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Conference Session
Potpourri Design
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
Janice Miller-Young
know why I didn’t thinkto do that!” Another goal of the first-year design courses and the LEGO instructions activity isto encourage students to consider other subjects such as statics, dynamics, mathematics or theirown experiences as information that is not meant simply to be used in those courses but is alsomeant to be incorporated into their set of analysis tools to be used to attack their engineeringproblems. We dare to hope that by the time they participate in a capstone design project, theywill be able to negotiate the minefields of team work and communication skillfully.Bibliography 1. Canadian Engineering Accreditation Board (CEAB) (2003) Accreditation Criteria and Procedures, , accessed January 1, 2005. 2
Conference Session
Topics in Civil ET
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Wafeek Wahby
the construction industry is no exception. Ithas also come from the collaboration and the hard work of risk takers.Universities and industry organizations have traditionally maintained informal ways of workingtogether, including student internships, faculty exchanges, and industry capstone projects tocomplete a degree program.A more recent phenomenon is the formal collaboration between a university (or group ofuniversities) and an industry organization (or group of organizations). The purpose of theseformal collaborations is to meet the construction technology education and training needs ofundergraduate and graduate/adult learners through joint ventures such as higher educationprograms, graduate programs (degree and certificate) and
Conference Session
NSF Opportunities for Undergraduate Engineering Education
Collection
2003 Annual Conference
Authors
Ron Adrezin; Marty Wood; Karen Wosczyna-Birch
called Project Lead the Way (PLTW). In the PLTW consortium, students willcomplete their capstone project and one senior level course at a neighboring communitycollege. The implementation of a seamless pathway program in Engineering andEngineering Technology was first piloted with the Engineering Department at theUniversity of Connecticut and with the School of Technology at Central Connecticut StateUniversity. This paper will highlight the strategies that were used to overcomearticulation and transfer barriers between two-year community colleges and four-yearengineering programs including the following: 1 Organizational Structure 2 Administrative procedures 3 Articulation using program outcomes 4 Mentoring 5
Conference Session
Stops and Starts in the Development of Cooperative Education Programs
Collection
2012 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Ilka M. Balk, University of Kentucky
Tagged Divisions
Cooperative & Experiential Education
the different areas on campus, such as faculty, academic advisors,career advisors and corporate representatives.Time will tell whether we are actually gaining more feedback and assessment tools from thisreorganization, but even after only about 10 months we already see more verbal feedback fromour students and their experiential placement and career paths than we have ever seen fromstudents outside of the co-op program, and higher student turnout at employer events.Employers seek out the engineering career services office as an initial point of contact tocommunicate with faculty about research, capstone design project, and class presentation, withstudents about hiring, and with the engineering development office for student
Collection
2000 Annual Conference
Authors
Osama Ettouney; James Stenger; Karen E. Schmahl; James Moller; Christine Noble
work from courses in the sequence and shows how the integrateddesign thread is implemented.3. Pre-Post Learning of Engineering Design - Design reports generated in the freshman course,Introduction to Engineering Design, are used as a pre-learning vehicle for determining first-yearstudents' understanding of the professional ways of knowing, reasoning, and problem solving.The design reports of first-year students are collected, evaluated and compared to the students’work in their capstone projects during the senior year. Results provide information about valueadded during the students’ time at Miami.Customer FeedbackThese methods solicit our customers’ feedback. Our primary customers are considered to beindustry, employers of students, and
Collection
1998 Annual Conference
Authors
Kassim M. Tarhini; Gerald R. Frederick; Benjamin Koo
graduate student handbooks[3] which includecourse registration and scheduling procedures, rules, regulations, critical deadlines, tips from upperclassmates, study techniques and other useful information. This same information can becontinuously updated on a webpage for easyaccess by the students. Page 3.230.2ADVISINGAdvising should also comprise two phases. Academic advising[4] consists of providing informationand guidelines enabling students to select their appropriate areas of academic concentration throughproper choices of required courses, technical electives and related capstone/synthesis projects. Thus,the international student will have
Collection
1997 Annual Conference
Authors
Deran Hanesian; Angelo J. Perna
forward by the formation ofnumerous NSF sponsored Educational Coalitions the Freshman Engineering Design programshave become an integral part of the curriculum. The New Jersey Institute of Technology (NJIT),as part of the NSF sponsored Gateway Coalition, a consortium of ten engineering institutions,has instituted such a program and developed numerous discipline and interdisciplinary courses.The basic intent of these programs is to move the traditional exposure to design concepts fromsenior year capstone courses into the entire undergraduate curriculum, beginning with enteringfreshmen. The overall objective is to introduce freshmen to the open-ended nature of designproblems, to give students “hands-on” experience, to expose students to teamwork
Collection
1997 Annual Conference
Authors
Roger A. Messenger
,rather comprehensive, design problem, which involves selection of PV modules, batteries andcontrollers, based on stated loads and location. The final exam is twice as long andcomprehensive, with design and analysis components.SUMMARY The goal of the course was to stimulate student interest in PV systems design. Evidencethat this goal has been achieved is found in the number of capstone senior design projects whichhave been related to PV systems since the course has been offered. It is particularly encouragingthat some of these designs are being put to serious use, such as a water pumping system for aremote area of Haiti and a PV powered fountain which one student has given to his parents as athank you for their support of his education
Collection
2000 Annual Conference
Authors
Serpil Guvench; Mike Denton; Mark Rollins; Mustafa Guvench
forcing terminal voltage and an ammeter that measures thecurrent drawn by a device connected as a load at the SMU’s terminals, or (2) as a current source forcing theterminal current and a voltmeter combined with it that measures the voltage developed across the deviceconnected at its terminals. If the SMU’s source is stepped by a controller computer a single SMU will besufficient to get a full I-V curve of a two terminal device, such as a PN junction diode. Multiple SMU’s can beemployed to get I-V characteristics of multi-terminal devices such as BJT’s and FET’s, and even logic gates andoperational amplifiers. The purpose of this project was, while synchronizing multiple SMU’s to measure multi-terminal devices, also to be able to vary the
Conference Session
Innovations in Power Engineering Education
Collection
2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Dale S.L. Dolan, California Polytechnic State University; Taufik Taufik, California Polytechnic State University
Tagged Divisions
Electrical and Computer
AC 2011-1479: AN ACTIVE POWER FACTOR CORRECTION LABORA-TORY EXPERIMENT FOR POWER ELECTRONICS COURSEDale S.L. Dolan, California Polytechnic State University Dale S.L. Dolan is an Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering at Cal Poly with experience in renew- able energy projects, education, power electronics and advanced motor drives. He received his BSc in Zoology in 1995 and BEd in 1997 from the University of Western Ontario. He received the BASc in Elec- trical Engineering in 2003, MASc. in Electrical Engineering in 2005 and PhD in Electrical Engineering in 2009 all from the University of Toronto. He is past chair of Windy Hills Caledon Renewable Energy, past chair of the OSEA (Ontario Sustainable Energy
Conference Session
Writing and Communication I
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Richard Fry
each of the disciplines about how they relate to oneanother in a larger picture.In the spirit of interdisciplinary product development, students in the College of Engineering andTechnology at Brigham Young University participate in a “Capstone” experience that is meant toexpose them to the comparative peculiarities of the three disciplines of Manufacturing,Engineering, and Industrial Design. Despite the success of various individual team projects, ageneral dissatisfaction exists in the ranks of the students about what the actual benefit is for alltheir collaborative effort.Interdisciplinary Product Development efforts (both in and outside of industry) suffer from onesided biases based on the discipline of the sponsoring body. Engineering based
Conference Session
Instrumentation Poster Session
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Eric Wood; Mustafa Guvench
the waveform selected. At the moment, the user must use the help file included to learn aboutthe waveforms generated for the wobble and rotary side drive micromotors. Figure 8. Motor Control Algorithm Page 7.92.6 “Proceedings of the 2002 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition Copyright  2002, American Society for Engineering Education” Figure 9. Interface of Motor Control Software3. Results, Conclusions and RemarksThe system was built as a part of senior electrical engineering capstone project at the
Conference Session
Potpourri of Engineering Mathematics
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Jon Marvel; Charles Standridge
descriptive statistics laboratory, only the apparatus, procedures,and results and discussion sections are required. The next laboratory requires these sections plusthe conclusions section. This practice is followed until students are writing a completelaboratory report.Detailed writing instructions specific to each laboratory are given. A generic example labora toryreport is provided. Laboratory reports are graded for quality of technical content and of writing.Reports are returned quickly. Thus, students may use instructor feedback concerning theirwriting in developing the next laboratory report.A term project is the laboratory capstone. Students download data concerning flight volume forone control tower from the Internet and use hypothesis testing
Conference Session
Biological & Agricultural Division Technical Session 1
Collection
2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Ann D. Christy, Ohio State University
Tagged Divisions
Biological & Agricultural
bioenergy, biological engineering, capstone design, HVAC, thermodynamics, waste management, and professional development. Ann was the chair of her department’s academic affairs committee for ten years, over- seeing their undergraduate programs in engineering, construction systems management, and agricultural systems management. She has won multiple teaching awards at the departmental, college, university, and national levels. She is experienced with undergraduate program assessment and accreditation, having served both the ABET Engineering Accreditation Commission and the American Council for Construc- tion Education as a program accreditation evaluator. She leads an extension program called ”Barn Again” about the
Collection
15th Annual First-Year Engineering Experience Conference (FYEE)
Authors
Paul McMonigle, Pennsylvania State University; Denise Amanda Wetzel, Pennsylvania State University; Sara Kern, Pennsylvania State University
projects. Currently, there are over8,200 undergraduate students in the College of Engineering, and with the current approach toteaching, most students never receive formal library instruction.Academic libraries have long been promoters of using digital badges to supplement courseworkand introduce students to information literacy skills. Badges are often used in coordination withclassroom learning and usually require collaboration between librarians and teaching faculty.The library badge itself is never the point of the course but assists the student with learning skillsthat they would not normally have time to learn during the regular course period [1]. It is evenpossible for libraries to meet accreditation requirements via the creation of badges
Conference Session
Biomedical Engineering Division (BED) Poster Session
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Shannon Barker, University of Virginia; Brian P. Helmke, University of Virginia; Lynn Mandeltort, University of Virginia; Jessica Taggart, University of Virginia; Timothy E. Allen, University of Virginia
Tagged Divisions
Biomedical Engineering Division (BED)
. Allen’s teaching activities include coordinating the undergraduate teaching labs and the Capstone Design sequence in the BME department at the University of Virginia, and his research interests are in the fields of computational biology and bioinformatics. He is also interested in evaluating the pedagogical approaches optimal for teaching lab concepts and skills, computational modeling approaches, and professionalism within design classes. He is active within the Biomedical Engineering Division of the American Society for Engineering Education and previously served on the executive committee of this division (Program Chair 2011, Division Chair 2012, and Nominating Committee Chair 2013). For the past seven years, he has
Collection
2013 Pacific Southwest Section Meeting
Authors
Anne Beug; Phillip L. Nico
on Computing education research, 2010, pp. 69–76.9. P. Bender and K. Kussmann, “Arduino based projects in the computer science capstone course,” J. Comput. Sci. Coll., vol. 27, no. 5, pp. 152–157, May 2012.10. P. Jamieson, “Arduino for Teaching Embedded Systems. Are Computer Scientists and Engineering Educators Missing the Boat?,” in International Conference on Frontiers in Education: Computer Science and Computer Engineering, 2011.11. R. Balogh, “Educational robotic platform based on arduino,” in Proceedings of the 1st international conference on Robotics in Education, RiE2010. FEI STU, Slovakia, 2010, pp. 119–122.12. “Build Your Own Blocks Homepage.” [Online]. Available: http:// http://byob.berkeley.edu/. [Accessed: 05
Collection
2025 ASEE PSW Conference
Authors
Sophie Emma Herant, University of Southern California; Alexander William Clark Kuncz, University of Southern California
Paper ID #49743Anti-Plunge Medical Educational Device: University of Southern CaliforniaSenior DesignMs. Sophie Emma Herant, University of Southern CaliforniaAlexander William Clark Kuncz, University of Southern California ©American Society for Engineering Education, 2025 An Improved Method for Resident Orthopedic Surgeon Training: the Anti-Plunging Medical Educational Device (APMED)Abstract As part of the USC biomedical engineering program, seniors take a capstone seniordesign course in which they design and build a prototype of a medical device or testing system.Our project seeks to address a common
Conference Session
Environmental Engineering Undergraduate Research
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
James Lambrechts, Wentworth Institute of Technology
Tagged Divisions
Environmental Engineering
precipitation intothe ground by itself can be the complete answer to the problem of preservation of wood piles, butit is a vital part of the solution. Student senior design capstone project in 2005 investigatedmeans for recharge of precipitation, and environmental aspects of using surface runoff for a fourblock neighborhood in the South End. It was also determined necessary to include a perimetercut-off barrier through the Fill stratum to retain the recharged water. The project was presentedto a group of City and State representatives who have since authorized $2 million for actualinstallation of the cut-off barrier that would essentially create a groundwater “bath tub”.The possible drawdowns caused by groundwater withdrawals into leaking low lying
Conference Session
Entrepreneurship and Innovation: Beyond the University
Collection
2017 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Laura Hirshfield, University of Michigan; Aileen Huang-Saad, University of Michigan; Julie Libarkin, Michigan State University
Tagged Divisions
Entrepreneurship & Engineering Innovation
master a wider set of skills to succeed in theworkplace. They must be able to communicate effectively, lead and work with interdisciplinaryteams, and design unique and creative solutions for open-ended problems, while consideringethical standards and global implications. In response to these growing expectations, engineeringprograms are evolving to better prepare their students for the workplace. One way thatengineering curricula are addressing this is by the inclusion of design-based courses or projects,that give students a chance to work in a more industrially-situated context to develop bothtechnical expertise and non-technical skills.Recently, entrepreneurship education has emerged as a means of supporting engineeringprofessional development
Conference Session
Potpourri: Various Issues and Topics in Graduate Studies
Collection
2016 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Michael J. Dyrenfurth, Purdue University, West Lafayette; Kathryne Ann Newton, Purdue Polytechnic Institute, Purdue University, West Lafayette; Mitchell L Springer PMP, SPHR, SHRM-SCP, Purdue University, West Lafayette; Mary E. Johnson, Purdue University, West Lafayette; Randy R. Rapp, School of Construction Management, Purdue Polytechnic Institute
Tagged Divisions
Graduate Studies
, organizational change, and program management. Dr. Springer sits on many university and community boards and advisory committees. He is the recipient of numerous awards and recognitions; most recently he was awarded the Purdue University, College of Technology, Equity, Inclusion and Advocacy Award. Dr. Springer received his Bachelor of Science in Computer Science from Purdue University, his MBA and Doctorate in Adult and Community Education with a Cognate in Executive Development from Ball State University. He is certified as a Project Management Professional (PMP), Senior Professional in Human Resources (SPHR & SHRM-SCP), in Alternate Dispute Resolution (ADR), and, in civil and domestic mediation. He is a State of
Conference Session
Curriculum Development in Computer Engineering Technology
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Dwight Egbert; Dave Williams
likelihood of theirsuccess in a conventional programming class in a future semester. Equally significant, the coursemaintains student participation in the technical curriculum and will therefore be likely toimprove student retention. Other students seeking Matlab instruction, additional problem-solvingdevelopment, or an introduction to elementary game programming are also invited to enroll. Thecourse has also been accepted as a technical elective for non-engineering majors but is notapplicable toward the college’s Engineering Technology or Engineering Science degrees.The structure, curriculum, and class project used in the initial offering of the course are presentedin this paper. The real centerpiece of the course was a collaborative class project
Conference Session
Mechanical Engineering Division (MECH) Technical Session 14: Curriculum and Course Assessment in and Outside the Classroom
Collection
2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Aimee Monique Cloutier, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology; Holly M. Matusovich, Virginia Tech; Carol Geary, Virginia Tech; Natali C. Huggins, Virginia Tech
Tagged Divisions
Mechanical Engineering Division (MECH)
2014, received the College of Engineering Graduate Student Mentor Award in 2018, and was inducted into the Virginia Tech Academy of Faculty Leadership in 2020. Dr. Matusovich has been a PI/Co-PI on 19 funded research projects including the NSF CAREER Award, with her share of funding being nearly $3 million. She has co-authored 2 book chapters, 34 journal publications, and more than 80 conference papers. She is recognized for her research and teaching, including Dean’s Awards for Outstanding New Faculty, Outstanding Teacher Award, and a Faculty Fellow. Dr. Matusovich has served the Educational Research and Methods (ERM) division of ASEE in many capacities over the past 10+ years including serving as Chair from 2017
Conference Session
Materials Division Technical Session 2
Collection
2022 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Susan Gentry, University of California, Davis; Rachel Altovar
programming skills in later courses, such asthe capstone design project, but these were not required to complete assignments before thepandemic. Unfortunately, a portion of the study cohort had their undergraduate educational plansdisrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic. Students enrolled in the two-quarter capstone designproject in Spring 2020 were not permitted to access laboratory equipment on campus or travel tosponsor companies. Thus, they relied on computational tools to complete their projects.MethodsThis study surveyed students enrolled in a Materials Kinetics course in either Winter 2018 or2019. The new survey was distributed to the cohort in Spring 2021, nine to twenty-one monthsfollowing the expected graduation date (based on course timing
Conference Session
Multidisciplinary Engineering Division (MULTI) Technical Session 9
Collection
2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Jamie R. Gurganus, University of Maryland, Baltimore County; Mark Berczynski, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
Tagged Divisions
Multidisciplinary Engineering Division (MULTI)
school. Her research is focused on solving problems relating to educating and developing engi- neers, teachers, and the community at all levels (P12, undergraduate, graduate, post-graduate). A few of these key areas include engineering identity and mindsets, global competencies, failure culture, first year experiences in engineering, capstone design thinking, integrating service and authentic learning into the engineering classroom, implementing new instructional methodologies, and design optimization using traditional and non-traditional manufacturing. She seeks to identify best practices and develop assess- ments methods that assist in optimizing computing and engineering learning. Dr. Gurganus was one the inaugural
Conference Session
Mechanical Engineering: Thermodynamics
Collection
2022 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Emmanuel Glakpe, Howard University
accreditation by havinga final year capstone design course as documented by Thigpen et al [3] that tasks students toexecute a project in which most of the principles that were taught and learnt in the curriculum areapplied in the realization of a product that is designed, built, and tested. The overall goal of thecurriculum in mechanical engineering should be to prepare students to pursue differentprofessional endeavors from working with an engineering company, working on their own, orpursuing advanced studies to innovate new products or improve on existing products. In allcases, students must be taught at a level that ensures their understanding and application of thefundamental principles of science and engineering. The formula approach to teaching
Conference Session
College Industry Partnerships Division Technical Session 2
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Faye R. Jones, Florida State University; Marcia A. Mardis, Florida A&M University - Florida State University; Priyanka Prajapati, LPL Financial; Pallavi Ramakanth Kowligi, Florida State University
Tagged Divisions
College Industry Partnerships
for 1) work-based learning, 2)career and technical student organizations (CTSOs), or capstone experiences that engagestudents through formal or informal learning. Florida’s Experiential Learning Frameworkprovides examples of work-based learning as career experiences (e.g., practicum, internships,registered apprenticeships or pre-apprenticeships, and on-the-job training), and careerengagement (e.g., directed student or other capstone courses, school enterprise, service learning,simulated work environments, or participation in CTSOs. Experiential learning also includespreparation for work-based learning, which includes career exposure (e.g., job shadowing,mentoring, company tours, and informational interviews) and career exploration (e.g
Conference Session
Engineering Communication II: Curricular Practices, Integrations, and Collaborations
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Sheila Anne Gobes-Ryan, University of South Florida; Kingsley A. Reeves Jr., University of South Florida
Tagged Divisions
Liberal Education/Engineering & Society
Paper ID #34039Instructors’ Experiences With the Miscibility of Math and Communicationin a Probability and Statistics CourseDr. Sheila Anne Gobes-Ryan, University of South Florida Sheila Gobes-Ryan is a Communication Instructor in the College of Engineering at the University of South Florida. She received her PhD in Communication and an interdisciplinary MLA degree from the University of South Florida. She has a Bachelor of Environmental Design, architectural focus, from North Carolina State University. She was a workplace strategic planner involved in large scale corporate and government projects for STUDIOS Architecture
Conference Session
CoNECD Session : Day 2 Slot 6 Technical Session 4
Collection
2021 CoNECD
Authors
Angela R. Bielefeldt, University of Colorado Boulder
Tagged Topics
CoNECD Paper Submissions, Diversity
ofengineering faculty may be newly motivated to integrate SJ issues into their teaching. This paperprovides ideas for individuals newer to considering SJ integration into their teaching.Most engineering ethics textbooks fail to address SJ issues in a substantive way. In Unger’s 2017book [14] the terms social justice, racism, and poverty are not found. A passing nod is given tothese issues in a short description of the Panama Canal project, i.e. “there is much to criticizeabout the way that the workers, particularly the black Caribbean laborers, were treated.” (p. x).McGinn’s 2018 The Ethical Engineer [15] does not explicitly use the term social justice but doesdiscuss Rawl’s Theory of Justice: “for the unequal distribution of a benefit or a burden
Conference Session
Assessing Entrepreneurship Programs
Collection
2007 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Jeffrey Blessing, Milwaukee School of Engineering; John D. Gassert, Milwaukee School of Engineering; Lawrence J. Schmedeman, Milwaukee School of Engineering; Larry Fennigkoh, Milwaukee School of Engineering
Tagged Divisions
Entrepreneurship & Engineering Innovation
solving problems. It has a 10-course2 design sequence that starts in the freshmanyear and culminates in a capstone design project in the final year of study. This course design,combined with a willing faculty, made BE an easy choice for our initial effort.In order to make effective use of university resources and have an immediate impact on the BEcurriculum, the plan for teaching entrepreneurship was to break up the topics into educationalmodules which each focusing on one particular aspect of business. This modular approachallows existing content from business courses to be used as new content in the engineeringcourses, thus addressing the faculty workload issue (challenge #2). Modules are being1 John D. Gassert, et. al., “Converting