in both the School of Sustainable Engineering and the Built Environment and the Division of Educational Leadership and Innovation at Arizona State University. She has a Ph.D. in Educational Technology, postgraduate training in Computer Systems Engineering, and many years of experience teaching and developing curriculum in various learning environments. She has taught technology integration and teacher training to undergrad- uate and graduate students at Arizona State University, students at the K-12 level locally and abroad, and various workshops and modules in business and industry. Dr. Larson is experienced in the application of instructional design, delivery, evaluation, and specializes in eLearning
Statistics, “IPEDS: Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System,” Washington, D.C.[12] A. Godwin, G. Potvin, Z. Hazari, and R. Lock, “Understanding engineering identity through structural equation modeling,” in Frontiers in Education Conference, 2013 IEEE, 2013, pp. 50–56.[13] A. Godwin, G. Potvin, Z. Hazari, and R. Lock, “Identity, critical agency, and engineering: An affective model for predicting engineering as a career choice,” J. Eng. Educ., vol. 105, no. 2, pp. 312–340, 2016.[14] J. Cribbs, Z. Hazari, P. M. Sadler, and G. Sonnert, “Development of an explanatory framework for mathematics identity,” in Psychology of Mathematics Education-North American (PME-NA) Chapter Conference, 2012.[15] Z
University.The videos and quizzes were integrated into the university course management system. Variousanalytics on the videos and quizzes are available; this data is reported elsewhere.12Future WorkThe team is in the process of creating an additional six modules, which are focused on thefollowing topics: Design process overview Basic physical prototyping Understanding customer needs Testing design solutions Researching a design problem Failure and iteration in engineering designStatus of Specific Aim #2 – Evaluate Effectiveness of Flipped ModelAs part of the project, the team is evaluating two major
Psychology of Learning, Education, and Technology. Her background in in K-12 education where she has served as a high school science teacher, Instructional and Curriculum Coach, and Assistant Principal. Her research and areas of interest are in improving STEM educational outcomes for Low-SES students through the integration of active learning and technology-enabled frequent feedback. She currently works as the Project Manager for the NSF faculty development program based on evidence-based teaching practices.Kara L. Hjelmstad, Arizona State University Kara Hjelmstad is a faculty associate in Mary Lou Fulton Teachers College at Arizona State University. c American Society for Engineering Education
Paper ID #9860Measuring the Effects of Precollege Engineering EducationMr. Noah Salzman, Purdue University, West Lafayette Noah Salzman is a doctoral candidate in engineering education at Purdue University. He received his B.S. in engineering from Swarthmore College, his M.Ed. in secondary science education from University of Massachusetts, Amherst, and his M.S. in Mechanical Engineering from Purdue University. He has work experience as an engineer and taught science, technology, engineering, and mathematics at the high school level. His research focuses on the intersection of pre-college and undergraduate engineering
, University of Central Florida Richard Hartshorne is an Associate Professor and Chair of the Department of Learning Sciences and Educational Research at the University of Central Florida (UCF). He earned his Ph.D. in Curriculum and Instruction with a focus on educational technology production and technology and teacher education from the University of Florida. Prior to his tenure at the UCF, Richard was an Assistant and Associate Professor of Instructional Systems Technology at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte for seven years and a physics instructor at Ed White High School in Jacksonville, FL for seven years. At the University of Central Florida, his teaching focuses on the integration of technology into the
introduction to the tools and technologies utilized and effective strategies for masteringmaterial presented online.Current WorkThe team has begun to identify specific topics to be included in the MBSE curriculum throughinterviews with industrial partners and searching peer-institution curricula. As of January 20,2020, our team had spoken with eight people at three partner corporations who have furthervalidated the need and demand for a vertically integrated program of MBSE education.Discussions with industry partners has revealed that it is useful for all employees involved withmanufacturing and upper management, to be familiar with the concept of model-based systemsengineering, while design engineers must be able to apply the concepts. Some
research fields.Dr. Nicholas Andres Brake, Lamar University Nicholas Brake is currently an Assistant Professor in the civil and environmental department at Lamar University. He received his B.S. (2005), M.S. (2008), and Ph.D. (2012) from Michigan State University. His area of expertise is in cementitious composites which includes: fracture and fatigue mechanics of quasi-brittle materials, recycled concrete, conductive concrete, reinforced concrete, pervious concrete, geopolymer, and structural dynamics. He currently teaches a wide array of courses that includes statics, reinforced concrete design, structural analysis, and materials engineering. Dr. Brake actively integrates project based and peer assisted learning
, and maintains a portfolio of NSF and private grants to support STEM and CTE pathways in the region.Christopher Russell Christopher Russell is the Information and Engineering Technologies Project Manager at Northern Vir- ginia College. His research focuses on developing novel methods of integrating digital fabrication into formal and informal STEM instruction. Currently, he manages two NSF ATE awards - Makers By Design, a design thinking professional learning program for interdisciplinary groups of educators, and Product Design Incubator, a summer-long entrepreneurship program for community college students.Antarjot Kaur ©American Society for Engineering Education, 2023 Building Data
adaptingit for this experiment. Thanks to the professional research assistants who supervised theexperiment: Krystin Corby, Shaina Martis, and Chris Bird. And thanks to the student researchassistants who administered the experiment: William “Bill” Carpenter, Bethany Baker, IlaGoldanloo, Karli Heuer, Ashley Nye, Niesha Smith, Payton Stroh, Rosalyn Wong, and Katherine“Katie” Cording.1. Hertzberg, J., Leppek, B. R. & Gray, K. E. Art for the Sake of Improving Attitudes towards Engineering. in Am. Soc. Eng. Educ. (2012). at 2. Pugh, K. J. Transformative Experience: An Integrative Construct in the Spirit of Deweyan Pragmatism. Educ. Psychol. 46, 107–121 (2011).3. Montfort, D., Brown, S. & Pollock, D. An Investigation of
Paper ID #30170Zip to Industry: A First-Year Corporate-STEM Connection ProgramDr. Donald P. Visco Jr., The University of Akron Donald P. Visco, Jr. is the former Dean of the College of Engineering at The University of Akron and currently a Professor of Chemical Engineering.Nidaa Makki Dr. Nidaa Makki is an Associate Professor in the LeBron James Family Foundation College of Education at The University of Akron, in the department in Curricular and Instructional Studies. Her work focuses on STEM curriculum integration and science inquiry practices in middle and high school. She is a co-PI on an NSF funded project to
Paper ID #21163The Impact of the Mathematics S-STEM Program at the University of Texasat ArlingtonProf. Tuncay Aktosun, University of Texas at Arlington Dr. Aktosun is a professor of mathematics at the University of Texas at Arlington. His research area is applied mathematics and differential equations with research interests in scattering and spectral theory, inverse problems, wave propagation, and integrable evolution equations. He is involved in various men- toring and scholarship programs benefiting students. He has been the GAANN Fellowship Director in his department since 2006, the NSF S-STEM Scholarship Director in
effort andis more persistent in solving the problem. Creative engineers generate new and valuablesolutions to design problems. However, prior studies suggest that the creativity of mechanicalengineering students decreases over the course of an engineering program. This paperinvestigates the latter claim, and searches for ways to increase creativity of engineering students.Firstly, a four-year longitudinal study investigates the changes in design self-efficacy and designcreativity of students in an engineering program1. Over the course of an engineering curriculum,the design self-efficacy and creativity of the students should increase. This longitudinal studytracked one cohort of students for four years, which resulted in two sets of data: within
-world. But, what have they actually learned about solving ambiguous problemsand integrating Making into their design thinking, engineering doing, and the design process?The American Society for Engineering Education has generated reports [1], [2] on the role ofMaking within an engineering context.What does it mean to learn Making? Does the student’s own understanding of the engineeringdesign process change as a result of such experiences, and how? Many engineering faculty reporton “cool stuff” they do in class in support of learning but few bolster their reports withevaluations of the student learning or ground them in prevailing cognitive science or educationalpsychology [3]. This study aims to work towards understanding the cognitive process
their own web-based tutoring system. His current research focuses on security of cyber-physical systems based on multiagent framework with applications to the power grid, and the integration of an intelligent virtual laboratory environment in curriculum. He is an associate editor of Dynamics of Continuous, Discrete and Impulsive Systems: Series B, and is a member of IEEE, ASEE, and Sigma Xi.Dr. Li Bai, Temple University Dr. Li Bai is a Professor in the ECE department, Temple University. He received his B.S. (1996) from Temple University, M.S. (1998) and Ph.D. (2001) from Drexel University, all in Electrical Engineering. He was a summer research faculty in AFRL, Rome, NY, during 2002–2004 and the Naval Surface Warfare
AC 2012-5448: PLATFORM INDEPENDENT INTERFACE FOR REMOTELABORATORY EXPERIMENTSMr. Bo Cao, University of HoustonDr. Gangbing Song, University of HoustonXuemin Chen, Texas Southern UniversityMr. Daniel Osakue, Texas Southern University Page 25.1045.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2012 Platform Independent Remote Laboratory ExperimentsAbstractA remote laboratory experiment is an online experiment that requires only external input throughthe internet to control. These days, online experiments have not been widespread in the use ofengineering curriculum because of their complexity in both development and use
Three elective junior courses, (e.g. PH 382U, BI 372U and ECE 383U,) from a single cluster, (e.g. Science & Liberal Arts or Design Thinking/Innovation/Entrepreneurship,) which includes courses from multiple departments, grouped around a single theme. An integrating two-quarter senior capstone experience, including some form of community service. (In engineering, this requirement is satisfied by the traditional capstone design project, performed in groups with participation and supervision by local industry. A future goal is the introduction of nanotechnology capstone projects which will integrate non-STE “graduates” of the nanotechnology courses into some of these industrial projects.)The four
Paper ID #11568Development and Implementation of a Pathway Assessment Model for theASPIRE ProgramDr. Maria-Isabel Carnasciali, University of New Haven Maria-Isabel Carnasciali is an Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering at the Tagliatela College of Engineering, University of New Haven, CT. She obtained her Ph.D. in Mechanical Engineering from Georgia Tech in 2008. She received her Bachelors of Engineering from MIT in 2000. Her research focuses on the nontraditional engineering student – understanding their motivations, identity development, and impact of prior engineering-related experiences. Her work dwells into
Hamilton Mayled is a PhD candidate at Grand Canyon University. She is pursuing her PhD in Psychology of Learning, Education, and Technology. Her background in in K-12 education where she has served as a high school science teacher, Instructional and Curriculum Coach, and Assistant Principal. Her research and areas of interest are in improving STEM educational outcomes for Low-SES students through the integration of active learning and technology-enabled frequent feedback. She currently works as the Project Manager for the NSF faculty development program based on evidence-based teaching practices.Ms. Elizabeth Lopez, Arizona State University Elizabeth Lopez is a Master’s student at Arizona State University studying
and workstations and fast algorithms which simplify the FEsoftware. Introducing new material into the already packed 4-four year engineering programsposes challenges to most instructors. The need for integrating FE theory and application acrossthe engineering curriculum has been established and methods have been suggested by otherengineering authors 4-6 . This paper discusses the technique of designing finite element activelearning modules (ALM) across many areas of engineering and the success of these modules inimproving the student's understanding of the engineering concepts and of the finite elementanalysis technique. Previous authors over the past six years have reported their success in usingtheir finite element learning modules7-15.The
seven Information Technology textbooks, over 100 peer reviewed journal articles and conference papers, and she gave numerous presen- tations at national and international professional events in USA, Canada, England, France, Italy, Portugal, Spain, Germany and Romania. She is the founder director of the Auburn University Educational and Assistive Technology Laboratory (LEAT), Co-PI of NSF EEC ”RFE Design and Development: Framing Engineering as Community Activism for Values-Driven Engineeringan”, Co-PI of NSF CISE ”EAGER: An Accessible Coding Curriculum for Engaging Underserved Students with Special Needs in Afterschool Programs”, institutional partner of AccessComputing (http://www.washington.edu/accesscomputing/), Ac
electronics and clean energy. As part of this grant-funded project, the partners workedtogether to develop the degree, contextualize the curriculum, and develop an articulationagreement between the two schools. This paper focus on the second phase of the NSF ATEproject which involves offering undergraduate research opportunities to students.The goals of this work are two-fold: 1) to develop a collaborative working relationship between atechnical college, a state university, and an industry partner to provide hands-on field experiencefor students while collecting useful results for the industry partner and 2) to study theeffectiveness of different solar module power electronic devices in the presence of variousmismatch conditions (shading, soiling
… Contributions to WPI may demonstrate an external impact if they are disseminated and recognized externally.” • It endorses an inclusive definition of scholarship and identifies characteristics common to all scholarship: public, amenable to critical appraisal, exchanged and used by other members of a scholarly community. The scholarships of discovery, integration, application and practice, teaching and learning, and engagement are defined. The policy states that contributions may be in one area or across multiple areas, and that all areas are valued equally. Scholarly contributions may combine or cut across traditional categories of teaching, research/creativity, and service. • A teaching portfolio is now a required element
. Some students begin to view SDL in terms of their own interests andlearning. The range of responses becomes wider as different individuals state different ideas ofwhat self-directed learning is and how SDL might be demonstrated. We see that students createtheir own meaning, and their conceptions often overlap with our working definition of SDL butmight not be as encompassing. SDL begins to show up as choices that students might have, interms of not only what to learn but also how.Defining SDL became an ongoing process as the research unfolded and as the studentsprogressed in the curriculum. They began defining the instantiation of SDL practices by the waysthey interpreted varying instructional models. For example, when students assumed
students into STEM (ODU BLAST).Dr. Anthony W Dean, Old Dominion University Dr. Anthony W. Dean has had several roles in academia. He is currently Assistant Dean for Research, Batten College of Engineering and Technology (BCET) at ODU. His previous appointments include As- sociate Professor of Engineering Technology and as Associate Director of the Institute for Ship Repair, Maintenance, and Operations at Old Dominion University (ODU).His research has focused mostly on control systems (integration and testing) and the reliability and maintainability of complex systems. He has been selected as both a NASA and an ONR Faculty Fellow. He regularly teaches courses in Ma- rine Engineering and in Maintained Systems. Most
created to offer an alternative totraditional coursework, as often there is not room in a curriculum to require automationtechnicians to complete separate cybersecurity courses. If an educator wishes to incorporate theCyber4RAM content into their course offering, the project team can share a SCORM packagethat can be utilized via their institution’s LMS. NICE Competencies for Badge 1. Asset and Inventory Mgmt. 2. Computer Languages 3. Data Privacy 4. Data Security 5. Digital Forensics 6. Identity Management 7. Incident Management 8. Infrastructure Design 9. Physical Device Security 10. Systems Integration 11. Vulnerabilities Assessment Figure 1: Badge Competencies Figure 2: Badge Development
systems and automatic control. Dr. Guo is a senior member of the IEEE and a member of the ASEE.Mr. Jingbo Han, Northern Illinois University Jingbo Han earned the M.S in Electrical Engineering from Northern Illinois University in 2010.Dr. Andrew W Otieno, Associate Professor Dr. Andrew W. Otieno is an associate professor in the Department of Technology at Northern Illinois Uni- versity. He holds a Ph.D. in Mechanical Engineering from Leeds University in the United Kingdom. Dr. Otieno has worked in various capacities at several institutions both in the United States and abroad. Since joining the Department of Technology, Dr. Otieno has actively participated in curriculum development. He has extensively revised and
examine curriculum and rigor and to develop further opportunities to help studentsprepare for the transition to college.As mentioned above, these low-income students appear to be hyper-focused on obtaining acollege degree, but not necessarily an engineering degree. The scholars repeatedly talked abouthow a college degree will help them better their lives, but in these conversations, they very rarelytalked about an engineering degree. Their college-identity (or at least their purpose and goalsrelated to this part of their identity) seems to be further developed than their future-engineeridentity upon entering college. The influence on their future-engineer identities has mainly beenfamily members and not formal engineering educational experiences
interrelated. These blocks, which include design, analysis,ethics, and laboratory, serve to fragment rather than integrate the curriculum and therefore thelearning experience and preparation of engineering students. The curricula typically includemany levels of pre-requisites and require students fully understand theory before being permittedto practice application. Rather than necessarily informing each other, these insular blocks,typically taught by different entities within the university structure, serve as individualappendages between which the student must somehow identify connections. The authors argued“… the workload of science and math courses can be so overwhelming that students end uplosing interest in the profession for which they are
assistiant in the Curriculum and Instruction department in the Curry School of Education at University of Virginia. She earned her BS in Chemical Engineering from The Ohio State University.Karina Sylvia Sobieraj, Ohio State University I am a third year Biological Engineering Student pursuing a minor in Biomedical Engineering. I am active in many clubs on campus including Make a Wish and the Society of Women Engineers and I am also an undergraduate researcher for en engineering education research group.Teresa Porter, Ohio State UniversityAlessandra St.Germain, Clemson University c American Society for Engineering Education, 2019