He has also pursued advanced analysis of burn injury occurrence and treatment and the application of thermal therapy for cancer. Currently he is focused on the use of temperature manipulation to enhance the healing of injured soft tissues, the development of a new generation of safer and more effective