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Displaying results 811 - 819 of 819 in total
Conference Session
Beyond BS: Issues Affecting Graduate Education
Collection
2013 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Zsuzsa Balogh, Metropolitan State University of Denver; Marvin E. Criswell P.E., Colorado State University; Michael A De Miranda, Colorado State University
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
buildings and LEED, building inspection and monitoring, and building repair,renovation and reuse. A well-organized survey course, perhaps taught by a local structuralengineer with extensive experience in project and office management, addressing many of themanagement and professional topics could be very effective in building on the undergraduateslimited abilities in these areas to reach the expected proficiency levels. Structural engineeringdesign software may be best taught as an integral tool in a building design project classemphasizing one or more structural materials. Ethics, a critical topic not specifically addressedin the questionnaire, leadership skills, management topics, and construction/architecturalconcerns may be best addressed by
Collection
2013 ASEE Midwest Section Conference
Authors
Garth V. Crosby
Low Cost Collaborative & Portable Electronics Lab Kit Garth V. Crosby Department of Technology, College of Engineering, Southern Illinois University CarbondaleAbstractThe current growth in online program is exponential. However, undergraduate programs inengineering and engineering technology has not benefited from this growth as otherprograms. One of the main factors that encourage this disparity is the difficulty andinfeasibility of incorporating the required laboratory experiences into an online/distanceeducation program. In this paper, an attempt is made to provide a potential solution for
Conference Session
First-Year Programs (FPD) Poster Session
Collection
2013 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Amber Kemppainen, Michigan Technological University; Gretchen L. Hein, Michigan Technological University; Steve Haisley Patchin, Center for Pre-College Outreach - Michigan Technological University; Kimberly D'Augustino; Cody J Kangas, Michigan Technological University
Tagged Divisions
First-Year Programs
-0836861). This project requires students to design, build, test, and analyze a lab-scalehorizontal axis wind turbine. The goals of this project were to create project modules that couldbe easily adaptable to various curriculums and applications, including K-12 programs.1In 2010 – 2012, three project modules were integrated into the first-year curriculum at MichiganTech: aquaculture, biomechanics, and wind energy. For the aquaculture module, students built,tested, and analyzed their own aerator or used 3D modeling to develop a new impeller for anexisting pump to use in water circulation. Students working on the biomechanics module createda prosthetic leg device and analyzed the motion and forces generated during the kickingmovement. Students
Conference Session
NSF Grantees' Poster Session
Collection
2013 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Wei Zheng, Jackson State University; Liusheng Wang, Jackson State University; Jianjun Yin, Jackson State University
Tagged Topics
NSF Grantees Poster Session
Paper ID #6169Correlation Analysis of Scaffolding Creative Problem Solving Through Ques-tion Prompts with Process and Outcomes of Project-Based Service LearningDr. Wei Zheng, Jackson State University Dr. Wei Zheng is an associate professor of Civil Engineering at Jackson State University. He received his Ph.D. in Civil Engineering from University of Wisconsin-Madison in 2001 and has over ten years of industrial experience. Since becoming a faculty member at JSU in 2005, he has made continuous efforts to integrate emerging technologies and cognitive skill development into engineering curriculum.Mr. Liusheng Wang, Jackson State
Conference Session
K-12 Professional Development I
Collection
2013 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Jed S. Lyons, University of South Carolina; Erica Pfister-Altschul, University of South Carolina
Tagged Divisions
K-12 & Pre-College Engineering
dissertationwork. These findings provide a useful background for future graduate student developmentprograms, and outline the successful (and also less effective) components of this GK-12program.Bibliography1. Graduate STEM Fellows in K-12 Education. http://www.gk12.org/. Last accessed December 14, 2012.2. Mitchell-Blackwood, J., Figueroa, M., Kokar, C., Fontecchio, A., and Fromm, E. (2010), “Tracking middle school perceptions of engineering during an inquiry based engineering science and design curriculum.” Proceedings of the 2010 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference.3. S. Thompson, (2006). “Examining Change in Underrepresented Minority Students’ Perceptions of Engineering Sciences as a Result of a GK-12 Collaboration
Collection
2013 Spring ASEE Middle Atlantic Section Conference
Authors
Ahmed Azam
22 USING CLOUD COMPUTING TO UNITE OUR UNIVERSITY Author: Ahmed Azam aazam@devry.edu DeVry University 3880 Kilroy Airport Way Long Beach, CA 90806Abstract: DeVry University has expanded over the years with five distinct colleges,more than ninety locations in the US, Canada, and Brazil. DeVry offers traditional face-to-face courses in the classroom, online courses and hybrid or blended courses, and usestechnology to enhance the curriculum. The expansion
Conference Session
Incorporating Technology into Construction Education
Collection
2013 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Antoine Jean-Pierre Tixier, University of Colorado at Boulder; Alex Albert, University of Colorado
Tagged Divisions
Construction
Hallowell, University of Colorado Dr. Matthew Hallowell is an Assistant Professor at the University of Colorado at Boulder. He earned a PhD with a dual focus in Construction Engineering and Management and Occupational Safety and Health from Oregon State University. He also earned a BS and MS in Civil Engineering from Bucknell University. For his efforts in teaching innovations, Dr. Hallowell has received the National Science Foun- dation CAREER award, Beavers Endowed Faculty Fellowship, John and Mercedes Peebles Innovation in Education Award, the ASCE New Faculty Excellence in Teaching Award, the Department of Civil, Architectural, and Environmental Engineering’s Teaching Award, University of Colorado College of En
Conference Session
NSF Grantees' Poster Session
Collection
2013 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Matthew W. Ohland, Purdue University, West Lafayette; Misty L. Loughry, Georgia Southern University; Richard A. Layton, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology; rebecca lyons; Daniel M. Ferguson, Purdue University, West Lafayette; Kyle Heyne; Tripp Driskell, Institute of Simulation and Training; David Jonathan Woehr, University of North Carolina Charlotte; Hal R Pomeranz; Eduardo Salas, University of Central Florida; Andrew Caleb Loignon, UNC - Charlotte; Shirley C Sonesh, UCF
Tagged Topics
NSF Grantees Poster Session
. Richard Layton is an associate professor of Mechanical Engineering at Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology with a Ph.D. from the University of Washington. His professional work includes student teaming, persistence, migration, and retention of engineering undergraduates, and consulting in data vi- sualization and graph design. He is also a singer and songwriter.rebecca lyonsMr. Daniel Michael Ferguson, Purdue University, West Lafayette Daniel M. Ferguson is a graduate student in the Engineering Education Program at Purdue University and the recipient of three NSF awards for research in engineering education. Prior to coming to Purdue, he was assistant professor of Entrepreneurship at Ohio Northern University. Before
Conference Session
FPD 3: Research on First-Year Courses
Collection
2013 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Kenneth Reid, Ohio Northern University; Tyler J Hertenstein, Ohio Northern University; Graham Talmadge Fennell, Ohio Northern University; Elizabeth Marie Spingola, Virginia Tech Department of Engineering Education; David Reeping, Ohio Northern University
Tagged Divisions
First-Year Programs
nationwide. These are often designedfrom scratch and tend to be “personal courses” – designed by instructors to cover what they feelis important. Therefore, while they may be prerequisites to second-year courses, first-yearengineering programs are not necessarily integrated into the curriculum. Further, since they areoften designed with little consideration for existing models, overall outcomes and content varywidely. This leads to, first, the issue of course developers “reinventing the wheel” as successfulmodels are not adequately disseminated. The problem is exacerbated by a lack of definition offirst year models: a developer may know what they want in a course, but how do they find acourse with similar outcomes with nothing more than “first-year