Paper ID #30994A Healthcare Case-Study to Teach Simulation TechniquesDr. Hassan Rajaei, Bowling Green State University Hassan Rajaei is a professor of computer science at Bowling Green State University, Ohio. His research interests include cloud computing, High Performance Computing (HPC), distributed simulation, parallel and distributed processing, communication networks, wireless communications, and IoT. Rajaei received his Ph.D. from Royal Institute of Technology, KTH, Stockholm, Sweden, and he holds a M.S.E.E. from the University of Utah, and a BS from University of Tehran. c American Society
, commercialization and technology policy. In particular, his research has recently focused on cybersecurity topics including intrusion detection and forensics, robotic command and control, aerospace command and 3D printing quality assurance. Straub is a member of Sigma Xi, the AAAS, the AIAA and several other technical societies, he has also served as a track or session chair for numerous conferences. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2019 Assessment of the Educational Benefits Produced by Peer Learning Activities in CybersecurityAbstractPeer learning activities may represent a solution to several problems in the cybersecurityeducation field. Peers have the potential
PhD Candidate in the Department of Communication at the University of Washington. Her work focuses on the intersections of gender, race, nation, and culture in relation to digital/social media.Dr. Julia M. Williams, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology Dr. Julia M. Williams is Professor of English at Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology. Her research areas include technical communication, assessment, accreditation, and the development of change management strategies for faculty and staff. Her articles have appeared in the Journal of Engineering Education, In- ternational Journal of Engineering Education, IEEE Transactions on Professional Communication, and Technical Communication Quarterly, among others.Dr. Eva
universities nationwide, specifically in the areas of software engineering and cybersecurity pedagogy. Dr. Buckley is a member of the Upsilon Pi Epsilon, Golden Key International and the American Society for Engineering Education (ASEE).Dr. Geoff Potvin, Florida International UniversityDr. Mandayam Thirunarayanan, Florida International University Mandayam Osuri Thirunarayanan is an associate professor in the School of Education and Human De- velopment (SEHD), in the College of Arts, Sciences, and Education (CASE) at Florida International Uni- versity, in Miami, Florida. He teaches courses in learning technologies at the undergraduate, masters and doctoral levels. He also supervises doctoral dissertations. His research interests
Proceedings of the Computer Science Education Research Conference, ser. CSERC ’14. New York, NY, USA: Association for Computing Machinery, 2014, p. 23–29. [Online]. Available: https: //doi.org/10.1145/2691352.2691354[11] A. Karabulut-Ilgu, N. Jaramillo Cherrez, and C. T. Jahren, “A systematic review of research on the flipped learning method in engineering education,” British Journal of Educational Technology, vol. 49, no. 3, pp. 398–411, 2018. [Online]. Available: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/bjet.12548[12] B. C. Wilson and S. Shrock, “Contributing to success in an introductory computer science course: A study of twelve factors,” SIGCSE Bull., vol. 33, no. 1, p. 184–188, Feb. 2001. [Online
- physical security, and advancing cybersecurity education in multiple STEM fields. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2020 Cybersecurity Awareness and Training Through a Multidisciplinary OSINT Course Project1. IntroductionOpen Source Intelligence (OSINT) is “based on information which can be obtained legally andethically from public sources” [1]. OSINT has risen in value recently, as technological advanceshave increased the amount and accessibility of publicly available material [2], [3]. Open sourceintelligence can be used offensively, such as during the reconnaissance stage of a cyberattack [4],or defensively, as when private corporations use OSINT to find out their
a professor of Technology Systems at East Carolina University.Dr. Philip J Lunsford II P.E., East Carolina University Phil Lunsford received a B.S. in Electrical Engineering and a M.S. in Electrical Engineering from Georgia Institute of Technology and a Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering from North Carolina State University. He is a registered professional engineer and is currently an Associate Professor at East Carolina University. His research interests include cyber security, telemedicine applications, network performance, and the cross-discipline application of technologies.Dr. john pickard, East Carolina University Dr. Pickard is an Associate Professor at East Carolina University in the College of Engineering
the Advanced Thermal-Fluids labora- tory. His primary interests are in renewable energy applications, fluid-thermal sciences, and international education.Mr. Brian Tang, Mission Technologies, division of HII Brian Tang is a Test Operation Engineer for Mission Technologies, a division of HII after graduating with a Bachelor’s in Integrated Sciences from James Madison University. He currently works within the field of naval nuclear propulsion in Newport News, VA conducting system testing. His interest towards energy and heat transfer stems from working as a HVAC tradesman with his father for 7 years. ©American Society for Engineering Education, 2023 THE DESIGN, IMPLEMENTATION, AND LESSONS
Paper ID #37386The Connotation and Structure of intrapreneurs'competence: An empirical analysis based on UCINET andquestionnaire surveyyongxin deng Doctoral Student, Zhejiang UniversityWei Shi (China University of Mining and Technology) © American Society for Engineering Education, 2022 Powered by www.slayte.com The Connotation and Structure of intrapreneurs' competence: An empirical analysis based on UCINET and questionnaire surveyAbstractEmployee intrapreneurship is a bottom-up commercial activity carried out byindividuals relying on existing organizations and has gradually become
education programs meet defined standards of quality [6]. It alsoassures employers that students graduating from these programs are well equipped for a job inthe construction industry [7]. Two major bodies that provide accreditation for CM-basededucation include the Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology (ABET) and theAmerican Council for Construction Education (ACCE).EmployabilityEmployability is a conceptualized form of work-specific, active adaptability that enables workersto identify and realize career opportunities [8]. Some argue that employability is not completelyself-driven but a composition of individual and external acting forces. Regarding highereducation, some speculate that employability is also affected by the
]. Available: https://offices.vassar.edu/community-engaged-learning/.[5] D. A. Schon, "Toward a Marriage of Artistry and Applied Science in the Architectural Design Studio," Journal of Architectural Education, vol. 41, no. 4, pp. 4 - 10, 1988.[6] W. Bateman, Open to Question. The Art of Teaching and Learning by Inquiry., San Francisco: Jossey-Bass Inc, 1990.[7] "Summer scholarship project: Designing and building a multi-purpose micro-farm structure as a pedagogical strategy for Architectural Engineering Technology students," in ASEE, 2020.[8] NREL, "Benefits of Agrivoltaics Across the Food-Energy-Water Nexus," 11 9 2019. [Online]. Available: https://www.nrel.gov/news/program/2019/benefits-of-agrivoltaics-across-the-food- energy-water
Paper ID #36768Work-In-Progress: Facilitating Engineering Students’Entrepreneurship Through Self-Regulated LearningInstructionsYing Wang Dr. Ying Wang received her Ph.D. in Educational Psychology from the Pennsylvania State University in 2021. She is currently a postdoctoral fellow in the College of Engineering at the Georgia Institute of Technology. Her research focuses on STEM students' self-regulated learning and particularly the metacognitive and motivational aspects in students' learning processes.Joy HarrisJanece Shaffer © American Society for Engineering Education, 2022
Paper ID #38133Course Strategy: Threading Triple Bottom-Line Sustainability AcrossMultiple CoursesDr. Daniel B. Oerther, 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 ten years on the faculty of the University of Cincinnati where he was the head of the Department of Civil and Environ- mental Engineering. ©American Society for Engineering Education, 2023 Course Strategy: Threading Triple Bottom Line
Paper ID #38876Roles for Take-Home Exams from the Perspective of Engineering Studentsand InstructorsDr. Micah Lande, South Dakota School of Mines and Technology Micah Lande, PhD is an Assistant Professor and E.R. Stensaas Chair for Engineering Education in the Department of Mechanical Engineering at the South Dakota School of Mines & Technology. Dr. Lande directs the Holistic Engineering Lab & Observatory. He teaches human-centered engineering design, design thinking, and design innovation courses. Dr. Lande researches how technical and non-technical people learn and apply design thinking and making processes to their
2006-455: SCIENCE FAIR PROJECT FOR DELIVERY CLASSES INELEMENTARY AND SECONDARY SCHOOLS AND ITS SIGNIFICANCE INJAPANHideyuki Kanematsu, Suzuka National College of Technology Ph.D. (Materials Science and Engineering), MIMF (Professional Member of Institute of Metal Finishing, UK), Associate Professor in the Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Suzuka National College of Technology. Publication Committee Member of Institute of Metal Finishing(2002.10-present), Editorial Board Member of Japan Institute of Metals(2003.4-2005.3), Editorial Board Member of Tokai Chemical Engineering Association(2001.4-present), councillor of Surface Finishing Society of Japan(2000.4-2002.3, 2004.4
2006-2416: DIFFERENCES IN CULTURAL EXPECTATION BETWEEN FACULTYAND STUDENTS IN AN INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATIONYuko Hoshino, Nihon University Education: 2003-, Ph.D. candidate, Nihon University; 1994, M.A., Asian Studies, University of Oregon; 1980, B.S., Clinical Pharmacology, Kyoritsu College of Pharmacy. Professional Experience: 1980-87 in Industry; 1987-1989 and 1994-1996, Harvard University; 1990, 1992, 1994, Engineering Alliance for Global Education Japan Program; 1996-, Kanazawa Institute of TechnologyWayne Sanders, Rose Hulman Institute Of Technology Education: 1975, Ph.D., Mechanical Engineering, Southern Methodist University; 1970, M.E.S., Lamar University; 1960, B.S.M.E., Texas A
2006-2408: FACULTY PERSPECTIVES ON INSTRUCTIONALCOLLABORATION AS A COMPONENT OF INTERNATIONAL LINKAGEMichael Dyrenfurth, Purdue UniversityMichael Ring, Dublin Institute of Technology Page 11.634.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2006TO: Dr. Nick SafaiFrom: Michael DyrenfurthRe: International Program SessionHello & Please note that the progress on the session we discussed is moving along wellalthough we will not be able to submit more than drafts of the papers at this time.I have been in touch with the Dean of DIT in Ireland and they will be finalizing plans as towho is coming this week and that will need to be reflected in the final papers.Given this, I am
Paper ID #7437FACULTY AT TOP EE/CS RESEARCH UNIVERSITIESDr. Anil Saigal, Tufts University Anil Saigal is a Professor in the School of Engineering at Tufts University. He received his doctorate from the Georgia Institute of Technology.Mr. Arun Karthik Saigal, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Arun Saigal is a graduate student in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at MIT. Page 23.592.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2013
Paper ID #44112Board 6: Robot Temperament Assessment as a Method to Expose Studentsto the Humanistic Aspects of Biomedical EngineeringDr. Uri Feldman, Wentworth Institute of Technology Uri Feldman is an Associate Professor of Biomedical Engineering in the School of Engineering at Wentworth Institute of Technology in Boston. He received a Ph.D. from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Media Lab, a B.S. in Electrical Engineering from Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, and an M.S. in Electrical Engineering from University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign. As a Postdoctoral Fellow at Harvard Medical School at
2016 to 2019. He completed a Ph.D. degree in civil engineering, focusing on construction management, from Michigan Technological University in 2008. He has an extensive teaching background with 22 years of the academic experience at five different universities. Students and departments have always praised him for his outstanding teaching and research excellence. He has been involved in numerous professional societies to supplement his teaching and research, including ASCE, ACI, ASEE, ASC, ATMAE, and TRB. His research output has been well disseminated as he has published 100+ journal papers and conference papers. His research interests are 1) Creating Innovative Sustainable Materials, 2) Digital Construction, 3
Paper ID #26533Board 29: Creating a Virtual Reality Simulation of Plasma Etcher to Facili-tate Teaching and Practice of Dry Etching in Nanotechnology EducationDr. Reza Kamali, Utah Valley University Dr. Reza Kamali-Sarvestani is an Associate Professor of Computer Engineering at Utah Valley University. He received his B.S. degree in Electrical Engineering from Shiraz University Iran, and M.S.E, Ph.D. degree in Electrical and Computer Engineering from University of Alabama in Huntsville in 2009, and 2011 respectively. He joined Utah Valley University (UVU) in 2012. He is currently working to develop a Virtual Reality course on
of Science in Electrical Engineering from Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology. My research interests are deep learning and computer vision. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2020 A Real-Time Attendance System Using Deep Learning Face Recognition Weidong Kuang, and Abhijit Baul, University of Texas Rio Grande Valley Abstract Attendance check plays an important role in classroom management. Checking attendance bycalling names or passing around a sign-in sheet is time-consuming, and especially the latter is opento easy fraud. This paper presents the detailed implementation of a real-time attendance checksystem based on
Paper ID #32627Impact of COVID-19 on Faculty Teaching and Student LearningDr. Mudasser Fraz Wyne, National University Dr Wyne has a Ph.D. in Computer Science, M.Sc. in Engineering, and B.Sc. in Electrical Engineering. Currently he serves as Professor of Computer Science at College of Professional Studies, National Uni- versity. He is the Academic Program Director (APD) for MS in Computer Science and have also been APD for MS in Information Technology Management, BS in Information Systems, and MS in Database Administration programs. His association with ABET USA dates back to 2001, as a certified program evaluator for BS
pedagogies, learning at scale, teaching with technology, increasing diversity in technical fields. American c Society for Engineering Education, 2021 CS + X: Coordinate Major in Computer Science Anastasia Kurdia akurdia@tulane.edu Department of Computer Science Tulane UniversityAbstractA coordinate major is an additional major aiming to complement the primary one. Compared to amajor, it requires less teaching resources; compared to a minor, it provides for more in-depthstudy. It attracts students from different
technologies, tools, and tricks of the trade as is often thecase in co-curriculars 44,11 .3.1 Topic SelectionWhen considering which topics to add to the course, we thought about: 1. skills that are useful during internships, undergraduate research, and upper-level courses 2. topics meaningful to students relative to career aspirations and personal use of technology, and 3. areas of computing that students likely find attractive from mainstream media.Familiarity with regular expressions, SQL, web development, and network fundamentals areuseful in industry and undergraduate projects and so were key skills we wanted to include.Students are interested in algorithms, software engineering practices, and interface designbecause they perceive
Paper ID #29525Predicting Retention Rates from students’ Behavior.Dr. Awatif Amin, Johnson C. Smith University Awatif Amin is a computer science Assistant professor at Johnson C. Smith University scince 2001. She primarily focuses on programming and data analytics. She completed her Doctorate of Management in organizational Leadership with specialization in Information System Technology (DM/IST), She earned her B.S. and M.S. in Computer Science. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2020 Predicting Retention Rates from students’ Behavior.AbstractMachine learning and Data mining
and Policy Analysis, Educational Policy, Journal of Student Affairs Research and Practice, and Teachers College Record.Prof. David S. Knight, University of Washington David S. Knight is an assistant professor at the University of Washington. His research examines educator labor markets, school finance, and cost-effectiveness analysis. He received his PhD in urban education policy and MA in economics from the University of Southern California and bachelor’s degrees in eco- nomics and anthropology from the University of Kansas. American c Society for Engineering Education, 2020 The CAHSI INCLUDES Alliance: Realizing Collective ImpactAbstractTo
Paper ID #33538Summer Coding Camp: Curriculum, Experiences, and EvaluationDr. Paea LePendu, University of California, Riverside Paea LePendu is a Professor of Teaching in the Computer Science and Engineering department at the University of California, Riverside.Dr. Cecilia Cheung, University of California, RiversideMariam Salloum, University of California, RiversidePamela Sheffler, University of California, RiversideMs. Kelly Downey, University of California, Riverside I have a masters degree in electrical engineering. After working in industry, I found a passion for educa- tion. I am currently a lecturer at UC, Riverside for
Paper ID #24915Creating Guided Study Exercises for a Flipped Database CourseDr. Karen C. Davis, Miami University Karen C. Davis is an Associate Professor in the Department of Computer Science and Software Engineer- ing at Miami University. Her research interests include database design, query processing and optimiza- tion, data warehousing, and computing education. She has published more than 50 papers, most of which are co-authored with her students. She has advised over 100 senior design project students and more than 40 MS/PhD theses/projects in the area of database systems. She was awarded the ASEE Sharon Keillor
in Computer Science. I am currently an Engineering Writing Fellow and have written previously on implementing Data Mining courses at an undergraduate level. I am the recipient of the Student Excellence Award in Computer Science in the UVU College of Technology & Computing.Dr. Elham Vaziripour, Utah Valley University Elham Vaziripour, Ph.D. in computer science, is currently a professor assistant at Utah Valley University. Her area of research is Security, UX research, and Data analysis. She graduated recently, Dec 2018, from Brigham Young University. Her dissertation was on analyzing security and privacy of secure messaging applications.Dr. Afsaneh Minaie, Utah Valley University Afsaneh Minaie is a