Mechatronics Curriculum and Packaging Automation Laboratory Facility. In 2010 he as Co-PI received NSF-ATE grant entitled Meeting Workforce Needs for Mechatronics Tech- nicians. From 2003 through 2006, he was involved with Argonne National Laboratory, Argonne, IL in developing direct computer control for hydrogen powered automotives. He is also involved in several direct computer control and wireless process control related research projects. His current interests are in the area of packaging machinery system design & control, industrial transducers, industrial process control systems, modeling and simulation of Mechatronics devices and systems in virtual environment, programmable logic controllers, programmable logic
Learning in an On-line Environment: No Significant Difference?” Vol. 53, Issue 1, p1, 2001.30. Uhlig, R., Viswanathan, S., Watson, J. B, Evans, H., "Effective Instruction of On-line Engineering Course", Proceedings of ASEE AC 2007-2815.31. Sergeyev, A., Alaraje, N., “Partnership with industry to offer a professional certificate in robotics automation”, ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition (ASEE 2010), AC 2010-96832. Sergeyev, A., Alaraje, N., “Promoting robotics education: curriculum and state-of-the-art robotics laboratory development”, The Technology Interface Journal, Vol. 10, #3, 2010.33. Echo360 lecture capturing system: http://echo360.com/34. Adesso CyberPad Digital Notebook: http://www.adesso.com/en/home/tablets.html
models, and solve for circuitrelated quantities in various component configurations. For practical applications, otherelectronic devices such as light emitting diodes and operational amplifiers may be introduced,without a detailed analysis of what happens inside the “black box.” A traditional treatmentbegins with circuits having direct current (DC) sources, moves to first and second order timedependent responses of R, L, and/or C combinations, and ends with alternating current (AC)circuits. However, the nature and behavior of circuits in such a first course is usually assumed toinvolve voltages that have a continuous range of possibilities; that is, it has usually been
2012 ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition”, AC 2012-392015. Trainor, T., McCarthy D., and Kwin M., “From Cornerstone to Capstone: Systems Engineering in the West Point Way”, Proceedings of the 2010 ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition”, AC 2010-153116 . Gipson, K.G., Henriques, J.J., and Sequeira, S., “ Development and Implementation of a Cornerstone Course: Engineering Opportunities”, Proceedings of the 2015 ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition”, Session 1158017. Vernier, M.A., Wensing, P.M., Morin, C.E., Phillips, A.P., Rice, B., Wegman, K.R. and Hartle C., “Design of a Full-Featured Robot Controller for Use in a First Year Robotics Design Project”, Proceedings of the 2014 ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition
. Swan, C., K. Paterson, O. Pierrakos, A.R. Bielefeldt, B.A. Striebig. 2011. ISES a Longitudinal Study to Measure the Impacts of Service on Engineering Students. American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition. Paper AC 2011-1328. 17 pp.7. Engineers Without Borders USA. 2010. EWB-USA Strategic Plan. https://s3.amazonaws.com/ewbgeneral/stratplan_FINAL_lo.pdf Accessed 1/23/2015.8. Engineers Without Borders – Valparaiso University. History of the Chapter. http://www.valpo.edu/student/ewb/about/history.pdf Accessed
sustain the new development in manufacturing processes and technologies, it iscritically important that there is skilled workforce to support the industry. Prior research haspointed to a talent gap in manufacturing industry (Javdekar et al., 2016). To that end, multipleinitiatives are taking place on different levels. For example, at the industry level, many initiativesare being taken by the companies to bridge this gap, such as upskilling the current workforcethrough continuing education (Nepal et al., 2019), or partnering with an academic institution indeveloping appropriate program or curriculum (Nepal et al., 2016; Seemakula et al., 2010). At theuniversity level, besides offering academic degree programs in manufacturing or similar
% 23.4% CS/ACS 11.7% 28.0% ME 12.3% 0.00 0.06 0.12 0.18 0.24 0.30 Percent RepresentationFigure 1: Shown here is the relative representation of students in the surveyed college, and the relativerepresentation of students that responded to the survey. Disciplines represented include EnvironmentalEngineering (EnE), Physics (P), Construction Management (CM), Civil Engineering (CvE), Electrical Engineeringand Computer Engineering (EE/CE), Computer
attend it. The grading for the classwas pass/fail.Engineering Living Learning CommunitiesThe College began a small engineering living learning community (ELLC) of 28 students in thefall of 2007. Two years later, in 2009, the ELLC was then moved to a newer more expensiveresidence hall in 2009 which had suite style rooms and was located close to the engineeringbuildings. That year the enrollment more than doubled (see Table 1). Due to limited residentialhousing there is no more room to expand the ELLC.Table 1. ELLC Enrollment and Overall Enrollment of First-Year Students Year # Admits ELLC ELLC 2007 440 28 6.4% 2008 479 27 5.6% 2009 363 71 19.6% 2010
courses, and studies the use of context in both K-12 and undergraduate engineering design education. He received his Ph.D. in Engineering Education (2010) and M.S./B.S. in Electrical and Com- puter Engineering from Purdue University. Dr. Jordan is PI on several NSF-funded projects related to design, including an NSF Early CAREER Award entitled ”CAREER: Engineering Design Across Navajo Culture, Community, and Society” and ”Might Young Makers be the Engineers of the Future?,” and is a Co-PI on the NSF Revolutionizing Engineering Departments grant ”Additive Innovation: An Educational Ecosystem of Making and Risk Taking.” He was named one of ASEE PRISM’s ”20 Faculty Under 40” in 2014, and received a Presidential Early
University of Wyoming (UW, 1997). He served as a graduate assistant and faculty at UW, and South Dakota State University. He served on UNI Energy and Environment Coun- cil, College Diversity Committee, University Diversity Advisory Board, and Graduate College Diversity Task Force Committees. His research interests, grants, and more than 50 publications are in the areas of AC/DC Power System Interactions, distributed energy systems, power quality, and grid-connected re- newable energy applications including solar and wind power systems. He is a senior member of IEEE, member of ASEE, Tau Beta Pi National Engineering Honor Society, and ATMAE. Dr. Pecen was recog- nized as an Honored Teacher/Researcher in ”Who’s Who among
years, 20 at Exxon and 5 in the high tech industry, an unexpected layoff came at a bad time, she was also newly widowed. Job offers that were once plentiful were nowhere to be found. The first, and only, offer to finally appear was to teach physical science at Bayonne High School, for a significant pay cut. A new adventure began. In the 14 years since then, she got to start up a research program, an engineering program, a science club, two FIRST Tech Challenge robotics teams, and brought in several new programs such as Technology Students Association, Young Science Achievers, and ACS Project SEED. She’s been invited back do pharmaceutical engineering research with Research Experience for Teachers at NJIT every summer
that resulted in the 2014 report, STEM Integration in K-12 Education: Status, Prospects, and an Agenda for Research. He was the study director for the project that resulted in publication of Standards for K-12 Engineering Education? (2010) and Engineering in K-12 Education: Understanding the Status and Improving the Prospects (2009), an analysis of efforts to teach engineering to U.S. school children. He oversaw the NSF-funded project that resulted in the 2013 publication of Messaging for Engineering: From Research to Action and the 2008 publication of Changing the Conversation: Messages for Improving Public Understanding of Engineering and was co-editor of the reports Tech Tally: Approaches to Assessing
involved. It did not take too much time awayfrom the REU students’ research activities, yet provided them with an opportunity to reach out toyounger students. It provided the REU students with an opportunity to work on theircommunication skills. By requiring the REU students to share their experiences and enthusiasmfor engineering, it reminded them of the reasons why they chose to pursue engineering or STEMdegrees in the first place. Given the positive outcomes of this experiment, it is our intention toorganize such activities in future REU program offerings.Acknowledgments:The author gratefully acknowledges the support of the National Science Foundation REUprogram NSF award # EEC-1359137 (2014-2017), award # EEC-1004915 (2010-2013) andaward # EEC
2016. This is after a 9.9% tuition increase in 2012-2013. Withcuts to financing programs and other federal grants, the burden of paying for college may detereconomically disadvantaged URMs from going to college or graduating from college. The effects of the budget cuts and tuition increases can be seen in the decrease in enrollmentat HBCUs. Of the eleven HBCUs in NC, only three saw enrollment percentage increases in full-time students, while seven saw double digit decreases from 2010-2013. Smaller colleges anduniversities such as HBCUs and UNCP, which are URM dominated, have smaller endowmentsand depend heavily on tuition dollars and government funding to continue operations.C. Lack of Preparation in K-12 Participating in advanced math
1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 YearFigure 3: Number of results returned per year by searching "digital image correlation" in the ASCE CEDB Table 1: Some published research using DIC or PIV to measure soil deformation Type of image Publication Research topic analysis White et al. (2003)8 Application of PIV to geomechanics 2D-PIV Bhandari et al. (2012)9
Western Michigan. She is currently co-lead of the WMU Aspire Change Alliance and is the WMU lead of the NSF ADVANCE Joining Forces Midwest Partnership grant. She has received numerous awards and honors including the Michigan ACE Network Distinguished Woman in Higher Education Leadership Award; the Geochemical Society Distinguished Service Award; ©American Society for Engineering Education, 2023 Paper ID #36421 the WMU Excellence in Diversity Rising Star Award; the WMU College of Arts and Sciences Faculty Achievement in Teaching Award; the WMU College of Arts and Sciences Dean’s Appreciation Award
senior member of the Institute of Electrical & Electronic Engineers (IEEE), and a member of the Electrical and Computer Engineering Technology Department Heads Association (ECETDHA).Prof. Scott A Kuhl, Michigan Technological University Scott Kuhl is an Associate Professor of Computer Science and an Adjunct Associate Professor of Cog- nitive & Learning Sciences at Michigan Technological University. He received his Ph.D. in Computer Science from the University of Utah in 2009. He has been the faculty advisor for Husky Game Develop- ment Enterprise since Spring 2010. His research interests include immersive virtual environments, head- mounted displays, and spatial perception. A link to his web page can be found
20-23 2010, pp. AC 2010-1802, 15.773.1, doi: DOI:10.18260/1-2--16732. [Online]. Available: https://peer.asee.org/16732[2] A. L. Welker, V. Smith, S. Shrestha, and K. M. Sample-Lord, "Including principles of sustainability in design by implementing the engineering for one planet framework," in ASEE Ann. Conf. Expo., Minneapolis, MN, June 26-29 2022, p. Paper ID #37048. [Online]. Available: https://peer.asee.org/40926. [Online].[3] Engineering For One Planet. "About EOP." https://engineeringforoneplanet.org/ (accessed February, 2023).[4] The Lemelson Foundation, "The Engineering for One Planet Framework: Essential Learning Outcomes for Engineering Education," online, (updated in 2022) 2020
. She completed her post-doctoral work at Columbia University between 2005-2008. She joined University of Missouri-Columbia, Chemical Engineering as an assistant professor in 2008 and has moved to Stevens in 2010. She is the recipient of the 2010 NSF-CAREER award and has received several grants from NSF-DMR, -CMMI and ACS PRF. She currently serves as the coordinator of the Nanotechnology Graduate Program and the PI of the REU/RET Site program (2021-2023) at Stevens. ©American Society for Engineering Education, 2023 A New Mentoring and Undergraduate Research Experience Model between REUs and RETs at the Stevens REU/RET Site Program on Sustainable Energy and BioengineeringAbstractThe Stevens REU/RET
, simulationsand plots are presented in the class. They are encouraged to work out the problems first usingpaper/pencil (“back of envelope” calculations), calculator, and then use simulation tools asneeded to better understand abstract, mathematical and theoretical concepts. R E F E R E N C E S[1]. Engineering Electromagnetics, 9th edition, by Hayt and Buck, McGraw Hill, 2019.[2]. Applied Electromagnetics, Early Transmission Line Approach, by S. M. Wentworth, JohnWiley, 2007.[3]. Elements of Electromagnetics, 5th edition, by Sadiku, 5th edition, Oxford University Press,2010.[4]. Electromagnetics, B. M. Notaros, Prentice Hall, 2011[5]. ASEE Annual Conference Paper, AC 2010-821: Enhancing Electromagnetics InstructionUsing
kids.In 2010, the average graduation rate of American Indian and Alaskan Native students was 67%.This was 26% lower than their white counterparts at 83% and the lowest of any racial/ethnicdemographic group in the US. iii Bureau of Indian Education (BIE) schools have an even lowergraduation rate within the reservations, of 53%, compared to a national average of 80%. iv Forthose that make it into college, the trend continues to be concerning. In 2010, 3.1 millionstudents were enrolled in college. Approximately 1.7 million were non-URM and 1.4 Millionwere URM students (African Americans, Hispanic, American Indian, Alaskan Native, Asian orPacific Islander and other ethnicities). Less than 2%, or 29,201, were Native American. v Ofthose Native
addressing the STEM workforce development has been to increase the representation ofunder-represented communities like African-American and in particular, African-Americanwomen (Landivar, 2013). The Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs), which arechronically underfunded (Palmer et al., 2010), have been largely responsible for addressing theSTEM workforce disparity among Black aspirants (Palmer et al., 2010 and Perna et al., 2009).Although, the burden on HBCUs for addressing workforce disparity is overwhelming, the STEMinitiatives undertaken by them may be the most impactful in addressing this concern (Palmer etal., 2010). The author’s previous institution (TU), one of the most recognized HBCUs in the U.S.(Rankings, 2019), admits a
specialty, one of the best aspects of being part of this project is having other students who come from a variety of fields work together to create something truly interdisciplinary.”• “Ever since I was little, I wanted to make a difference in the environmental sustainable aspects of engineering. I had extra motivation in the project because of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill of 2010, which occurred near Mexico, where my family is from.”• “It is an incredible feeling knowing that people see a lot of value in our research and know that this is something that can help people and the environment. It is really rewarding.”• “We want to keep our water bodies clean. We want to make sure you know people benefit from our research
example, he investigates how deaf individuals acquire information through speech-to-text (captions/subtitles) or sign language in- terpreters, compared with their hearing peers who listen directly. He also develops accessible computing solutions to address these disparities in multimodal information access. For example, he has implemented and verified the benefit of enhanced captions that provide visual cues to non-speech information. In the ac- cessibility/intellectual property law field, he advocates for updates in accessible and intellectual property law, to incorporate accessible computing advances such as automatic captioning/subtitling. He worked in industry for over five years before returning to academia and
approach in a high school setting would develop his/herdesign mindset readily when compared to problems provided in a traditional textbook. Forexample, take the basketball throwing example in Chapter 3 of Coletta (Physics FundamentalsPhysics Curriculum & Instruction; 2nd edition 2010)) and ask how to launch a food packageonto a third floor balcony in a street flooding situation. A displayed trend on a graph of locationversus angle or speed would demonstrate an understanding of the projectile motion knowledge.A subsequent imposition of a constraint on the food delivery boat such as oscillatory water levelwould require an iterated design with some appropriate assumptions. Another example would bethe L-shape arm bio-mechanical model where a
quality evaluation (topics, instructor/staff, field trips, and guest speakers) once at the completion of 36 or 40hrs of STEM learning instead of evaluating every session. 3. Teacher to stay at their satellite sites instead of rotating between middle school satellite camps. Provide additional training for pre-service teachers who will be assisting lead teachers. 4. Develop home-based project activities for family connection component of the project. 5. Integrate an Advanced Career (AC) model developed by the Southern Regional Education Board (SREB). Pilot test the AC curriculum focused on Aerospace Engineering with high school students. In addition, offer high school juniors and seniors
of California Polytechnic State University in San Luis Obispo. He was a former President and is current Industrial Advisor to the Cal Poly Amateur Radio Club (www.W6BHZ.org). He is very involved in community events and regularly provides communica- tions for bike rides and triathlons, helps at local repeater work days, and assists several testing sessions each year. His Masters Thesis is titled: Radio Direction Finding Network Receiver Design for Low-cost Public Service Applications. Marcel was licensed on Cinco de Mayo in 2008 as KI6QDJ. He received his Extra License in the Summer of 2010 and is now holds the callsign: AI6MS. He is an ARRL Life Member and has used his VE credentials to help license over 673 hams
0 4 ab 10 feet 90° -2 - - ⁺ 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 c 1 foot 30° ⁺ 2 ⁺ - ⁺ 10 12 9 14 16 12.2 6 ac 10 feet 30° ⁺ 2 - ⁺ ⁺ 81 80 78 76 73 77.6 7 bc 1 foot 90° ⁺ 2 ⁺ ⁺ ⁺ 140 139 143 140 143 141 8 abc 10 feet 90° ⁺ 2 Table 6: The three factor and two level fractional
650 Math 630 Reading 610 Wri8ng 590 570 550 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 Year Enrolled Figure 1. Average SAT Scores of Enrolled Students in the College of Engineering from 2008 to 2013Key statistics regarding women in