EducationReferences1. Harris, T.R., Bransford, J.D. and Brophy, S.P. (2002): Roles for Learning Sciences and Learning Technologies in Biomedical Engineering Education: A Review of Recent Advances. Annual Review of Biomedical Engineering, 4: 29-48.2. Bransford J.D., Brown A.L., and Cocking R.R., Editors (1999). How People Learn: Brain, Mind, Experience, and School. National Academy Press, Washington, D.C.3. Schwartz, D. L., Brophy, S., Lin, X., Bransford J. D. (1999). Software for Managing Comp lex Learning: Examples from an Educational Psychology Course. Educational Technology Research and Development. 47(2), 39 -59.4. Whittle, M. W. (1996): Gait Analysis: An Introduction, Second Edition. Oxford: Butterworth – Heinemann.5. Winter, D.A
Paper ID #34448Student Experience with COVID-19 and Online Learning: Impact ofFaculty’s Ability to Successfully Navigate Technological Platforms forRemote InstructionMs. Melissa Shuey, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Melissa Shuey is an incoming Ph.D. student in Science and Technology Studies, at Virginia Tech (Blacks- burg, VA). She received her B.S. in Mechanical Engineering at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (Troy, NY) with a minor in Science, Technology, and Society. Under the direction of Dr. Atsushi Akera and Dr. Alan Cheville, she has worked as an undergraduate and post-baccalaureate research assistant on two
Paper ID #28454Sustaining Faculty Collaboration: An Exploratory Process-Based Study ofResearch Collaboration Across UniversitiesMr. Yousef Jalali, Virginia Tech Yousef Jalali is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Engineering Education at Virginia Tech. He re- ceived a B.S. and M.S. in Chemical Engineering and M.Eng. in Energy Systems Engineering. His research interests include interaction between critical thinking, imagination, and ethical reasoning, interpersonal and interinstitutional collaboration, diversity, equity, and inclusion, systems thinking, and chemical en- gineering learning systems. Yousef taught
Paper ID #34248Development of an Interactive Top Hat Textbook for Engaged LearningDr. Matthew M. Barry, University of PittsburghMiss Samantha E. WismerDr. Tony Lee Kerzmann, University of Pittsburgh Dr. Tony Kerzmann’s higher education background began with a Bachelor of Arts in Physics from Duquesne University, as well as a Bachelor’s, Master’s, and PhD in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Pittsburgh. After graduation, Dr. Kerzmann began his career as an assistant professor of Mechanical Engineering at Robert Morris University which afforded him the opportunity to research, teach, and advise in numerous
Paper ID #32449Work in Progress: Evaluating Student Experiences in a ResidentialLearning Community: A Situated Learning PerspectiveMs. Aparajita Jaiswal, Purdue University, West Lafayette Aparajita Jaiswal is a Ph.D. student in Purdue Polytechnic at Purdue University, West Lafayette. Her re- search interests are in datascience education, computational thinking, student engagement and motivation in active learning environments.Mr. Joseph A. Lyon, Purdue University, West Lafayette Joseph A. Lyon is a Ph.D. student in the School of Engineering Education and a M.S. student in the School of Industrial Engineering at Purdue
Tokyo, Japan.Dr. Elizabeth Litzler, University of Washington Elizabeth Litzler, Ph.D., is the director of the University of Washington Center for Evaluation and Re- search for STEM Equity (UW CERSE) and an affiliate assistant professor of sociology. She has been at UW working on STEM Equity issues for more than 17 years. Dr. Litzler is a member of ASEE, 2020-2021 chair of the ASEE Commission on Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion, and a former board member of the Women in Engineering ProActive Network (WEPAN). Her research interests include the educational cli- mate for students, faculty, and staff in science and engineering, assets based approaches to STEM equity, and gender and race stratification in education and the
Paper ID #33915Artificial Intelligence Paradigms and the Future of Learning: What aPartial Review of Half a Century of AI Conceptualization SuggestsJoseph Maloba Makokha, Stanford University Joseph Makokha was born, raised and educated in Kenya. He obtained a BSEE degree from the University of Nairobi before moving to the United States, where he earned two masters degrees in education before starting his doctoral studies in mechanical engineering at Stanford University focussing on design. He researches human collaboration with artificial intelligence (AI), with the goal of understanding how to design AI that augments humans
Paper ID #33005Work-focused Experiential Learning to Increase STEM Student Retentionand Graduation at Two-year Hispanic-serving InstitutionsCynthia Kay Pickering, Arizona State University Cynthia Pickering is a retired electrical engineer with 35 years industry experience and technical lead- ership in software development, artificial intelligence, information technology architecture/engineering, and collaboration systems research. In September 2015, she joined Science Foundation Arizona (SFAz) to lead the Girls in STEM initiative and translate her passion for STEM into opportunities that will attract, inspire and retain
Introduction to Advocating for Engineering Miriam Quintal and Otto Katt Lewis-Burke Associates, LLC February 5, 2018Lewis-Burke and ASEE• Lewis-Burke began representing ASEE on October 1, 2017• As federal consultants, Lewis-Burke promotes the policy agenda of scientific organizations to a diverse set of audiences, including: – United States Congress – White House/Administration and the Federal Agencies – Like-minded organizations and the advocacy community in Washington, DC• 28 policy experts with range of expertise/backgrounds allow multi-layered issue teams with deep expertise in agencies and scientific/education areas• 40 clients exclusively composed of non-profit entities: universities, scientific
Paper ID #32568Work in Progress: The Faculty Development CanvasDr. Joe Tranquillo, Bucknell University Joe Tranquillo is a professor at Bucknell University where he currently serves as the Director of the Teach- ing and Learning Center. He was the second hire in a new biomedical engineering program, which has since grown to 7 faculty, 70 students, gained accreditation and has been ranked three times in a row as the number one undergraduate biomedical engineering program by US News and World Report. At Bucknell he co-founded the Bucknell Innovation Group, KEEN Winter Interdisciplinary Design Experience and served as
Session 12-3 Green Buildings – Sustainable Construction G.R. Kanapuram Civil Engineering Department Lamar University Texas Enno “Ed” Koehn Civil Engineering Department Lamar University Texas AbstractWith the increase in environmental legislation, during the last three decades, awarenessconcerning Green Buildings and Sustainable Construction is growing around the globe.Green or sustainable building is the practice of
Education (Gulf-Southwest Section), Austin, Texas. 6. Gregory, J. M., Carter, W. J., Gregory, P. S., 1997, The Student's Handbook for Academic Survival in College, McGraw-Hill. 7. Maas, J. B., Wherry, M. L., Axelrod, D. J., Hogan, B. R., Blumin, J. A., 1999, Power Sleep: The Revolutionary Program that Prepares Your Mind for Peak Performance, HarperPerennial, New York. 8. Roffward, H. P., Muzio, J. N., Dement, W. C., 1966, Ontogenetic Development of the Human Sleep-Dream Cycle, Science 152:604-619.JAMES M. GREGORYDr. Gregory has served as Associate Dean for Undergraduate Studies in the College of Engineering atTexas Tech University for eight years. He has spent over a decade in the research and
textbook on Biomedical Image Analysis (Cambridge Univ. Press, 2014). He graduated over 70 MS and PhD students, and mentored over 20 postdoctoral researchers. He holds seven US patents on object modeling, computer-aided diagnosis, and visualization. He was lead editor of IEEE-TIFS special issue on Face Recognition in the Wild (December 2014), and co-general chair of ICIP-2009. He is recipient of the University top Awards: Research (1999), Teaching (2009, 2011) and Trustees (2015).Dr. Asem Ali, University of Louisville Asem M. Ali received the M.S. degree in electrical engineering from Assiut University, Asyut, Egypt, in 2002, and the Ph.D. degree in computer engineering from the University of Louisville, Louisville, KY
Paper ID #35029Computer Science Technology-Cyber Security OptionDr. Asad Yousuf, Savannah State University Asad Yousuf is the Coordinator and Professor of Electronics Engineering Technology at Savannah State UniversityMr. Alberto G. De La Cruz, Savannah State University Instructor and Program Coordinator of Computer Science Technology at Savannah State UniversityProf. Frederick T. Sheldon, University of Idaho Prof. Sheldon has 35+ years of experience from academia, industry and government in various roles work- ing a diverse set of computer science problems within the scope of software engineering, formal methods and
Paper ID #33577How Small, Interdisciplinary Programs Are Contributing to Diversity andInclusiveness in STEM University Departments in the USMrs. Mirit Shamir, Kansas State University Mirit Shamir is the Academic Services Coordinator for the Rural Resource Resiliency NSF Research Traineeship housed in the Alan Levin Department of Mechanical and Nuclear Engineering at Kansas State University. She holds an M.S. in Environmental Policy from Michigan Tech where she was an IGERT scholar, and an LL.M from Tel -Aviv University. As the academic services coordinator, she actively recruits diverse prospective graduate students, and
Paper ID #33066Undergraduate STEM Students’ Comprehension of Function Series andRelated Calculus ConceptsDr. Emre Tokgoz, Quinnipiac University Emre Tokgoz is currently the Director and an Associate Professor of Industrial Engineering at Quinnipiac University. He completed a Ph.D. in Mathematics and another Ph.D. in Industrial and Systems Engineer- ing at the University of Oklahoma. His pedagogical research interest includes technology and calculus education of STEM majors. He worked on several IRB approved pedagogical studies to observe under- graduate and graduate mathematics and engineering students’ calculus and
Paper ID #34071Survey Design for Evaluating Student Interaction in Face-to-Face andOnline Learning EnvironmentMr. Jaskirat Singh Batra, Texas A&M University Jaskirat Singh Batra is a Ph.D. candidate in Materials Science and Engineering at Texas A&M University. He received M.S. in Electrical Engineering from Texas A&M University, College Station, TX and B.S. in Engineering Science from Trinity University, San Antonio, TX. He is actively involved in research (both disciplinary and engineering education), teaching and mentoring. He has 4 years of experience in engineering education research. Previously
applications. It also includes using robotics in education. Her research is highlighted in numerous international conference and journal proceedings. As an educator, researcher, and mentor, Dr. Wellman’s overall goal is to continue her research while teaching and training the next generations of computer scientists. One of her favorite inspirational quote is by Marian Wright Edelman: ”Education is for improving the lives of others and for leaving your community and world better than you found it.”Prof. Ludwig C. Nitsche, University of the District of ColumbiaDr. Dong Hyun Jeong, University of the District of Columbia American c Society for Engineering Education, 2021
Paper ID #28471Using power, privilege, and intersectionality to understand, disrupt,and dismantle oppressive structures within academia: A design caseDr. Nadia N. Kellam, Arizona State University Nadia Kellam is Associate Professor in the Polytechnic School of the Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering at Arizona State University (ASU). She is a qualitative researcher who primarily uses narrative research methods and is interested more broadly in interpretive research methods. In her research, Dr. Kellam is broadly interested in developing critical understandings of the culture of engineering education and, espe- cially
Paper ID #33868Overcoming Perfectionism: My Journey with the Binary MindsetHaleh Barmaki Brotherton, Clemson University Haleh Barmaki Brotherton is a graduate student in the Department of Engineering and Science Education at Clemson University. Her research interests include perfectionism, self-regulation, and decision-making. She earned her BS and MS from Middle East Technical University and Istanbul Technical University in Industrial Design respectively. She earned her second MS in Industrial Engineering and Engineering Management from South Dakota School of Mines and Technology.Dr. Marisa K. Orr, Clemson University
applies to physically-based animation (PBA).The state of an object/system changes over time [2], and thus, PBA is animation created withphysics in mind, as in providing a physical “feel.” In a way, one could make the case that PBA isreally just representing kinematics in which pixels activate over time to simulate motion. Formore about the field of computer graphics and the graphics pipeline, the GPU, graphics APIs(e.g., Vulkan, DirectX, WebGL), and much more, see [3].In PBA, the algorithms derive from actual physics (often engineering mechanics) using physicsto represent physics. If that statement seems redundant, think about a loading spinner from [1].The programming behind something like [4] may seem complicated to someone unfamiliar
Session 6-1 The Evolution of a Senior Capstone Course in the Context of a Research-Based University Quality Enhancement Plan Farrokh Attarzadeh, Enrique Barbieri, Miguel Ramos Engineering Technology Department College of Technology University of Houston AbstractThe process of reaffirming accreditation at the University of Houston has identifiedresearch-based instruction as a critical component of the campus learning environmentfor the foreseeable future. This assertion is consistent with broader trends in
Paper ID #32687Implementation and Design of a Novel Student Developed Modular HTOL/HTRBSystem Using Thermoelectric ControlMr. Nathaniel J. O’Neal, Naval Postgraduate School Graduate Student at Naval Post-Graduate School, Electrical Engineering Dept. B.S. Electrical Engineer- ing, United States Naval Academy B.S. Computer Engineering, United States Naval AcademyMatthew A. Porter, Naval Postgraduate SchoolCmdr. Christopher Adrian Martino, United States Naval Academy Commander Chris Martino is a Permanent Military Professor and the Associate Chair for the Electrical and Computer Engineering Department at the United States Naval
Paper ID #32446Pandemic Pivots: The Successful Transition of an NSF ResearchInternship to an Online FormatNicole Evans McIntyre, University of California, Berkeley Nicole McIntyre serves as the Director of Education & Outreach for the Center for Energy Efficient Elec- tronics Science, a NSF funded Science and Technology Center. She is also the Manger of Transfer Success Initiatives for the UC Berkeley College of Engineering, and the Director of the Transfer-to-Excellence pro- gram, an REU for community college students. Nicole holds degrees in Psychology and Social Welfare from the University of California, Berkeley
Paper ID #33544Evaluation of a Game-Based Personalized Learning SystemMr. Ryan Hare, Rowan University Ryan Hare received his B.S. in Electrical and Computer Engineering from Rowan University in 2019. He is currently pursuing his M.S. in Electrical and Computer Engineering at Rowan University. His current research focus is applying machine learning and games to enhance student education, particularly in STEM fields.Dr. Ying Tang, Rowan University Ying Tang received the B.S. and M.S. degrees from the Northeastern University, P. R. China, in 1996 and 1998, respectively, and Ph.D degree from New Jersey Institute of
Mapping the Flow Characteristics of the Baylor University Wind Tunnel Melanie Hagewood and Ken Van Treuren Department of Engineering Baylor University AbstractThe purpose of this experiment was to capture and analyze the flow characteristics of BaylorUniversity’s subsonic wind tunnel to determine the uniformity of both velocity and turbulenceintensity in the test section. Tunnel flow was accelerated to 15 meters per second and a square-mesh, square bar turbulence generation grid was inserted perpendicular to the flow. The tunnelhas a cross section of 8” by 12” inches. Three cross-sectional areas
INTEGRATING SUSTAINABILITY ANALYSIS WITH DESIGN: CASE STUDY OF BICYCLE FRAME Emmanuel Ugo Enemuoh, Ph.D. eenemuoh@d.umn.edu Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering University of Minnesota Duluth Duluth, MN 55812 Samuel Kwofie, Ph.D. drskwofie@yahoo.com Department of Material Engineering Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology Kumasi, GhanaAbstractDesigning a product to meet specific needs
Case-Based Learning: A Creative Experience in Comparison to Traditional Teaching Methods Waddah Akili Geotechnical EngineeringA b s t r a c tThis paper describes the steps taken in planning, developing, and executing a case study/ casehistory course in geotechnical/ foundation engineering at an international university. The paper ed : a ab e a ec e a a ed a ; e a a ecourse; and the results of evaluating the effectiveness of this approach versus traditionallecturing. Problems and challenges that could arise when offering the course for the first time arealso addressed. Embedded in this
Paper ID #35255Human-centered geometric design of roads using an autonomous vehicleproblemDr. Sushobhan Sen, University of Pittsburgh Dr. Sen is a postdoctoral research associate in civil and environmental engineering at the University of Pittsburgh. He received his PhD in civil engineering from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 2019, where he was the instructor of record for a senior design class for two semesters and a teaching assistant in various classes for four. He earned two certificates in teaching pedagogy and scholarship, as well a fellowship to train future faculty members. His research interests
Paper ID #32957Work-in-Progress: Ambiguous Reaction Couples: A Universal Approach toAnalyzing Bearing and Hinge Support Reactions in 3DStatically-Determinate ProblemsDr. Amir H. Danesh-Yazdi, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology Dr. Danesh-Yazdi is Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering at Rose-Hulman Institute of Tech- nology.Dr. Shraddha Sangelkar, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology Shraddha Sangelkar is an Assistant Professor in Mechanical Engineering at Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology. She received her M.S. (2010) and Ph.D. (2013) in Mechanical Engineering from Texas A&M University. She completed the B