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Displaying results 8911 - 8940 of 23728 in total
Collection
2007 North Midwest Section Meeting
Authors
Kurtis G. Paterson
segments were shifted to the podcast, allowing class time to be used foractive learning exclusively. Podcasts have the advantages of pause and replay by thestudent, important for such reflective course elements like lecture. The podcast, andcompanion web site, directed the student to appropriate textbook material. Class timethen built upon the podcast “lectures” with a mix of hands-on activities, problems, fieldtrips, and discussion. This learning process is depicted in Figure 4. The PEL cycle, anadaptation of that by Kolb,3 creates an interdependence of the three learning elements: thepodcasts, the textbook, and the in-class activities. The podcasts serve primarily tomotivate learning by providing the core information, hopefully in an engaging
Collection
2007 North Midwest Section Meeting
Authors
Richard Smith
A Curricular Strategy for Information Security Engineering Richard Smith Department of Computer and Information Sciences (formerly QMCS) University of St. ThomasAbstractExisting textbooks and training materials in basic information security do not reflect theactual problem solving techniques and practices in the field of information securityengineering. In general, texts focus on memorization of a broad range of facts related tomodern information security practice. Analytical techniques, when present, often focuson mathematical foundations of cryptography, the inner workings of security protocols,and perhaps the logical derivation of formal security policy statements
Collection
2007 North Midwest Section Meeting
Authors
Paul J. Weber
; • Enabling students to find and communicate information effectively; • Improving the ability of students to reflect on their own learning history; and • Increasing the understanding of a student’s own learning strengths and weaknesses.Such sustainable learning practices are akin to the old adage that if you give a person a fish, s/hewill eat for a day, but if you teach a person to fish, s/he will eat for a lifetime (assuming the fishsupply and techniques are sustainable!).When examining the physical sustainability limits of learning systems, it is important to considerthat cognitive learning generally pertains to the acquisition, manipulation, and application ofinformation. In this context, the medium/technology through which the information
Collection
2013 North Midwest Section Meeting
Authors
Francis Peloubet; Eakalak Khan; G. Padmanabhan
this paper.Course Goals and Objectives The course combines all aspects of the preparation, planning, design, and pre-constructionphases of an engineering project into a single comprehensive and meaningful educationalcapstone experience that integrate engineering and management disciplines and reflect real-world engineering design practices. Students, working in small groups, use the knowledge andskills acquired throughout their undergraduate education to develop the documentation requiredfor actual engineering project design (i.e. project analysis, design calculations, drawings, 169material quantities, basic cost estimate, design schedule, and an overall work plan) and presentresults in verbal
Collection
Middle Atlantic ASEE Section Spring 2021 Conference
Authors
Kate D. Abel, Stevens Institute of Technology (School of Engineering and Science)
review materials and resources multiple times allowing a much more student-centered approach. The instructor should use this to their advantage whenever possible. For example, promote the concept that the student is the owner of their learning process and that they should take time for reflection and be promoted to share that reflection, in the classroom, in breakout rooms, and in assignments themselves. Additionally, do not just rely on teacher-student interaction. Remember and encourage student-student and student-content interactions. - Opening Communication with students - If this means the instructor meets with smaller groups and/or getting TA or Teacher Assistant assistance to engage smaller
Collection
ASEE 2021 Gulf-Southwest Annual Conference
Authors
Ronald E. Barr P.E., University of Texas at Austin
is to support the concept ofdesign course scaffolding throughout the four-year engineering curriculum. The concept isillustrated in Figure 2. The freshman Design Graphics Collaboratory serves as a cornerstonecourse that is meant to reflect similar educational experiences that the students will eventuallyreceive in their senior capstone design course. In between, it is expected that they will receivesome intermediate design course experiences, based on their engineering major. Proceedings of the 2021 ASEE Gulf-Southwest Annual Conference Baylor University, Waco, TX Copyright © 2021, American Society for Engineering Education
Collection
ASEE 2021 Gulf-Southwest Annual Conference
Authors
Yasser Mahgoub, Department of Electrical Engineering, The University of Texas at Tyler; Prabha Sundaravadivel, The University of Texas at Tyler
classroom setting. In this paper,integrating problem-based learning (PBL) as an assessment tool in the EENG 3306 ElectronicsCircuit Analysis I course is discussed as a strategy to promote student engagement. This coursewas taught as an online and hybrid course at the University of Texas at Tyler, in both the Tylerand Houston campuses. The analysis of the data collected in the assessment reflect increasedstudent engagement and enthusiasm in the curriculum. IntroductionRecruiting, retaining, and engaging students in STEM disciplines have always been a majorconcern. As per the reports of the President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology(PCAST) [1], with the help of targeted funding programs for
Collection
ASEE 2021 Gulf-Southwest Annual Conference
Authors
Ahmed Ali HASAN, University of New Mexico; Tariq Khraishi, University of New Mexico
on a bridge experiment Figure 8. Bridge Equilibrium ForcesStudent Surveys: A nine-question anonymous survey was distributed to the students to reflect on the success andeffectiveness of the course and identify areas for improvement. The collective results from 29students surveyed in 2019 and 2020 are displayed in Figures 9-17. Figure 9 Figure 10 Figure 11 Figure 12 Proceedings of the 2021 ASEE Gulf-Southwest Annual Conference Baylor University, Waco, TX Copyright © 2021, American Society for
Conference Session
Mid Atlantic Papers
Collection
2017 Mid-Atlantic Section Fall Conference
Authors
Peter Raymond Stupak, Raritan Valley Community College
Tagged Topics
Mid-Atlantic Section Fall Conference
made to minimize the number of LED lights to minimize thepower consumption since all energy ultimately needed to be generated on-site by the Customer.Multiple reflector designs were attempted to angle the LEDs, use reflective materials, and direct Fall 2017 Mid-Atlantic ASEE Conference, Oct 6-7 – Penn State Berkslight to the Reader. The combination of 3D-Design software (Inventor) and a 3D-Printer(Makerbot) made rapid prototyping and testing possible. The final configuration was 6 clear(no-color) LED (“High) and 3 LED (“Low) lights, tilted at 20 degrees outwards, around thecircumference of a circle of 5.0cm in diameter, and used “ultra-white” reflective paint.Figure 1(left): The Tent-Light product showing the 3D-Printed knurled
Conference Session
Enrollment, Instruction and Pedagogy - Focus on Classroom Practices
Collection
2017 FYEE Conference
Authors
Ohbong Kwon, New York City College of Technology; Juanita C But, New York City College of Technology; Sunghoon Jang, NY City College of Technology of CUNY
Tagged Topics
FYEE Division - Paper Submission
a specific discipline [2]. Inoften struggle with teaching specialized concepts, Engineering courses, this refers to training students to think,formula, and technical terminologies, because of the communicate, represent, and apply content knowledge likelack of strategies to engage students in active reading expert engineers. As described in the ABET competencies,and learning. this literacy is translated into a range of skills and practicesIn this paper, the challenges students face in reading to that reflect the current requirements in the engineering field.learn in EMT 1255 and the strategies used to overcome At New York City College of Technology
Conference Session
Undergraduate Track - Technical Session VII
Collection
2018 CoNECD - The Collaborative Network for Engineering and Computing Diversity Conference
Authors
Kasi Kiehlbaugh, University of Arizona; Paul Blowers, University of Arizona
Tagged Topics
Diversity, Undergraduate Education
combination of the literatureand relevant survey responses. Our future work will involve rigorously evaluating our interventions todetermine which interventions are most effective in supporting female engineers to graduation as wepursue our long-term goal of empowering students to take charge of their own learning and persist tograduation.To support dissemination of the results to our colleagues, we have established a faculty learningcommunity within the College of Engineering to reflect on teaching methodologies, share best practices,and conduct peer observations. As we measure which interventions are most effective in supportingfemale engineers to graduation, we will have an immediate cohort of engineering instructors withwhom we can deploy the
Conference Session
Undergraduate Track - Session V
Collection
2018 CoNECD - The Collaborative Network for Engineering and Computing Diversity Conference
Authors
Ni Li, California State University, Los Angeles; Gustavo B. Menezes, California State University, Los Angeles; Emily L. Allen, California State University, Los Angeles; Paul S. Nerenberg, California State University, Los Angeles
Tagged Topics
Diversity, Undergraduate Education
of three major parts: inquiry-based lecturing, in-class activities,and reflection, as is shown in Figure 7.The inquiry-based lecturing time was mainly spent on learning theory. The whole learning process wasguided by a series of logically connected questions to strengthen students’ critical thinking and learningabilities. To raise student’s interest and keep students engaged throughout the class, videos anddemonstrations of real-world applications were used. Figure 7. Basic structure of classThe classes usually started with an animated cartoon, a movie or a problem, and then questions relatedto the scene or problem are posed to students, leading them into thinking about the concepts involved(Figure 8
Collection
2018 ASEE Zone IV Conference
Authors
Tyler Jay Ashby, Utah State University; Wade H Goodridge, Utah State University; Sarah E Lopez, Utah State University; Natalie L Shaheen, National Federation of the Blind; Benjamin James Call, Utah State University - Engineering Education
Tagged Topics
Diversity
ability with Dr. Goodridge at Utah State University. He focuses work in this area towards the adaptation of spatial ability assessment instruments for accessible use with blind and visually impaired populations. Additionally, he is focused on developing engineering educational teaching experiences that aim to deliver engineering content to this population as well as refining existing engineering curriculum to reflect a focus on spatial connections.Dr. Wade H Goodridge, Utah State University Wade Goodridge is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Engineering Education at Utah State University. He holds dual B.S. degrees in Industrial Technology Education and Civil and Environmental Engineering. His M.S. and Ph.D
Conference Session
Pre-College: Working with Teachers to Improve K-12 Engineering Education
Collection
2017 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Sarah E. Lopez, Utah State University; Wade H. Goodridge, Utah State University; Moe Tajvidi P.E., Utah State University; Kurt Henry Becker, Utah State University, Center for Engineering Education Research
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Pre-College Engineering Education Division
, the question remains, howshould those programs be tailored to best match the needs of teachers in rural areas? Toanswer this, we identify notable areas of low confidence and high benefit from responsesof rural teachers to the survey.From section one, the area of least confidence among rural teachers was their ability toimplement the NGSS in their classrooms, as measured by agreement to the followingstatement: “I feel confident enough in my foundational engineering knowledge levels tobe able to develop and deliver engineering content focused on applications that satisfyengineering standards in the Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS).” (M = 3.8 on a7 point scale, centered at 4) This weakness was reflected across all demographiccategories
Conference Session
Pre-college Engineering Education Division Poster Session
Collection
2017 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Gina Navoa Svarovsky, University of Notre Dame; Scott A. Pattison, Institute for Learning Innovation; Monae Verbeke, Institute for Learning Innovation; Marcie Benne, Oregon Museum of Science and Industry; Pam Greenough Corrie MS, Mt. Hood Community College
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Pre-College Engineering Education Division
% thought parents would be “interested” and28% thought parents would be “in the middle.” These differences across staff and parentsresponses may reflect staff members’ own hesitation about the topic as appropriate for earlychildhood education, as well as feelings that there are already many other content areas that theprogram must cover.Families and staff primarily associate engineering with building and constructionDespite their excitement and interest, both parents and staff members indicated a somewhatnarrow perception of engineering, although a large minority of respondents mentioned planningand problem solving. Table 1 highlights the most common coded response categories for eachgroup and the frequency of responses within each category
Conference Session
NSF Grantees Poster Session
Collection
2017 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Nicole Berge, University of South Carolina; Charles E. Pierce, University of South Carolina; Robert Petrulis
Tagged Topics
NSF Grantees Poster Session
assigned to view three educational videos (produced as part of thisproject) on nanomaterial dimensions, uses, and manufacturing. The first exercise requiredstudents to draw, as individuals and in teams, a nanoscaled view of low-porosity and high-toughness Portland cement mortar incorporating multiwalled carbon nanotubes (MWCNTs).Supplemental questions were designed to invoke student reflections on the shape and relativesize of MWCNTs and cement hydrates, and how those physical relationships affect relevantmechanical properties of the nanoreinforced mortar. Student teams worked on a set of threehands-on active learning exercises using more familiar physical objects, on a larger scale, torepresent MWCNTs, cement hydrates, and fine aggregate. These
Conference Session
NSF Grantees Poster Session
Collection
2017 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Matthew A. Verleger Ph.D. (He/His/Him), Embry-Riddle Aeronautical Univ., Daytona Beach
Tagged Topics
NSF Grantees Poster Session
it was deemed too time intensive.Stage 3) Full evaluation of 5 samples with comparison to an expert evaluator. Participants werepresented with 5 sample MEA solutions and asked to complete a full evaluation of the workusing both the numeric and free response items. After each evaluation, they are shown theirreview next to an expert’s review of that same sample and asked to reflect on how they mightimprove their evaluation to more closely align with the expert.For peer review, the peers went through a similar, but much shorter training process to theteaching assistants, with Stage 3 being reduced to only a single training evaluation andcomparison to expert.ResultsFor each of the 7 rubric items shown in Table 1, the 6 non-expert evaluations
Conference Session
Biomedical Division Poster Session
Collection
2017 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Alexander J. Carroll, North Carolina State University; Andrew J. DiMeo Sr., UNC & North Carolina State University; Hatice O. Ozturk, North Carolina State University; James McCall, North Carolina State University
Tagged Divisions
Biomedical
 Filename follows format:  Deleting highlighted areas  Single Spaced, 1” Margins, 12-point Times New Roman font 10  Proper placement of name or date locations  Table of Contents reflects section names and page numbers  No sponsor signature  Spelling/grammar Appendix D: BME 451 EX 2 Competitive Landscape and Patent Review RubricCategory Points GradeQuality of Work 25Content  All sections of the deliverable have been adequately
Conference Session
NSF Grantees Poster Session
Collection
2017 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
R. Alan Cheville, Bucknell University
Tagged Topics
NSF Grantees Poster Session
-out which enableda richer view of the various inter-relationships between areas of the ecosystem, participants wereasked to reflect on their relationships with other parts of the ecosystem. The goal of this exercisewas to begin to elicit both the types of resources participants needed from others to thrive(inputs) as well how the results of their efforts were utilized by other sectors (outputs). Thiselicitation was scaffolded using the framework shown in Figure 3. This framework drew fromthe Crucial Conversations framework (Patterson, Grenny, McMIllan, Switzler, & Roppe, 2012)to identify areas where participants had, and were lacking, resources they might draw from orcontribute to other parts of the ecosystem. Messages were then developed
Conference Session
NSF Grantees Poster Session
Collection
2017 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Pong P. Chu, Cleveland State University; Chansu Yu, Cleveland State University; Karla R Hamlen, Cleveland State University
Tagged Topics
NSF Grantees Poster Session
engineeringcurriculum. Each theme grows in two dimensions:  Component complexity.  Design abstraction level.The component dimension represents the I/O devices and peripherals. Each theme uses an arrayof I/O components and modules. While all the components in a theme follow the same basicoperation principle and perform similar functions, their capabilities and complexities graduallygrow. The design abstraction dimension reflects the abstraction layers of an IP core shown inFigure 1(a). The construction starts at the gate level or register-transfer level and graduallyevolves to an IP core with software driver library.2.1 Components in each theme2.1.1 Video (image) theme A computer image is composed of a matrix of pixels. A pixel contains three
Conference Session
NSF Grantees Poster Session
Collection
2017 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Kenneth A Connor, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute; Kathleen Meehan, University of Glasgow; Bonnie H. Ferri, Georgia Institute of Technology; Aldo A. Ferri, Georgia Institute of Technology; Deborah Walter, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology
Tagged Topics
NSF Grantees Poster Session
given to high school students who worked on FirstRobotics. Thus, the myRIO is better suited to students without a strong electrical engineering orcomputer engineering or computer science background.Best PracticesThe list of topics below reflect the discussion and general consensus of the workshop participantson the use of portable labs.1. Pedagogical approachThe level of open-endedness of the experiment or project depends on the purpose. Thepedagogical approaches observed by the practitioners can be categorized as: directedexperiments, open-ended programing tasks, and mobile labs. The best practices of experiencedpractitioners are summarized below.Directed experiments use straightforward labs that instruct students to explore and
Conference Session
Civil Engineering Division Poster Session
Collection
2017 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Kenneth R. Leitch P.E., West Texas A&M University; Byungik Chang P.E., University of New Haven; Erick Benjamin Butler, West Texas A&M University; J. Arn Womble P.E., West Texas A&M University; Nathan Howell, West Texas A&M University
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
tocurriculum planning and teaching coursework for all courses with a civil engineering specificdesignation. ABET and ASCE prefer that civil and environmental engineering faculty to belicensed in order to teach any course with significant design content, typically reflected in thecourse title and catalog description. The civil engineering faculty members are currentlylicensed as professional engineers while the environmental engineering faculty members arelicensed or in process of professional licensure as of the start of the fall 2016 semester.The Need for New Engineering ProgramsCurrently, thirty-two public and private universities in Texas graduate approximately 10% of allengineering students in the USA, about 65,000 current students in total as of
Conference Session
Work-in-Progress Posters: Computers in Education Division Poster Session
Collection
2017 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Darren K. Maczka, Virginia Tech; Jacob R. Grohs, Virginia Tech
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Computers in Education
shaping), it is especially relevant when makingdecisions regarding how to synthesize these results into practice. Any changes to assessment mustalways be accompanied with reflection about how changes might affect different people, inparticular those who have been historically disadvantaged. In short, we caution against rushing toFigure 1: Screenshot of ELAN during data analysis. The large pane contains the screen capturevideo, the smaller window shows the front facing camera of a member of the research team fordemonstration purposes. These two video streams, and the audio, are played in sync using theplayback controls below the video panes. Below that we see the audio waveform and customdefined tiers, ELAN’s term for a single analytic layer of
Conference Session
Work-in-Progress Posters: Computers in Education Division Poster Session
Collection
2017 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Ting-Ting Wu, National Yunlin University of Science and Technology; Yueh-Min Ray Huang, National Cheng-Kung University
Tagged Divisions
Computers in Education
. Fostering students' creative thinking and unleashing theirimagination thus develops their capacity for innovation, which is now essential inengineering education.IntroductionCompetitive market structures are changing, and industry is gradually demanding anincreasingly large number of cross-disciplinary and innovative employees. Therefore,engineering education should, in addition to teaching traditional skills, also focus ontraining students in the ability to solve engineering problems innovatively. Creativethinking and an integrated curriculum can be used to develop students' creativethinking, critical reflection, and adaptation skills.Creativity education curricula have traditionally differed because there are differentopinions and explanations
Conference Session
Multidisciplinary Design Projects
Collection
2017 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
David R. Mikesell, Ohio Northern University; John-David S. Yoder, Ohio Northern University; John K. Estell, Ohio Northern University; Ahmed Abdel-Mohti P.E., Ohio Northern University; Firas Hassan, Ohio Northern University
Tagged Divisions
Multidisciplinary Engineering
total of six majors, has increased the number of multi-disciplinaryprojects to better reflect the environment in which most engineers will ultimately be employed.Involving students and advisors from multiple departments on the same project, though, oftenresulted in uncertainty from the varied course schedules and expectations.In the spring of 2016, the college faculty voted to create one college-wide capstone course toreplace the departmental courses. This course governs only the project-based portion of capstonedesign; each department still retains complementary senior-level lecture-based courses tailored toits discipline that cover project management and design process topics. The 2016-17 academicyear is the first offering for this new course
Conference Session
Technical Session 3a
Collection
2017 Pacific Southwest Section Meeting
Authors
Nolan Tsuchiya PE, California State Polytechnic University, Pomona; Paul Morrow Nissenson, California State Polytechnic University, Pomona; Mariappan Jawaharlal, California State Polytechnic University, Pomona
Tagged Topics
Pacific Southwest Section
b) somewhat beneficial c) just a little beneficial d) not beneficial at all11) When reflecting upon your experience in ME 100L, what is your overall opinion? (circle one) a) very favorable b) a little favorable c) neither favorable nor unfavorable d) a little unfavorable e) very unfavorable12) Feel free to write any additional thoughts about ME 100L below.Question 9 polls students about their confidence in programming the Arduino microcontroller.Arduino is an inexpensive, open-source prototyping platform that can be used in numerousapplications to read sensor data and write to outputs that physically manipulate a system12.Arduino is appropriate for many of the projects in the
Conference Session
Technical Session 2a
Collection
2017 Pacific Southwest Section Meeting
Authors
Dean Arakaki, Cal Poly State University
Tagged Topics
Pacific Southwest Section
havedifficulties identifying movement along particular contours and applying general Smith Chartprinciples. Multiple lecture videos have been prepared to illustrate Smith Chart methodsincluding basic “normalized impedance to complex reflection coefficient conversions” thatconvert between the complex normalized impedance plane and the Smith Chart. The mostdifficult hurdle is using the extensive grid on the Z version of the chart and the twice-as-denseZY chart. Multiple lecture videos describe examples and applications on both versions toillustrate RF network analysis and matching network design techniques. These videos arefollowed up in class to reinforce these difficult subjects.The author observed an improvement in student participation and insightful
Conference Session
Technical Session 4a
Collection
2017 Pacific Southwest Section Meeting
Authors
Elizabeth Fife, University of Southern California
Tagged Topics
Diversity, Pacific Southwest Section
level and accuracy of technical description that the students present, inaddition to guiding student’s inquiries into their topic. An assignment earlier in the semester thatinvolves researching and writing about the science and engineering behind an idea, product, orprocess provides the experience for navigating academic work and more applied treatments oftheir subject matter. Frequent meetings with the research teams is useful for monitoring studentunderstanding of their topic and for directing them towards resources.Figure 1 below reflects student’s perspectives as they begin their research. At this point,students have looked at the Grand Challenges website which identifies the challenge andpotential technological remedies. Students have not
Collection
2017 ASEE Mid Atlantic Section Spring Conference
Authors
Peter Raymond Stupak, Raritan Valley Community College
Tagged Topics
Diversity
optical receiver and speaker location. Since six speakers were required,each of the two lasers would point at three receivers and speakers. While the movement of thelaser would be accomplished by the rotation of a servo-motor, the Engineering Team wasconcerned that too much time would be required to move the laser light-beam from one speakerto another resulting in brief but uncomfortable periods of silence during a performance of theproduct (e.g., 60 degrees in 0.23s).The Team brainstormed that mirrors could be employed to take advantage of the reflection of thelaser light-beam to reduce the laser rotation angle and time. It was originally thought that thebest option was to direct the laser light-beam to mirrors positioned on the performance
Conference Session
Concurrent Paper Tracks Session I - Skills Development
Collection
2017 ASEE International Forum
Authors
Daniel Christe, Drexel University; Jay J. Bhatt, Drexel University (Eng. & Eng. Tech.)
Tagged Topics
Main Forum (Podium Presentation)
Engineering Libraries Division of the American Society for Engineering Education c American Society for Engineering Education, 2017 A Corporate-Academic Partnership to Deploy Game-based Learning Around the WorldAbstract:The challenges of the 21st century are complex and systemic in nature, demanding transdisciplinary andcollaborative mindsets to solve. However, much of university STEM education still reflects an emphasison instructor-centered content delivery, through passive lectures and uninspiring lab courses. This approachdiscourages potential science and engineering talent, disproportionately affecting women andunderrepresented minorities. The university of the future likely will be an “experience university