AC 2011-517: PROJECT-BASED RESIDENCY COURSE FOR ONLINEGRADUATE PROGRAMBimal P. Nepal, Texas A&M UniversityDr. F. Barry Lawrence, Texas A&M University Dr. Barry Lawrence holds the Leonard and Valerie Bruce Leadership Chair, the Program Director of the Industrial Distribution Program, Director of the Thomas and Joan Read Center, and Director of the Global Supply Chain Laboratory at Texas A&M University. As a faculty member of the Industrial Distribution Program he is involved in graduate, undergraduate, and professional continuing education teaching activities, funded research projects, publications and in- dustry presentations. His teaching activities surround classes in manufacturer/distributor
AC 2011-1186: THE VIRGINIA DEMONSTRATION PROJECT–A SUM-MATIVE ASSESSMENTJacob D. Joseph, The College of William and Mary Jacob Joseph has over ten years of experience in the engineering industry, and has taught secondary chemistry and physics. Mr. Joseph is the Virginia area coordinator for the STEM Education Alliance. In addition, he is currently the lead evaluator on a Department of Defense grant and is lead on the evaluation team designing the new survey instrument, the STEM Attitudes and Awareness Scale.Jessica Taylor, STEM Education Alliance, College of William and Mary JESSICA TAYLOR- Jessica Taylor is a Program Coordinator for the STEM Education Alliance. She serves as a professional development coordinator
Society for Engineering Education, 2011 Educational Outcomes Embedded Within Energy Conservation ProjectsAbstractDuring the summer of 2008, the NIU College of Engineering and Engineering Technologyreceived funding from the United States Department of Energy to study modes of energyconservation in the railroad industry. Specifically, the projects looked at reducing the usage ofdiesel fuel in the operation of today’s modern locomotives. The project lasted one and a halfyears, and five project tasks examined unique aspects energy conservation in the commonlocomotive. The team studied the usage of alternate fuels as a suitable alternative to usingstraight diesel fuel, where cost, availability, emissions, and material wear are key
AC 2011-1279: COMMUNITY-BASED RESEARCH PROJECT IN WIRE-LESS COMMUNICATIONMohammad N Amin, National University Mohammad Amin received his Ph.D. and MS degrees in Electrical Engineering and MS degree in Solid State Physics from Marquette University, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and M.Sc. and B.Sc. Honors degrees in Physics from the University of Dhaka, Bangladesh. He is currently working as a Professor at National University, San Diego, California. He has published and presented 60+ papers in the areas of electri- cal engineering applications, computer applications and biotechnology. He has 20+ years experience in teaching engineering, science, and math. He received an R&D award in 1996 from the R&D Magazine 100
. This paperdiscusses an open-ended design project in which students bridge the gap by designing a devicethat converts heat produced by a candle into the work of raising a quarter vertically. The act ofdesigning and testing the device allows students the opportunity to analyze the conversionprocess using material learned in class and provides a valuable hands-on experience dealing withthe physical phenomena involved (i.e. friction, heat loss, sudden expansion, etc). The project hasbeen administered at multiple universities with students participating in small teams andfeedback gathered through post-project surveys. Several iterations of the project have beenadministered with variations in the analysis required, in-class time dedicated to the
AC 2011-93: DESIGN PROJECTS WITH OUT-OF TOWN COMPANIESLizabeth T Schlemer, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Lizabeth Schlemer has been teaching at Cal Poly, SLO for 18 years. She is a graduate of Cal Poly herself, and she holds a Masters in Industrial and Systems Engineering and an MBA from University of Southern California, and a PhD in Educational Research from University of California, Santa Barbara. She has 10 years of work experience at Unocal Corporation where she held positions of increasing responsibility. Most of her current research activities center around engineering education and enhancing engagement through valid contexts like project based learning and community service. She
AC 2011-1190: DESIGNING STEM KIOSKS: A STUDENT PROJECT THATTEACHESBekir Kelceoglu, Indiana University Purdue University, Indianapolis Assistant Prof. Bekir Kelceoglu was born in Ankara, Turkey and attended Anadolu University, where he received his B.A. in Interior Architecture degree. Even before his graduation, he started to work as a free-lance tutor, product designer, and interior designer. In year 2006, he received his Master of Fine Arts degree from the Ohio State University, concentrating on Design Development in industrial design. Prior to joining School of Engineering and Technology in IUPUI, where he currently teaches Architectural Technology and Interior Design classes, he successfully established Interior
, Darmstadt. There he started his work in the fuell cell and hydrogen technics area beside power electronics.Michael J. Dyrenfurth, Purdue University, College of Technology, West Lafayette Michael Dyrenfurth is professor in the Department of Industrial Technology at Purdue University. He is co-PI of the DETECT and Atlantis Concurrent MS degree projects. Active in international aspects of the profession, he teaches and researches in the areas of technological innovation, technological literacy, and international dimensions of technological education.James L. Barnes, James Madison University Dr. Barnes is a professor of Integrated Science and Technology at James Madison University. He has worked in the science and technology
AC 2011-1446: A PROJECT BASED HANDS-ON DIGITAL LOGIC COURSENuri Yilmazer, Texas A&M University-Kingsville Nuri Yilmazer received the B.S. degree in electrical and electronics engineering from Cukurova Uni- versity, Adana, Turkey in 1996, and the M.S. and PhD degrees in electrical and computer engineering from University of Florida and Syracuse University in 2000 and 2006 respectively. He worked as a Post Doctoral Research Associate in Computational Electromagnetics Laboratory at Syracuse University from 2006 to 2007. He is currently working as an Assistant Professor in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science department at Texas A&M University-Kingsville, Kingsville, TX. His current research interests
project that has as its primaryaim to address algorithmic thinking.The paper is organized in the following way. Background is presented on how the projectfits into the overall introduction to computing course. Next is a detailed outline of theproject assignments. A related detour is then taken to discuss a class-wide groupprogramming exercise called The Triangle Game. Assessment from student and theinstructor are presented as well as ABET assessment associated with the project. Lastly,recommendations are made for improvements and alternative implementations of theproject.BackgroundThe semester-long project was incorporated into a half-credit (two formal lectures andone recitation per week), required junior-level biomedical engineering course
major with biomedical and applied mathematics minors. She is involved with American Society of Mechanical Engineers and Society of Women Engineers. She is also a member of the varsity swim team and a lifeguard on campus. She was the female freshman recipient of the 2010 DeBow Freed Award for Outstanding Leadership at ONU for excellence in academics, athletics, and leadership in various organizations and projects. Her career goals include obtaining a job in research and development or project management in the field of biomedical engineering to help bridge the gap between scientific discovery and public availability
Laptop Recycling Project: A Service-Learning Experience Patricia S. Buford Electrical Engineering Department – Arkansas Tech UniversityAbstractThis paper describes an interdisciplinary humanitarian project initiated by the ElectricalEngineering Department at Arkansas Tech University. The project goal was to provide solarpowered computers to disadvantaged students in areas where resources were not available forthem to otherwise have computer access. It also incorporates environmental aspects of recyclingold laptop computers and powering them with solar energy. This project occurred during the2008-2009 school year upon receipt
from reaching out for quickequations to plug and chug in” (p. 22). Similarly, Johnson (1999) reported that students in aPBL version of a hydraulic engineering course sought “homework problems to improvetheir understanding of fundamental calculations and help them prepare for exams” (p. 10),despite also expressing concerns that the workload of the PBL course was alreadyburdensome. The students in Johnson’s study also complained that the projects were “toovague and needed additional clarification” (p. 11), suggesting a discomfort with ill-structured problems.Although PBL normally prescribes learning content in the context of new problems, manyproblems also require the application of prior knowledge. Mitchell and Smith (2008) notedthat
currently oversees two multidisciplinary service-learning programs: the Access by Design project that has capstone students design devices for people with dis- abilities to participate in adapted physical activity and Organic Twittering that merges social media with sustainability.Dr. James M Widmann, California Polytechnic State University Jim Widmann is a Professor of Mechanical Engineering at California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo. He received his Ph.D. in 1994 from Stanford University. Currently he teaches mechanics and design courses. He conducts research in the areas of design optimization, machine design, fluid power control and engineering education.Dr. Brian P. Self, California
AC 2011-511: USING A PROJECT-BASED LEARNING APPROACH TOTEACH MECHANICAL DESIGN TO FIRST-YEAR ENGINEERING STU-DENTSEric Constans, Rowan University Eric Constans is the chair of the Mechanical Engineering program at Rowan University. His research interests include engineering education, acoustics and design optimization.Dr. Jennifer Kadlowec, Rowan University Page 22.1603.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2011 Using a Project-Based Learning Approach to Teach Mechanical Design to First-Year Engineering StudentsAbstractThe Rowan University Mechanical Engineering
reinventing the world every day. So conventions arethe source of great comfort, even if this is at the expense of thought.” [1] This has neverbeen more evident than when observing university students. They are so used to routineand feeling that if they complete a checklist and receive a good grade that they havelearned. Perhaps they have learned the material but they haven’t learned how to think.From observation, students treat classes as something on a to-do list with the rewardbeing a degree when they have checked off all items on the list. Within the scope of aclass, students find great comfort in their to-do list of 10-12 weekly homeworks, 3 tests,maybe a project and then a final exam. All items are treated as part of a to-do list. Whenhomeworks
has performed extensive research and pub- lished numerous technical papers. He has secured over one million dollars in the form of both internal and external grants and research funding. This funding has come from several organizations, including the Tennessee Department of Transportation and the National Science Foundation. Dr. Foroudastan is the faculty advisor, coordinator, and primary fundraiser for EVP teams entering national research project competitions such as the Formula SAE Collegiate Competition, the Baja SAE Race, the SolarBike Rayce, the Great Moonbuggy Race, and the Solar Boat Collegiate Competition. For his concern for and dedication to his students, Dr. Foroudastan received MTSU awards such as
AC 2011-957: NOVEL AERONAUTICAL ENGINEERING STUDENT PROJECT:DEVELOPING ULTRA-LIGHT-WEIGHT AERIAL VEHICLE DESIGN ANDPROOF OF CONCEPTHoracio Andrs Trucco Mr. Trucco was a Vice President and Principal Scientist at GASL, Inc., where he has been a full-time staff member since 1968 until 1994. He headed both the design and fabrication departments. His activities have involved projects related to analytical and experimental research in advanced propulsion systems and components, low and high speed combustion, air pollution and energy conservation. Mr. Trucco was responsible for design and fabrication of wind tunnel components such as air heaters, water-cooled nozzles, vacuum-producing air ejectors and scramjet engine
Leadership Development and Learning Technologies. She is currently the Chair, MSN Advance Practice Role Program, Coordinator of Informatics Projects and Associate Clin- ical Professor at Drexel University College of Nursing and Health Profession teaching in both under- graduate and graduate programs. She is a board certified nurse informaticist and an NLN certified nurse educator. Her area of research involves student learning, development of clinical decision making skills, faculty development in integration and application of instructional technology for classroom innovations and simulation learning experiences, virtual learning environments for DL, and information seeking be- haviors among students and professionals in
to the real chromatography system; 5. use the real BioLogic LP Chromatography System to purify proteins.At Montgomery County Community College, the Virtual Liquid Chromatography Laboratorywas used to teach student interns working on an industry- college collaboration project thatinvolved testing chromatography resins for their potential application in the biomanufacturingindustry. Prior to performing experiments students used the virtual learning module in all threemodes. First, they became familiar with the system components running the simulation in theequipment mode. The process mode was extremely helpful in teaching the students the correctorder of events for successfully performing the experiment and gave them confidence in theirability
AC 2011-489: MODELING AND SIMULATION OF ELECTRIC MACHIN-ERY FOR A SENIOR DESIGN PROJECT IN ELECTRICAL ENGINEER-ING PROGRAMZiqian Liu, SUNY Maritime College Ziqian Liu received the Ph.D. degree from the Southern Illinois University Carbondale in 2005. He is currently an Assistant Professor with the Engineering Department, SUNY Maritime College. From 2005 to 2008, he worked in Ingersoll-Rand Co. Ltd, USA. From 1989 to 1999, he was with the Department of Electrical Engineering, Hefei University of Technology, China. His research interests include nonlin- ear optimal control, intelligent control, motor control systems, DSP or microprocessor-based embedded systems, power electronics and drives, and computational modeling
the IEEE and is the father of seven children and eleven grandchildren. Page 22.1262.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2011 Robotic Laser Tag: A Capstone Design ExperienceAbstractThis paper describes a senior design project in which teams of electrical and computerengineering students design and implement hardware and software modules that allow an off-the-shelf RC vehicle to operate autonomously using only on-board sensors and computationalresources, including a custom FPGA board. The technical details of the project in its currentform are highlighted, including the
AC 2011-43: TO WELDOR NOT TO WELD - EVALUATION OF AN UN-DERGRADUATE ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY WELDING AND FAB-RICATION COURSESteven Fleishman, Western Washington University Steven Fleishman is currently an Assistant Professor at Western Washington University in the Engineering Technology Department, and Vehicle Research Institute. He has more than twenty years of experience in automotive drivetrain R&D, and is currently engaged in a hybrid bus research project with his undergrad- uate student team and industrial partners. Page 22.1530.1 c American Society for Engineering Education
Defined Radio in Multidisciplinary Senior Design ProjectsAbstractIn this past year’s senior design program at California State University, Northridge (CSUN),faculty assigned two six-person teams with year-long design projects utilizing software definedradio (SDR). The course structure emulated a real world design project. Faculty acted ascustomers and management, presenting students with a list of requirements and constraints.Students were required to present weekly status updates on their designs, write specifications,documentation and test procedures. Students gained invaluable and in-demand expertise in thisemerging technology, while fulfilling the criteria required by the Accreditation Board forEngineering and
Page 22.1087.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2011 Multi-Disciplinary Capstone Design Project: An Unmanned Aircraft System (UAS) for Vehicle TrackingAbstractOver the past several years we have used a variety of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs)applications as multidisciplinary capstone design projects. In this paper, we present one of thoseprojects in which the goal of the UAS is to search, detect, and identify an approaching vehicle,then relay the identity of the vehicle to a ground station in an environment with radio frequency(RF) interferences. The project team had seven students from four different majors: SystemEngineering Management, System Engineering, Computer
AC 2011-1060: ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING STUDENT SENIOR CAP-STONE PROJECT: A MOSIS FAST FOURIER TRANSFORM PROCES-SOR CHIP-SETPeter M Osterberg, University of Portland Dr. Peter Osterberg is an associate professor in Electrical Engineering at the University of Portland (Portland, OR). He received his BSEE and MSEE degrees from MIT in 1980. He received his Ph.D. degree in electrical engineering from MIT in 1995 in the field of MEMS. He worked in industry at Texas Instruments, GTE, and Digital Equipment Corporation in the field of microelectronics. His research interests are microelectronics, MEMS, and nanoelectronics.Aziz Sukru Inan, University of Portland Dr. Inan is a professor in the Department of Electrical
has been identified in much of the relatedliterature is that engineers need a broader skill set than is currently contained in the coreengineering curricula. Key skill deficiencies that have been identified include creative thinking,entrepreneurship, and the ability to work effectively in multidisciplinary groups.For the past 3 years, a project at Youngstown State University dubbed the CooperativeLaboratory (CoLab) has brought together students from STEM and the Fine and Performing Artsto work on challenging design problems. Through the CoLab project, engineeringtechnology students have been able to work on real-world, open ended projects with bothtechnical and non-technical constraints. Thus far, initial development of the program has
technology centers. 2. ENGT 3190 3D Laser Scanning and Reverse Engineering (3). Prerequisite: ENGT 3130 (1st AM course) The course will introduce reverse engineering, operating principles of 3D scanning, and applications of 3D laser scanners. Students will apply knowledge of 3D scanners for reverse engineering and direct digital fabrication purposes. 3. ENGT 4130 Additive Manufacturing Applications (3). Prerequisite: ENGT 3190 (2nd AM course) This is a project based course. Each team will design a product that is difficult or impossible to fabricate using SM technology, and then utilize the AM technologies available in the lab to fabricate the product. Students will search current AM R & D and application information
project management, new productdevelopment, and interdisciplinary student teams. Our purpose was to produce engineering andtechnology graduates who are open to the injection of new ideas, comfortable in an environmentthat will nurture new product ideas from diverse disciplines and can mature promising ideas intoactual business propositions.Regional contextThe western North Carolina region is made up of the 23 western-most counties of North Carolina(shown in red in figure 1). This region is larger than eight U.S. states and is approximately thesize of Maryland. The demographics of the region are largely rural with a rural population ofalmost 60% as compared to the entire state ratio of 39.8%. North Carolina ranks the highest inrural population
8IET 45100 or Production Cost Analysis or 3 TECH 49700 Senior Design Project 2IT 45000 Monetary AnalysisOLS 45000 Project Management 3 Technical Selective * 3 Technical Selective * 3 Technical Selective * 3COM 30300 or Intercultural Communication or 3 Selective Global, Cultural, or Diversity 3COM 31400 Adv Presentational Speaking Free Elective 3 Free Elective 3TECH 49600 Senior Design Project Proposal 1*Technical Selectives are intended for ConcentrationTable 1: Engineering Technology Plan of StudyThe ET plan of study fulfills the