Paper ID #13131Providing Students with Hands-on Experiences through the Construction ofa Treatment WetlandDr. Jennifer Mueller Price PE P.E., Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology Page 26.1283.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2015Providing Students with Hands-on Experiences through the Construction of a Treatment WetlandAbstractBecause of their natural water treatment capabilities, wetlands have been constructed for onsitetreatment of stormwater and wastewater. As municipalities work to reduce
interests are: • The Russian system of tech- nical regulation in the formation of the Common economic space of the Customs Union and the WTO, • Problems of training specialists in quality for enterprises of petrochemical complex of the Republic of Tatarstan.Dr. Vasiliy Grigoryevich Ivanov, KAZAN NATIONAL RESEARCH TECHNOLOGICAL UNIVERSITY Vasily Ivanov graduated from Kazan State Chemical and Technological Institute (today Kazan National Research Technological University, KNRTU) in 1976. He continued his research and obtained a PhD in Engineering in 1986. At the same time, he held the administrative positions in the regional system of ed- ucation management. He received the position of the First Vice-Rector of KNRTU for
Paper ID #11628Assessment of an Improved Problem-Based Learning Implementation in aSenior/Graduate Mechatronic Design CourseDr. James A. Mynderse, Lawrence Technological University James A. Mynderse, PhD is an Assistant Professor in the A. Leon Linton Department of Mechanical Engineering at Lawrence Technological University. His research interests include mechatronics, dynamic systems, and control with applications to piezoelectric actuators, hysteresis, and perception. He serves as the faculty advisor for the LTU Baja SAE team.Jeff Shelton, Purdue University, West Lafayette Dr. Shelton studies human motor control in the
Paper ID #26383Assessing Student Responses to the Potential Conflict between Safety andWelfare in the American Society of Civil Engineers Code of EthicsDr. Matthew Sleep P.E., Oregon Institute of Technology Matthew Sleep is an associate professor of civil engineering at Oregon Institute of Technology. Prior to Oregon Tech, Matthew received his PhD at Virginia Tech researching slope stability, levees, transient seepage and reliability. Matthew is from Nashville, TN and has worked for the United States Army Corps of Engineers and private consulting. He currently teaches and continues research on reliability and transient
Paper ID #21300Work in Progress: Integrating Process Safety and Ethics in Classroom Dis-cussion through SurveysDr. Reginald E Rogers Jr, Rochester Institute of Technology (COE) Reginald Rogers is an Associate Professor in the Department of Chemical Engineering at Rochester In- stitute of Technology. His research focuses on the use of carbon nanomaterials for water treatment and sodium-ion battery applications. Dr. Rogers has been recognized for his teaching, research, and service efforts through numerous invited seminars and awards. Notable awards include the 2015 Partner of the Year Award from RIT’s Multicultural Center for
Paper ID #30843Introducing High School Students to Engineering Disciplines: Activitiesand AssessmentDr. Nicolas Ali Libre, Missouri University of Science and Technology Nicolas Ali Libre, PhD, is an assistant teaching professor of Civil Engineering at Missouri University of Science and Technology. He received his BS (2001), MS (2003) and PhD (2009) in civil engineer- ing with emphasis in structural engineering, from University of Tehran, Iran. His research interests and experiences are in the field of computational mechanics, cement-based composite materials as well as in- novative teaching techniques. Dr. Libre is the
Paper ID #28998Student Collaboration as a strategy to achieve learning outcomes inBiomaterials CoursesDr. Emily Dosmar, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology B.S. Biomedical Engineering, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology Ph.D. Biomedical Engineering, Illi- nois Institute of Technology Assistant Professor of Biomedical Engineering, Rose-Hulman Institute of TechnologyDr. Patrick Ferro P.E., Gonzaga University Patrick Ferro, PhD, PE is a Professor of Mechanical Engineering at Gonzaga University. Pat received his PhD in Metallurgical and Materials Engineering from the Colorado School of Mines. He has fifteen years of
2006-1779: A GUIDING VISION, ROAD MAP, AND PRINCIPLES FORRESEARCHING AND TEACHING SUSTAINABLE DESIGN ANDCONSTRUCTIONKaren Hansen, California State University-Sacramento Assistant ProfessorJorge Vanegas, Georgia Institute of Technology Page 11.49.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2006 A Guiding Vision, Road Map, and Principles for Researching and Teaching Sustainable Design and Construction ABSTRACTThe Architecture, Engineering, and Construction (A/E/C) industry plays a critical role in delivering adiverse range of Facilities and Civil Infrastructure Systems (F&CIS), including
Paper ID #8223Concept Group Exercises for Continuous Improvement of Students LearningAbilitiesProf. Rajesh V Shende, South Dakota School of Mines and Technology Professor Dr. Rajesh V. Shende received his Ph.D. degree in chemical engineering from the Institute of Chemical Technology, Mumbai under the supervision of Professor Dr. V.V. Mahajani. After work- ing for few years in dyes manufacturing industry, he returned to academia where he initially received post-doctoral experience at the National Institute of Chemistry, Slovenia and the University of Missouri, USA before accepting the assistant professor position in
AC 2012-4675: INTEGRATING STUDENT PROJECTS THROUGH THEUSE OF SIMULATION TOOLS ACROSS LOGISTICS ENGINEERING CUR-RICULUMDr. Pawel Pawlewski, Poznan University of Technology Pawel Pawlewski works as an Assistant Professor at the Department of Engineering Management, Poznan University of Technology. He holds a Ph.D. in mechanical engineering, with a specialization in organi- zation of production systems from the Poznan University of Technology. His research interests include organization of manufacturing systems, monitoring of operations management, reengineering and IT ap- plication for logistics, simulation, and modeling of processes.Dr. Zbigniew J. Pasek, University of Windsor Zbigniew J. Pasek is an Associate
Paper ID #9226Effective Strategies for Generating Awareness and Interest in Science andEngineering among Underrepresented YouthDr. Marius D Ellingsen, South Dakota School of Mines and Technology Marius D. Ellingsen is a tenure-track assistant professor of Mechanical Engineering, Solid Mechanics group, at the South Dakota School of Mines, 501 E. Saint Joseph St., Rapid City, SD, 57701. Mar- ius.Ellingsen@sdsmt.eduDr. Cassandra M Degen, South Dakota School of Mines and TechnologyDr. Mark David Bedillion, South Dakota School of Mines and Technology Dr. Mark Bedillion joined the Mechanical Engineering Department at the South
forth this technology understand the societal and ethicalimplications of this new technology. The National Nanotechnology Infrastructure Network(NNIN) is an integrated collective of 14 universities with open facilities that support nanoscalescience and engineering research. The NNIN facilities train and support approximately 4,800users per year. The network offers a unique opportunity for research in societal and ethical issues(SEI) as well as providing SEI information to users. The goals of the NNIN’s SEI efforts are to:1) develop societal and ethical consciousness within the user community and the broader NSEcommunity and 2) broaden the exploration of the ethical and societal implications of NSE atNNIN and in the broader NSE community. To
AC 2011-2561: ENHANCING UNDERGRADUATE ENGINEERING EDU-CATION OF LEAN METHODS USING SIMULATION LEARNING MOD-ULES WITHIN A VIRTUAL ENVIRONMENTElizabeth A. Cudney, Missouri University of Science & Technology Dr. Elizabeth Cudney is an Assistant Professor at Missouri University of Science and Technology. She received her B.S. in Industrial Engineering from North Carolina State University, Master of Engineering in Mechanical Engineering and Master of Business Administration from the University of Hartford, and her doctorate in Engineering Management from the University of Missouri Rolla. In 2010, Dr. Cudney was inducted into the ASQ International Academy for Quality. She received the 2008 ASQ A.V. Feigenbaum Medal
Paper ID #8935Practicing and Assessing Formal Systems Competencies in ECE Senior De-signDr. Mario Simoni, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology Dr. Simoni is an Associate Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology.Mr. William D. Schindel, ICTT System Sciences William D. Schindel is president of ICTT System Sciences, a systems engineering company, and devel- oper of the Systematica Methodology for model and pattern-based systems engineering. His 40-year engineering career began in mil/aero systems with IBM Federal Systems, Owego, NY, included ser- vice as a faculty member of
Paper ID #5823Quickly Building Students’ Confidence in their Fabrication AbilitiesDr. Daniela Faas, Harvard University Daniela Faas is currently the senior preceptor in design-based instruction at the School of Engineering and Applied Science at Harvard University. She is also a research affiliate in the Department of Mechan- ical Engineering at MIT. Daniela received her Ph.D. in Mechanical Engineering and Human-Computer Interaction from Iowa State University, and her B.S. and M.S. degrees in Mechanical Engineering from Bucknell University, Lewisburg, PA.Dr. Daniel D. Frey, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
environmental engineering consulting before changing careers to academia at Texas A&M University-Kingsville.Dr. Shannon L. Isovitsch Parks P.E., University of Pittsburgh at Johnstown Dr. Shannon Parks is a registered Professional Engineer with 20 years of broad-based experience in the water resources and environmental engineering fields. She holds a Bachelor of Science Degree in Civil Engineering from the Pennsylvania State UniversitDr. Daniel B Oerther P.E., Missouri University of Science and Technology Professor Daniel B. Oerther, PhD, PE joined the faculty of the Missouri University of Science and Tech- nology in 2010 as the John A. and Susan Mathes Chair of Civil Engineering after serving for ten years on the faculty
., M.ASCE is a consultant and Adjunct Accreditation Director for Technology for ABET, Inc. In 25 years of association with ABET, he has participated in 25 accreditation visits and has served as Program Evaluator, Commissioner, Commission Chair, Chair of the ABET Accreditation Council, and ABET delegate to the Sydney and Dublin Accords. He has been a facilitator/presenter for U.S. and international workshops on program assessment, improvement, and accreditation. Dr. Hornbeck was a Department Chair of Civil Engineering Technology at West Virginia Institute of Technology, and at Southern Polytechnic State University, he was a faculty member, Department Chair, and Interim Vice President for
the department of Learning Sciences and Human Development in the College of Education and Human Services at West Virginia University. In her research, she is interested the assessment of student learning- particularly the assessment of academic growth, advanced statistical modeling, issues related to diversity and inclusion in engineering, and the evaluation of curricular changes.Dr. Afrin Naz, West Virginia University Inst. of Tech. Dr. Afrin Naz is an assistant professor at the Computer Science and Information Systems department at West Virginia University Institute of Technology. She is working with high school teachers to inspire the K-12 students to the STEM fields. In last four years Dr. Naz and her team
Electrical Engineering Technology. Prior to arriving at MSOE, Gassert spent seventeen years in industry as a Business owner, a design engineer, a clinical engineer and a consultant.Jeffrey Blessing, Milwaukee School of Engineering Jeffrey Blessing is an Associate Professor and Director of the Management Information Systems program at the Milwaukee School of Engineering, where he has taught for 21 years (16 years in the Electrical Engineering and Computer Science department and 5 years in the Rader School of Business). He earned a Ph.D. in Computer Science and Engineering from the University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee in 1999, a Master of Science in Computer Science and Engineering from
. Toorganize the discussion, the ABET Criterion 3 topics shown above will be used as a structure.Clearly, other qualities of the capstone design course help to satisfy the Criterion, but only thespecific writing and research assignments will be discussed below.Criterion 3d – an ability to function on multidisciplinary teamsIn her paper on student perceptions of collaborative writing, Nelson6 references a number ofsources reporting that “engineering and technology professionals spend an average of one-thirdof their time writing, and most write as members of a team.” Nelson goes on to report thefindings of several sources which state that collaboration builds such skills as interactivity,teamwork, and negotiation, promotes growth and increases the
2017 he worked at different health care facilities as a Medical Technology Consultant and as a Biomedical engineering lecturer at various Universities. Ahmed Sayed received his B.Sc. and M.Sc. degrees in systems and biomedical engineering from Cairo University, Egypt in 2003 and 2008, respectively. He is the author/co- author of 40 publications in international peer-reviewed journals and conferences. He is listed as a co-inventor on 9 granted US patents in the field of Bioinstrumentation. He serves as an expert reviewer for several top-tier journals including IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering and IEEE Transactions on Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics, and Frequency. He is a member of ASEE, ARVO, and a senior IEEE member
Paper ID #41725Strategies for Building Engineering Education Research Capabilities: Reflectionson Three Past Practices, Exploring Current Practices, and Speculating onFuture PracticesDr. Elizabeth Cady, National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine Dr. Elizabeth T. Cady is a Senior Program Officer with the Board on Science Education (BOSE) in the Division of Behavioral and Social Sciences and Education (DBASSE) at the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. She conducts studies, workshops, and other projects focused on equitable, inclusive, and effective STEM education at all levels. From 2006
is also a focal point in the process of promoting technicalliteracy.In a society that becomes more and more dependent on technology, the center has made one ofits fundamental goals to provide every student with the ability to understand the social, political,economic, and ethical implications of new technological developments. Since its inception, ithas served as a catalyst for student study groups and a central location for promoting studentscholarships, engineering design competitions, internships, summer undergraduate researchopportunities, and a variety of activities promoting technical literacy on our campus. The Centerhas been host to tutoring sessions for difficult courses, student success seminars, resume writingand job search
considered. In this study, Calculus I engineering students were compared to students inother fields of study (Pre-Med, non-engineering STEM students, and Non-STEM students) whoalso enrolled in Calculus I as their first math course in college. “STEM” refers to science,technology, engineering and math majors.From this study, the following research conclusions were made: 1. There was no significant difference in the grade distribution of the engineering students‟ Calculus I grade compared to students in other fields. 2. A significant difference in the distributions of the first-year GPA (grade point average) existed among the four student sectors with the engineering students showing the distribution with the lowest first-year GPA
million people willstill be living in extreme poverty, and 600 million people will be expected to face hunger.Ruha Benjamin [14] denounces how technology and artificial calculators (aka. artificialintelligence) are not neutral tools but instead are codified with racial biases and hierarchies.She even uses the term “Jim Code” to define these new ways of racial oppression.Technology and engineering applications should not fall into the reinforcing of racism thatUmoja Noble [15] and Ruha Benjamin [14] denounce.At the Ecosystem level, one example that literally touches us all is the omnipresence ofmicroplastics which are found in air, water, food, even inside humans, and most likely in allspecies; their health effects are still unknown [16]. Barnet
Paper ID #13883In-class anonymous student feedback and interactivity at the speed of light!Prof. Faisal Shaikh, Milwaukee School of Engineering Dr. Faisal Shaikh joined MSOE 5 years ago in a unique interdisciplinary engineering program called BioMolecular engineering. The program is a combination of molecular biology and chemical engineering and is unique in the nation. He developed most of the core chemical engineering courses in this program, albeit with a biological focus. He is also a champion of industry-academia partnerships and has been instrumental in bringing industry sponsorship to a number of the senior design
scientists and engineers from Bell Labs to create astonishing (for the time) music,dance, and theatre performances incorporating new technologies like video projection,wireless sound transmission, and Doppler sonar [19]. Klüver went on to co-found (withartist Robert Rauschenberg) Experiments in Art and Technology, a group dedicated tobringing artists and engineers together, and to write and edit several books, including ADay with Picasso, published in 1997 by MIT Press [20].At Pixar Animation Studios, everyone in the company is encouraged to devote up to fourhours per week to taking classes at Pixar University, the in-house training operation.With over a hundred classes—including a complete filmmaking curriculum, art classes,and creative writing
2017 ASEE International Forum:Columbus , Ohio Jun 28 Paper ID #20748Research University as a Center of Internationally-Focused Training Innovative-Economy EngineersDr. Vasiliy Grigoryevich Ivanov, KAZAN NATIONAL RESEARCH TECHNOLOGICAL UNIVERSITY Vasily Ivanov graduated from Kazan State Chemical and Technological Institute (today Kazan National Research Technological University, KNRTU) in 1976. He continued his research and obtained a Ph.D. in Engineering in 1986. At the same time, he held the administrative positions in the regional system of education management. He received
AC 2009-1610: COMMUNICATION PEDAGOGY IN THE ENGINEERINGCLASSROOM: A REPORT ON FACULTY PRACTICES AND PERCEPTIONSJulia Williams, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology Julia M. Williams is Executive Director of the Office of Institutional Research, Planning and Assessment & Professor of English at Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology, Terre Haute, Indiana. Her articles on writing assessment, electronic portfolios, ABET, and tablet PCs have appeared in the Technical Communication Quarterly, Technical Communication: Journal of the Society for Technical Communication, The International Journal of Engineering Education, Journal of Engineering Education, and The Impact of Tablet PCs and Pen
2006-480: EFFECTIVE INTEGRATION OF ELECTROMAGNETICCOMPATIBILITY AND SIGNAL INTEGRITY IN ELECTRICAL ANDCOMPUTER ENGINEERING CURRICULAEdward Wheeler, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology Edward Wheeler is Associate Professor in Electrical and Computer Engineering at Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology. He received a Ph.D. in electrical engineering from the University of Missouri-Rolla in 1996. His interests include electromagnetic compatibility, the electrical and optical properties of materials, and engineering education.JianJian Song, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology Jianjian Song is Associate Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology. He received a