Page 24.1086.2offered with IWBs. Thus, the connection between the dealer and a new customer often isfractured in a few months. The same situation is observed in the USA as well, since Americanparticipants mentioned identical situations. Also, from a Russian cultural perspective, aninnovation is a desire, a free creative (similar to art) working mindset. Thus, for many Russiantop-business environments there is a recent almost trendy refusal of “bothersome” SMARTtechnologies. Management prefers to employ large “writing walls” where meeting participantscan express their thoughts freely without thinking of computer-related or challengingtechnologies and instead, rely on human interaction above and beyond the physical touch ornewfangled digital
he is a recipient of the SME Education Award. He has authored four textbooks. Applied Fluid Mechanics 7th ed, Applied Strength of Materials 5th ed, Statics and Strength of Materials, 1st ed, and Machine Elements in Mechanical Design 5rd ed, all published by Pearson/Prentice-Hall.Dr. Ronald J. Bennett, University of St. Thomas Dr. Ronald J. Bennett is Founding Dean and Professor Emeritus of the School of Engineering at the University of St. Thomas. Prior to entering academia, Bennett held leadership positions for three decades in the appliance, electronics, medical device and knowledge engineering industries, as well as in several entrepreneurial organizations. His responsibilities ranged from R&D, engineering
developing change-focused mindsets for creativityand innovation in our MOOC students: Creative Diversity to recognize that everyone is creative indifferent ways, CENTER to guide the process of turning passion and initiative into possibilities,and Intelligent Fast Failure to actuate change through frequent experimentation. Figure 1. One CIC MOOC student’s visual summary of the three course themes Page 24.75.7 6Briefly, Intelligent Fast Failure (IFF) focuses on the “rapid prototyping” of ideas, products, andprocesses, so that “rapid and smart
combine robotics engineering knowledge with entrepreneurship andintrapreneurship opportunities, and to bring an entrepreneurial mindset to the to the field ofrobotics engineering;ABET accreditation: ABET accreditation is a requirement of all engineering bachelor degrees atLawrence Tech. As stated previously, there is no degree accreditation for the RoboticsEngineering discipline, at this time. Accreditation of the program will be done by theEngineering Accreditation Commission (EAC) of ABET under the General-Basic Level Criteria.A detailed assessment plan has been developed for the BS in Robotics Engineering and is kept asan internal document within the mechanical engineering department. The first students enteredthe program in the fall of 2011