evaluations, and student achievements consistently show the effectiveness of the proposedmethods.References[1] Dalrymple, Odesma, Sears David, Evangelou, Demetra “AC 2010-2027: Evaluating the Motivational and Learning Potential of an Instructional Practice for use with First Year Engineering Students,” copyright American Society for Engineering Education (ASEE), 2010.[2] Luechtefeld, Ray A., Watkins Steve E., “Suboptimization of Motivation Approaches in Engineering Education,” 2009 ASEE Midwest Section, 44TH Annual Meeting.[3] Bishop, R., and Dorf, R., “Teaching Modern Control System Analysis and Design,”, Proceedings of the 2001 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition.[4] Hari
Electrical Engineering from the 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
BiodesignInstitute, and she is Deputy Director of CBB. She received her Ph.D. in Chemistry and B.S. in Clinical Chemistry at Cordoba National University inAr- gentina. Prior to join ASU, she received prestigious fellowships from the Argentinian Research Councilto support her Ph.D. and postdoctoral studies in Argentina. She came to ASU in 2003 as postdoctoral research associate ofthe Department of Electrical Engineering; where later she worked as Assistant Re- search Professor. Dr. Forzani became Assistant Professor in SEMTE in Fall 2010. Erica is also Research Associate of Mayo Clinic. Dr. Forzani’s current research interests are the development of novel hybrid c American Society for Engineering
. Baker-Sennett, P. Lacasa, and D. Goldsmith, “Development through participation in sociocultural activity,” New Dir. Child Adolesc. Dev., vol. 1995, no. 67, pp. 45–65, 1995.[23] J. G. Greeno, “The situativity of knowing, learning, and research.,” Am. Psychol., vol. 53, no. 1, p. 5, 1998.[24] K. R. Koedinger, J. L. Booth, and D. Klahr, “Instructional complexity and the science to constrain it,” Science, vol. 342, no. 6161, pp. 935–937, 2013.[25] R. Heard, “AC 2010-172: INSTRUCTION OF PROFESSIONAL SKILLS TO MATERIAL SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING STUDENTS USING A MULTI-YEAR MODULE APPROACH,” age, vol. 15, p. 1, 2010.[26] L. Vanasupa, B. London, K. C. Chen, and R. Savage, “Curricula to Educate the 2020 MSE Engineering
. entrepreneurial mindset (e.g., Fry,2011; Kriewall and Mekemson, 2010; Condoor and McQuilling, 2009; Bilan et al., 2005).Finally, educators are thrusting experiential exercises into the curriculum, i.e. methods teaching(Cadotte, 2014; Greene and Neck, 2011). From our perspective, this mixed modality approachoffers students a dynamic learning environment and an equally exciting opportunity for facultymembers to conduct research related to student experiences and behaviors.In this dynamic classroom setting, which includes historical context, reflection on one’s mindset,process learning, and methods teaching, we developed a relevant research question, which is thebasis for this paper: Does an entrepreneurial mindset assessment predict a student’s behavior
of engineering mathematical contentinto the introductory electrical engineering course, we will be collecting data for three differentgroups. A student who took one or both of the introductory circuits courses EE2050 (LinearCircuits I, primarily DC) and EE2060 (Linear Circuits II, primarily AC) in the last five academicyears will be included in the study. The student will be placed into a group as follows: Group A: The student was enrolled in EE100 during academic years 2013 to 2015, prior to enrolling in EE2060. Group B: The student was enrolled in EE1000 during academic years 2016 to present, prior to enrolling in EE2060. Group C: The student was not enrolled in either EE100 or EE1000 prior to enrolling
., a slide presentation, avideotaped elevator pitch, a technical status meeting using the whiteboard, an initial designpresentation with prototypes and, a preliminary poster presentation) leading to the final posterand prototype presentation at the ENG 3 Design Showcase.Integrated communication and engineering design topics provided a rich opportunity to explorestudent outcomes across a wider population of students in the college of engineering. Initialresearch findings from fall 2017 focused on changes in students’ self-efficacy in engineeringdesign using a vetted pre- and post- survey instrument “Engineering Design Self Efficacy,”developed by Carberry et al (2010). Other data collection included a survey on students’ priorknowledge and
shows the accredita-tion status for computer science programs at the top 20 US universities as ranked by U.S. News& World Report 5 . A little more than one-half of these programs do not have their Computer Sci-ence program accredited, although most if not all of these institutions have engineering programsaccredited through ABET. Hence, one could conclude that some institutions deliberately elect notto seek ABET accreditation for their computer science programs because they do not feel there issufficient value in it for themselves.Several of the institutions on the list have a sufficiently high-profile that they may feel that ac-creditation provides no additional benefit to them. Potentially, these institutions believe that theyhave
and develop these modules for implementation.References[1] "NAE report".[2] C. Wang, "Teaching Entrepreneurial Mindset in a First-Year Introduction to Engineer- ing Course".[3] T. J. Kriewall and K. Mekemson, "INSTILLING THE ENTREPRENEURIAL MINDSET INTO ENGINEERING," vol. 1, no. 1, pp. 5-19, 2010.[4] C. J. Creed, E. M. Suuberg and G. P. Crawford, Engineering entrepreneurship: An example of a paradigm shift in engineering education, 2002.[5] K. F. Doug Melton, "KEEN Student Outcomes," [Online]. Available: http://www.kffdn.org/files/keen-student-outcomes.pdf.[6] "Creativity as a Factor in Persistence and Academic Achievement of Engineering Undergraduates - Atwood - 2016 - Journal of Engineering Education - Wiley Online Library
implementation of the LST program, set-up a state- of-the-art instrumentation laboratory, architected the new degree program, and helped to place a large number of Deaf/HH individuals into careers in the chemical sciences. For his advocacy for diversifying STEM fields, Dr. Pagano has been honored as a recipient of the American Chemical Society’s (ACS) Stanley C. Israel Award, the ACS/Dreyfus Foundation’s National Award: Encouraging Underrepresented Students into the Chemical Sciences, and U.S. Professor of the Year Award by Council for Advancement and Support of Education (CASE) and the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2018
] and TheAmerican Council on Education (ACE) [13] prior to conversion to a numerical value. Factors inthe ANOVA included grades in math courses (Calculus I, Calculus II, Calculus III, andDifferential Equations), General Biology, two courses in English composition, and twosophomore-level biomedical engineering courses (Foundations of Biomedical Engineering andBiomedical Systems) as well as grade point average (GPA) entering the junior year and gender.Results of the ANOVA demonstrated that the factors related to the final grade in engineeringphysiology were grades in all four math courses, Foundations of Biomedical Engineering, andGeneral Biology, with p values no greater than 0.008 for any of these factors.Identification of these factors allowed
, Nios II Gen 2 Processor Reference Guide, Intel Corp., 2016.[4]. Arduino, “Arduino UNO R3 Board,” https://store.arduino.cc/usa/arduino-uno-rev3[5]. ARM, AMBA AXI and ACE Protocol Specification, ARM Holdings, 2011.[6]. C. J. Atman, et al., Enabling Engineering Student Success: The Final Report for the Center for the Advancement of Engineering Education, 2010.[7]. P. Chu, “Integrating Computer Engineering Labs with a Sound Theme,” Proceedings of ASEE Annual Conference, 2016.[8]. P. Chu, “Integrating Computer Engineering Labs with a Video Theme,” Proceedings of ASEE Annual Conference, 2017.[9]. P. Chu, Chansu Yu, and Karla Mansour, “Integrating Computer Engineering Lab Using Spiral Model,” Proceedings of ASEE Annual Conference, 2017
characters that they meet and taking notes in their online journal. Finally, they report what they have learned to the mayor and, via a video, see that their research has resulted in AC electricity lighting up the 1893 Chicago World's Fair. • Houston in 1970 during the Apollo 13 mission: Through video and digital graphic novels, users learn about the oxygen tank explosion and the resulting challenge of fitting command module air filters into the lunar module. They are tasked with helping the NASA engineers at the mission control center, where the engineers have many questions for the user about how to proceed. Should they work separately or together? Whose ideas should they use? Based on the
",Proceedings of 2006 International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition (IMECE'06), , Nov.5-10,Chicago, IL., 2006[10].Nagchaudhuri, A., Mitra, M., and Zhang, Lei, “AIRSPACES: Air-propelled Instrumented Robotic SensoryPlatform(s) for Assateague Coastline Environmental Studies- A Multidisciplinary Experiential Learning andResearch Project at Minority Serving Land Grant Institution”, Proceedings of 2013 IEEE Frontiers in EducationConference, pp. 1623-1625, October 23-26, 2013, Oklahoma City, OK.[11]Nagchaudhuri, A., Teays, T., Chen, G., Bowden, M., Henry, R.C., Paper # AC 2010-1761: “Broadening StudentResearch Experiences through Summer Exchange Program Across Campuses”, Proceedings 2010 AnnualConference of American Society for Engineering
receive citations for which the employer is expected to pay a fine andresolve the violated issue [2]. There are approximately 2,100 Compliance Officers; eachCompliance Officer conducts inspections for 59,000 workers. Moreover, there are more than 8million worksites around the nation, employing a total of 130 million workers. Therefore, thetask of ensuring compliance across all worksites is the responsibility of all stake holders in theconstruction process [4]. From 1992 to 2010, the Center for Construction Research and Training calculated thedeaths associated with falls to total 6,858, which equates to around 360 deaths annually. Thehighest being near 450 deaths in 2007 and the lowest being 267 deaths in 2010 [5]. In this sameyear, “the
, for instance, how light is absorbed in photo-voltaic materials.Prof. Andrew Ferguson, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Andrew Ferguson is Associate Professor of Materials Science and Engineering, and Chemical and Biomolec- ular Engineering, and an Affiliated Associate Professor of Physics, and Computational Science and Engi- neering at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He received an M.Eng. in Chemical Engineer- ing from Imperial College London in 2005, and a Ph.D. in Chemical and Biological Engineering from Princeton University in 2010. From 2010 to 2012 he was a Postdoctoral Fellow of the Ragon Institute of MGH, MIT, and Harvard in the Department of Chemical Engineering at MIT. He commenced
Society. He has presented at the Southeastern Arizona Teachers Academy, the ASTA Annual Conference, NSTA, ACS, and the Biennial Conference on Chemical Education (BCCE). He is a member of ASTA, NSTA, AAPT, ACS, and 2YC3. He is the current membership secretary of ASTA, a position which he has held since 2010. He has been a volunteer with the Boy Scouts of America for the past 20 years. For the past 11 years, he has served as Dean of Instruction, while continuing to teach at least one course each semester.Ms. Cynthia Kay Pickering, Science Foundation Arizona Cynthia Pickering is a retired electrical engineer with 35 years industry experience and technical lead- ership in software development, artificial intelligence
robotics, automation, and nanotechnology engineering education and research. He is a licensed PE in the State of Colorado, a member of ASEE, a senior member of IEEE, and a senior member of SME.Dr. Bahaa I. Kazem Ansaf, Colorado State University, Pueblo B. Ansaf received the B.S. degree in mechanical engineering /Aerospace and M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in mechanical engineering from the University of Baghdad in 1992, 1996 and 1999 respectively. From 2001 to 2014, he has been an Assistant Professor and then Professor with the Mechatronics Engineering Department, Baghdad University. During 2008 he has been a Visiting Associate professor at Mechanical Engineering Department, MIT. During 2010 he has been a Visiting Associate
-Smith, T., et al., AC 2010-2410: A MULTI-INSTITUTIONAL STUDY OF CONNECTION, COMMUNITY AND ENGAGEMENT IN STEM EDUCATION: CONCEPTUAL MODEL DEVELOPMENT. age, 2010. 15: p. 1.15. Wilson, D., et al., The link between cocurricular activities and academic engagement in engineering education. Journal of Engineering Education, 2014. 103(4): p. 625-651.16. Wilson, N., Impact of extracurricular activities on students. University of Wisconsin-Stout, 2009.17. Baxter-Magolda, M., Making their own way: Narratives for transforming higher education to promote self-development. 2004: Stylus Publishing, LLC.18. Candy, P.C., Self-Direction for Lifelong Learning. A Comprehensive Guide to Theory and Practice. 1991: ERIC.
, and a Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering from the 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
. Donald Goldthwaite and the Firstyear Engineering Learning and Innovation Center and Lab Assistants for their support during thisproject and making the prototype in the lab.References1. The Science of Teaching Science, M. Mitchell Waldrop, Nature, Vol 523, 272-274 (2015)2. Physical and Virtual Laboratories in Science and Engineering Education, Ton de Jong, Marcia C. Linn, and Zacharias C. Zacharia, Science, Vol. 340, Issue 6130, 20133. Impact of a Design Project on Engineering Physics: Does motor design project motivate students? Bala Maheswaran, ASEE Conference Proceeding, AC 2013.4. Developing Interactive Teaching Strategies for Electrical Engineering Faculty, Margret Hjalmarson, Jill K Nelson, Lisa G. Huettel, Wayne T. Padgett
, is an assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering at the University of Pittsburgh’s Swanson School of Engineering. Robert was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. He got his B.S. (2010), his M.S (2012). and his PhD (2014) from the University of Pittsburgh, all with a concen- tration in electric power systems. Robert’s academic focus is in education as it applies to engineering at the collegiate level. His areas of interest are in electric power systems, in particular, electric machinery and electromagnetics. Robert has worked as a mathematical modeler for Emerson Process Management, working on electric power applications for Emerson’s Ovation Embedded Simulator. Robert also served in the United States
MANUFACTURING TECHNOLOGY.Prof. Branislav M. Notaros, Colorado State University Branislav M. Notaros is Professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Colorado State University, where he also is Director of Electromagnetics Laboratory. He received a Ph.D. in elec- trical engineering from the University of Belgrade, Yugoslavia, in 1995. His research publications in computational and applied electromagnetics include more than 150 journal and conference papers. He is the author of textbooks Electromagnetics (2010) and MATLAB-Based Electromagnetics (2013), both with Pearson Prentice Hall. Prof. Notaros served as General Chair of FEM2012, Colorado, USA, and as Guest Editor of the Special Issue on Finite
Computer Science and Computer Engineering at California State University, Fullerton. Dr. Barua is a leader in engineering educational reform and is an experienced developer of innovative edu- cation programs for facilitating graduation rate and narrowing the achievement gap. She is a Co-PI on the NSF awards, ”ECS Academic Catalyst for Excellence (ACE) Scholarship Program,” the ”CSUF AD- VANCE IT-Catalyst Project” and the ”INCLUDES: STEMˆ3: Scaling STEMˆ2”. She serves as a PI on the Department of Labor grant ”Orange County Bridge to Engineering”. Dr. Barua is a recipient of Out- standing Teacher/Scholar awards several times and has been actively involved in mentoring female and underrepresented students in computing for
, 2000, pp. 451–502.[7] R. Azevedo and J. G. Cromley, “Does training on self-regulated learning facilitate students’ learning with hypermedia?,” J. Educ. Psychol., vol. 96, no. 3, p. 523, 2004.[8] D. Kostons, T. van Gog, and F. Paas, “Self-assessment and task selection in learner- controlled instruction: Differences between effective and ineffective learners,” Comput. Educ., vol. 54, no. 4, pp. 932–940, 2010.[9] P. R. Pintrich and B. J. Zimmerman, “A conceptual framework for assessing motivation and self-regulated learning in college students,” Educ. Psychol. Rev., vol. 16, no. 4, pp. 385–407, 2004.[10] B. Galand, B. Raucent, and M. Frenay, “Engineering students’ self-regulation, study strategies
Programming” (3 credits) ‒ novice-level programming in visual basic; 3. MET 234 “Mechanical Technology Laboratory I” (3 credits) ‒ instrumentation; 4. EET 330 “Electrical Applications” (4 credits) ‒ alternating current and direct current (AC/DC) circuits, amplifiers, and transducers. Noticeably missing from the curriculum are courses in microcontrollers, programmable logic controllers, or industrial automation.Project selection was driven by the two instructors and the students. The instructors solicitedproject concepts from industry, university labs, the general public, and the studentsapproximately 4 to 6 weeks before the beginning of the fall semester. During the first week ofthe fall semester, students rank ordered their top three project
engineering course forfreshman students majoring in the AAS degree program in Electromechanical EngineeringTechnology (EMT) offered by the Computer Engineering Technology (CET) department at NewYork City College of Technology. This course includes both lecture and laboratory components.The lecture portion of the course introduces the physical basis and mathematical models ofelectrical components and circuits. Topics include Ohm’s Law, Watt’s Law, resistance, series,parallel, and series-parallel circuits, network theorems, Thevenin equivalent circuits, capacitiveand inductive circuits, and sinusoidal ac inputs. The lab portion of the course is performed on abreadboard using the digital multi-meter, oscilloscope and function generator. According to
Rowan University for six years and currently is an advisory board member of the New Jersey Chapter of the American Council on Education (ACE) Office of Women in Higher Education (OWHE). She received a Fulbright award in 2015. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2018 Engineers on Wheels: A Mobile Engineering Outreach Program Rowan University Henry M. Rowan College of Engineering Glassboro, New Jersey March 15, 2018 Dr. Kauser Jahan
Technology, vol. 7, pp. 415‐434, 2010. [9] W. Xu, H. Yang, W. Zeng, T. Houghton, X. Wang, R. Murthy, et al., "Food‐Based Edible and Nutritive Electronics," Advanced Materials Technologies, p. 1700181, 2017. [10] A. Salimi and A. Yousefi, "Conformational changes and phase transformation mechanisms in PVDF solution‐cast films," Journal of Polymer Science Part B: Polymer Physics, vol. 42, pp. 3487‐3495, 2004. [11] H. Kim, M. A. I. Shuvo, H. Karim, J. C. Noveron, T.‐l. Tseng, and Y. Lin, "Synthesis and characterization of CeO2 nanoparticles on porous carbon for Li‐ion battery," MRS Advances, pp. 1‐9, 2017. [12] H. Kim, M. A. I. Shuvo, H. Karim, M. I. Nandasiri, A. M. Schwarz
allowed them to understandand use an internet Broker for Publishing and Subscribing. They were able to accomplisha number of embedded sensor and actuator experiments by modifying/creating programsfor the Texas Instrument’s CC3200 Launchpad coupled with BoostXL SensorPack.These capabilities were then integrated into a complete system using the Cayenne web-based Dashboard for display and decision making/control of their IoT systems. The workfocused on the IoT kits that each teacher constructed during the workshop. As shown inthe figure, the IoT Kit consisted of the following items: Battery pack Motion Sensor Relay/AC Outlet LaunchPad/BoostXL SensorPack 3D Printed Enclosure H-Bridge Driver DC Motor