attendance in e-learning activities in blended-learning format is of equalimportance as face-to-face learning, if not more critical. The fast-growing pace ofblended-learning delivery trend necessitates the need for quantifying the impact ofdifferent levels of virtual attendance in e-learning activities on students’ performance.In blended-learning format, the e-learning activities include the following components: 1. Instructor-led threaded discussions 2. Internet-based e-books 3. Online or tele-Q & A sessions 4. Virtual document sharing 5. Internet-based Webiography 6. Web-based practice quizzes and tests 7. Web-based laboratory exercises 8. Web-based homework exercises 9. Web-based grade-books with feedback commentary areas
load is connected to thegenerator, the mechanical power used for driving the rotor is converted into electrical power and Page 22.1153.2delivered to the load. Figure 1 shows a three-phase rotating AC generator 1. Generators like thisone have been used at most of the applications where an AC generator is needed, becausemajority of the power for driving generators are from a rotating machine, such as hydraulicturbine or a diesel engine. Figure 1. A three-phase AC generatorWhen the driving power is from a linear oscillating source, the linear moving force has to beconverted to rotating torque before it can be used for
the LaPlace equation. In an electrical system the equation is: 2 2 E E 0 Equation 1 x2 y2For a thermal system the equation is: 2 2 T T Equation 2 0 x2 y2Since these two equations are similar, an analogue can be drawn between the electricalsystem and the thermal system. If the potential field in an electrical system where theconduction is taking place
aviation and automotive industry workforce needs, the needfor E-Learning and the role of CA2VES, the center’s goals and objectives, and the virtual reality(VR) module development component of CA2VES.1. IntroductionA report conducted in 2009 showed a 17% growth rate for online enrollments from 2008 whichfar exceeds the 1.2% growth of overall higher education student population1. The same reportshowed that 82% of those taking online courses are studying at the undergraduate level. Asonline classes and degree programs become more and more popular, students are able to find theappropriate program that allows them to hold a full-time job and still pursue additional
have shown that “positive self-perceptions of social acceptance and scholasticcompetence” are linked to a sense of belonging at the university1. Two of the projects describedin this paper are designed to help students find their way around the campus, and hopefully helpthem begin to develop a sense of belonging. They are both listed under project 1 – scavengerhunts, and will be described below.Others have also suggested that freshmen seminars should contain topics that stimulate thestudents to think, and to provide opportunities to learn through collaborative environments2,3.Two of the projects described in this paper deal with the design and building of mechanicaldevices while working in teams. They are projects 2 and 3 described below. These
possibility of closing the gap increases. Another mechanism for closing this gap is theimplementation of efficient peer-to-peer mentorship programs to facilitate knowledge and skillstransfer.With these concerns in mind, the main objectives of the project included:(1) developing experiments that engage students with inquiry-based learning style; Page 22.1059.3(2) introducing students to real world projects; and(3) improving communication skills through required product documentation.In our capstone course specifically, the student project has many components that emphasizecommunication skills. These include weekly progress reports, weekly meeting agenda
that we are facing as a society. The Wind Turbine (Vertical Axis WindTurbine) for Automobiles (Figure 1) is one such project that can get the graduate andundergraduate students involved and excited. Figure 1: The Wind Turbine mounted at the top of an automobileThe increased use of gasoline for powering automobiles has raised concern for environmentalissues such as pollution, global warming, and depletion of ozone layer. Moreover, running thegasoline powered vehicles causes exhaustion of natural resources. As a possible solution to theseproblems, some companies have introduced electric powered and hybrid vehicles. However,these vehicles also have some limitations or drawbacks due to limited power storage capacity ofthe
signal processing systems. In commercialproducts, the final implementation of these systems will be most likely targeted to an ApplicationSpecific Integrated Circuit (ASIC) due to final cost under volume production. For architectureexploration, design tradeoffs and concept feasibility demonstration, an FPGA is the idealplatform for proof of concept and hardware acceleration.Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM) [1-3] is a modulation technique that is notnew, but the technology required for its implementation has evolved over the last ten years tomake it now practical. Nowadays a large number of communication standards (e.g. DSL, IEEE802.16e (WiMax), 3GPP LTE, DVB-H, 802.11a and 802.11n) have adopted this modulationtechnique due to
activation energy1, R is the gas constant and T is theabsolute temperature. (∂ε/∂t)= K2*(stress)n*EXP(-Q/(R*T)) (1) For a given material and under similar testing conditions, the K2, n, and Q values will remainconstant. Then at a given temperature the simplified relation will take the form shown inequation 2. (∂ε/∂t)= K1*(stress)n (2)On the other hand if the stress is maintained the same, the creep rate will depend on the absolutetemperature of the specimen is subjected to. This may me expressed by equation 3, (∂ε/∂t)= K3*EXP(K4/T) (3)where K3, K4
Electro-Mechanical Engineering Technology (EMET) or similar programs. Theinstructional modules, including an advanced certificate option for incumbent workers, can leadto certification as a Robotics Production Technician (RPT) and be aligned with theManufacturing Skill Standards Council’s (MSSC) "Certified Production Technician” credential,which is recognized by the federal National Skill Standards Board as the "Voluntary Partnership"for manufacturing.The project team has established the following goals: 1. necessary skills for RPTs will be updated and validated; 2. six instructional modules leading to certification as a RPT will be developed for on-line delivery; 3. completers will demonstrate “readiness” for industry- recognized
. A framework for managing the various customer requirements in the engineeringeducation context is developed. This framework emphasizes focusing on the synergies betweenthe various customers’ requirements which can lead to superior system outcomes. The case ofIndustrial Distribution at Texas A&M University is presented as an example implementation ofthis framework.IntroductionHughes et. Al explores academic/practitioner engagement by undertaking interviews withacademicians, practitioners and other experts with relevant experience in engagement[1]. Theyaddress the questions like how academics are in general meant to keep in touch with the realityof business practice and how younger academics develop the experience or expertise to
and engineering to prospective students and to encourage earlystage engineering students to continue with the upper level courses, freshman levellaboratories were developed for students to operate equipment and conductexperiements.1-3 In manufacturing courses, at both undergraduate and graduate levels,hands-on practical manufacturing projects were implemented to promote active learning.The labs involved include rapid prototyping, laser machining, book-making, and welding,etc.4-6 Material testing was conducted in labs to provide the fundamental material scienceknowledge necessary to perform engineering design and material selection. 7,8 A numberof innovative experiments on thermodynamics, heat transfer, and fluid mechanics weredeveloped to
those that satisfy the coursedescription and cover the major topics in the various chapters of the textbook for the course.Table 1 lists the course outcomes for a first-semester introduction to engineering technologycourse as an example.Quantification method for a course, along its own outcomes, is as follows: During the semester,students are evaluated on a numerical scale in various classroom activities such as, homeworkassignments, oral or written reports, laboratory or field exercises, quizzes or tests, projects, andother presentations as determined by the instructor. Each of these categories of classroomactivities is assigned a weight out of a total of 100. Table 2 summarizes this weighing forassignments for the introduction to engineering
and currently serving the School of Nuclear Engineering as Nuclear Electronics Technician, Senior Reactor Operator for Purdue University Reactor 1, and Radiation Detection and Measurement Laboratory Instructor. Page 22.1502.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2011 Defining a Role for a College of Technology in Nuclear EducationAbstractEver-increasing energy demands, concerns over climate change, and an elusive chase fornational energy independence are driving a quiet resurgence for increasing the use of nuclearpower. Experts maintain however, that any nuclear power expansion
engineering practice.This paper discusses changes proposed and approved to the civil engineering technologyprogram.BackgroundPrior to the 2009-2010 academic year the Board of Regents of the Georgia University Systemapproved for Southern Polytechnic State University to offer undergraduate degrees in civil,electrical and mechanical engineering; in addition to previously approved degrees in constructionand mechatronics engineering. In order to provide a broader and practical engineeringtechnology curriculum that will embrace the Vision for Civil Engineering in 2025 to “create asustainable world and enhance the global quality of life”1; the faculty of the CET departmentproposed to modify the existing sequence and content of courses in the civil
open-sourcescreen capturing video tools have not received much attention. Recent developments in userfriendly open-source applications offer excellent alternatives to tablet-PC users in recordinglectures and making the video files available for students’ use. This article presents a review offree open-source software tools available for tablet-PCs running Linux operating system, and asummary of lessons learned from the teaching experience of three civil engineering technologycourses taught in a traditional classroom setting with tablet-PC and free screen capturing videotools.1. IntroductionTablet-PCs make it possible to write on pdf or word files during the lecture and save them indesired file formats. The file that has instructor’s
is a gap between their knowledge tothe real-world application in these process plants. To meet the industrial needs, thedepartment designed our curriculum this way: for electronics students, the focus will be theabove-mentioned electronics classes, and add instrumentation classes INST 333 as a mandatoryclass and INST 304 as an elective one.This paper presents the courseware and the assessment for the course INST 333: InstrumentationOverview. This course teaches electronics students with the knowledge of control system andinstrumentation through the following work: 1) Realizing that the current technology trend isthat technicians work more with systems, sub-systems, software, modules, PC boards and soforth, and work less with components and
activities, a questionnairewas developed which collected their responses. The following ten questions were used for thesurvey: 1. How did your experience in this competitive activity relate to enhancing your leadership skills? 2. As a result of your experience, to what extent did you have an opportunity to improve your solving problem skills? 3. How much did your experience contribute to improving your team building skills? 4. To what extent did your experience in your competitive team provide an opportunity to sell your ideas to others? 5. What was the extent of your experience in preparing a business plan in your competitive team? 6. As a result of your experience in the competition, how much innovation was
being in their personal relatedness: their free relation-in-otherness….Allthings are what they are by being particulars constituted by many and various forms of relation.”1 Page 22.1390.2One of the primary thrusts of Gunton’s book is that the individual (the one) must be respectedand therefore cannot be subsumed into the community (the many); but at the same time, thecommunity must be respected as an essential part of the individual’s humanity. We need both.Neither the individual nor the community have primacy, both are key parts of what make ushuman. As just one example, the individual who fears “big government” may respect ademocracy for
large,established companies, however, and has the potential to result in “safe” project topics that arenot of significant scope and relevance. For every company that is willing to work within theconstraints of the current mechanisms for funding student projects, there are likely a muchgreater number who would very much like to offer challenges to student teams, if there were astreamlined process that adequately protected their commercial interests, had a contractdeliverable that they were purchasing, and reduced the project risk to an acceptable level.Current Funding Mechanisms & LimitationsAt Cal Poly, there are three primary mechanisms for industry support of student projects: 1. As a donation to the College or Academic Department. 2
. Page 22.1172.3The goal of this paper is to answer three research problems: 1) Identify if students are receivingeverything they need during school in order to enter the real world after graduation; 2)Determine if students from the dual degree program are more successful during their first timejob search than those in the traditional program; 3) Confirm that there is a need for engineers tohave a well-rounded education. If gaps are identified in either group which deserve attention,proper measures can be taken. If areas are identified as being useful with one group and lackingin the other, this can also be addressed.Literature ReviewDual DegreeSome research attention has been focused on traditional three-two programs orBachelors/Masters
innovator's personal and professional aspirations.I. The innovation challengeOverviewOne of our hopes is that… there will be full employment, and that the production of goods andservices will serve to raise our standard of living… Surely we will not get there by standing still,merely by making the same things we made before and selling them at the same or higher prices.We will not get ahead in international trade unless we offer new and more attractive andcheaper products… There must be a stream of new scientific knowledge to turn the wheels ofprivate and public enterprise. -- Vannevar Bush, 1945 [1]The translation of basic scientific research to practical and deployable innovations that benefitpeople and the planet is as old as human history itself
couple of examples from Altshuller19.The ProblemThe problem consists of developing the pneumatic punch press system shown in Figure 1. Thesystem is to operate in the following manner: 1. When an operator presses two pushbuttons at the same time (pushbuttons not shown in Figure 1), the clamping plate pushes down clamping the part to be punched. 2. The punch ram punches through the clamped part and then retracts back to its original position. 3. When the punch ram is fully retracted, the operator releases the two pushbuttons, removes the punched part, inserts the next part, and repeats the process.A near “closed world” solution is desired, i.e. only minimal modifications to the hardwarespecification are allowed. This
lab access inorder to take frequent measurements and make adjustments to growing conditions. Thus, it isclear that an alternative which eliminates these challenges would be an advancement towardsgiving students the opportunity to have hands-on experience with biological growth, and betterunderstand the factors that influence reaction kinetics.Kefir is a drink that originates from the Caucus region of Eurasia, and is similar in appearanceand taste to unsweetened, drinkable yogurt. The production of kefir depends on the presence ofkefir grains (see Figure 1), which are colonies of bacteria and yeast that live in jelly-like clustersand are placed into milk during kefir production1. The growth of kefir, wherein microorganismsconsume a substrate
screencasts was a completely new field of study for me at the beginning of theFall 2010 semester. However, the learning curve was not particularly steep, and spending lessthan 1 hour watching tutorials from the Camtasia website was sufficient training.My method for recording the screencasts evolved over time. The first method was in essence tocreate a PowerPoint presentation and record the delivery of this presentation. The PowerPointslides contained a number of equations, with various algebraic manipulations and inserting ofgiven values. The details of unit conversions and numeric calculations were not includedexplicitly. I set the custom animations in PowerPoint such that each equation appeared one at atime on a mouse click. I continuously recorded
project was three-fold: (1) to address an existing runoff problem that was degrading a high-quality stream in the local community, (2) to involve undergraduate students in an integral way in the design process, system maintenance, and in performance monitoring, and (3) to use the project as a practical illustration of how sustainability constraints are incorporated into water resources engineering. The importance of ongoing partnerships with the local municipality, regulatory agencies, and watershed advocacy organizations is emphasized as key to sustaining multiple-year off-campus projects. Qualitative assessment suggests the project was highly motivational to many students; however, a drawback is that a given class of students
Problem Based Learning and Case Studies into an Environmental Engineering Lab Course Stephanie Luster-Teasley, PhD1 and Cynthia Waters, PhD2 North Carolina A&T State University 1 Department of Civil, Architectural and Agricultural Engineering 2 Department of Mechanical Engineering Greensboro, NC 27411Abstract An introductory Environmental Engineering course was re-designed to include newenvironmental laboratory modules based on Sustainability and Green Design. The goal of thecourse was to incorporate the skill sets taught in a traditional Environmental
systems to embrace sustainability gained worldwide attentionin 1987. As stated in the Brundtland Report: “[Sustainable Development] challenges cut acrossthe divides of national sovereignty, of limited strategies for economic gain, and of separateddisciplines of science . . . The changes in attitudes, in social values, and in aspirations that thereport urges [to achieve sustainable development] will depend on vast campaigns of education,debate and public participation”1. This report called for a change in the way we as humansinteract with each other and the planet. In the years since this report, campaigns for educationand public debate have occurred, albeit not to the vast extent envisioned by the BrundtlandCommission. Education is a deeply
orengineering that would contribute to solving global climate problems. Qualitative assessmentresults indicated that students felt more confident in their ability to contribute to climate changemitigation through both their personal knowledge and professional career options.IntroductionThe scientific community now recognizes with a very high level of confidence that recentindustrial and agricultural activities are having a profound impact on Earth’s climate. 1 Therelease of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere from these activities is causing a discerniblewarming and general instability of our planet’s climate. It is now time to help the broadercommunity understand the science of climate change, its potential implications, and the actionsrequired to
1involving the model rocketry work is the “project” segment of the course, encompassing the finalfive weeks of the semester. By this time, the students have had previous exposure to all of themeasurement tools needed to perform the model rocketry experiment and, at this point, are askedto design their own experiments to accomplish the goal of predicting the maximum height of arocket.Previous work in this area has been done by Boyer et al. [1] which dealt primarily with anintroduction to aerospace engineering, using model rocketry as part of this introductory course,including the concept of impulse. Suchora and Pierson [2] use model rocketry as part of afreshman introductory course, primarily in order to generate interest among first-yearengineering