Paper ID #8598Expanding the Presence of Stormwater Management in Undergraduate CivilEngineeringMs. Aimee S Navickis-Brasch P.E., Gonzaga University Aimee Navickis-Brasch is a registered professional engineer with over twenty years of practitioner experi- ence in Hydraulic and Stormwater Engineering. The majority of her career was spent working for WSDOT Headquarters Hydraulics and Stormwater Office where she was responsible for providing statewide sup- port including; design, research, training,and policy development. Aimee is currently pursuing a Ph.D. in Civil Engineering at the University of Idaho with an emphasis in
Paper ID #8533Exploring and Developing Hispanic STEM Education in West TexasDr. Aaron S. Hunt, West Texas A&M University Aaron S. Hunt teaches and researches rural, Hispanic education internationally.Dr. Pamela Renee Lockwood, West Texas A&M UniversityDr. Emily M Hunt, West Texas A&M University Page 24.577.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2014 ASEE 2014 Exploring and Developing Hispanic STEM Education in
Paper ID #9026An Implementation of Continuous Improvement of The Engineering Man-agement Program at California State University, NorthridgeDr. S. Jimmy Gandhi, California State University, NorthridgeDr. Ahmad R Sarfaraz, California State University, Northridge AHMAD SARFARAZ earned his PhD from West Virginia University in Industrial Engineering in 1988. He is currently full Professor in the Department of Manufacturing Systems Engineering and Management at California State University, Northridge. His current research focuses on Engineering Operations Man- agement, Applications of AHP and FAHP, and economic analysis. He is author
IEEE Computer Society, ACM, AAAI, and the Sigma Xi Research Society.Dr. John S Kinnebrew, Vanderbilt University Page 24.186.2 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2014 Analyzing Students’ Computational Models as they Learn in STEM Disciplines (Work in Progress)IntroductionThe 21st century workplace places a heavy emphasis on competence in STEM disciplines, but un-fortunately the US is lagging behind a number of the advanced countries in STEM competency atall levels.1 Therefore, more effective methods need to be developed for students to gain a
Paper ID #10011Biassociation for the Entrepreneurial Engineering CurriculumMr. Federico Garcia Lorca, Saint Louis University, Parks College of Engineering, Aviation & Technology Federico Garcia Lorca currently pursues a PhD. degree in aerospace engineering. Originally from Spain, he started his B.S. in aerospace engineering in Spain to later transfer to the USA. His current research focuses on entrepreneurial development and engineering education.Dr. Sridhar S. Condoor, Saint Louis University, Parks College of Eng
, engineering economy, electromagnetics, and system design. His research interests include cooperative control of networked multi-agent systems, resilient and fault-tolerant control, and networked control systems. He received the Best Student Paper Award in the area of Intelligent Control Systems and Optimization at the 2010 International Conference on Informatics in Control, Automation and Robotics, and he received an Honorable Mention Award at the 2012 International Conference on Hybrid Systems: Computation & Control.Dr. Khalid S. Al-Olimat P.E., Ohio Northern University Dr. Khalid S. Al-Olimat is professor and chair of the Electrical & Computer Engineering and Computer Science Department at Ohio Northern
Engineering and Computing Systems at Arizona State University. She conducts research on tools and techniques that can be readily applied in real engineering learning environments to improve student learning and teaching. In this respect her two prominent research contributions are with: 1) artefact-inspired discovery–based pedagogy, i.e., learning activities where students’ exploration of STEM knowledge is self-directed and motivated by interactions or manipulations of artefacts; and 2) the development of faculty expertise in outcomes-based course de- sign through the use of the Instructional Module Development (IMOD) system, a self-guided web-based training tool.Dr. Shawn S Jordan, Arizona State University, Polytechnic
the Armour College of Engineering at the Illinois Institute of Technology.Dr. Judith S Zawojewski, Illinois Institute of Technology Dr. Zawojewski received her B.S. Ed. from Northwestern University, M.S. Ed. from National Col- lege of Education (now National-Louis University) and her Ph.D. from Northwestern University. She recently retired as Associate Professor Emerita from Illinois Institute of Technology in Chicago, and in semi-retirement has joined the University of Chicago Center for Elementary Science and Mathematics Education as a Senior Curriculum Developer. She recently served on the Board of Directors for the Na- tional Council of Teachers of Mathematics and on the Editorial Panel for Mathematics
, mechanics, computational tools and international product design as well as graduate-level courses in engineering innovation and technology management. He has conducted research in the areas of environmentally-responsible manu- facturing, globally-distributed engineering teaming and early engineering education development and has over 30 years of combined academic and industrial management experience. He received his BSME and MSME degrees from Michigan Technological University.Dr. S. Patrick Walton, Michigan State University S. Patrick Walton received his B.ChE. from Georgia Tech, where he began his biomedical research career in the Cardiovascular Fluid Dynamics Laboratory. He then attended MIT where he earned his M.S
integrated into a freshman engineering course, a senior- level Hydrology course at Virginia Tech, and a couple of courses at Virginia Western Community College, Roanoke for enhancing water sustainability education. He is a member of ASCE and ASEE and has published 70+ refereed publications.Mr. Daniel S. Brogan, Virginia Tech Daniel Brogan is a PhD student in Engineering Education with BS and MS degrees in Electrical Engi- neering. He has completed several graduate courses in engineering education pertinent to this research. He is the key developer of the PIRMS and leads the LEWAS lab development and implementation work. He has mentored two NSF/REU Site students in the LEWAS lab. He assisted in the development and
Paper ID #10443Model Eliciting Activities motivated problem solving process: solution pathanalysisDr. Natasa S. Vidic, University of Pittsburgh NATASA VIDIC University of Pittsburgh / Assistant Professor / Department of Industrial Engineering 1032 Benedum Hall / Pittsburgh, PA 15261 412-624-9846 (ofc) / 412-624-9831 (fax) / nvidic@pitt.edu Professional Preparation University of Pittsburgh Industrial Engineering Ph.D. May 2008 University of Delaware Operations Research M.S. May 1992 University of Belgrade, Serbia Civil/Transportation Engi- neering B.S. June 1987 Appointments University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA
innovative, interdisciplinary curricular approaches that engage students in developing models of real world problems and their so- lutions. Her research also involves working with educators to shift their expectations and instructional practice to facilitate effective STEM integration. Tamara is the recipient of a 2012 Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers (PECASE) for her work on STEM integration with underrep- resented minority and underprivileged urban K-12 students.Dr. S. Selcen Guzey, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities Dr. Guzey is a Research Associate at the STEM Education Center at the University of Minnesota. Her research and teaching focus on integrated STEM education.Mr. Aran W Glancy
, Illinois Institute of Technology Professor Eric Brey is a Professor of Biomedical Engineering and co-Director of Distinctive Education in the Armour College of Engineering at the Illinois Institute of Technology.Dr. Judith S Zawojewski, Illinois Institute of Technology Dr. Zawojewski received her B.S. Ed. from Northwestern University, M.S. Ed. from National College of Education (now National-Louis University) and her Ph.D. from Northwestern University. She recently retired as Associate Professor Emerita from Illinois Institute of Technology in Chicago, and in semi- retirement joined the University of Chicago Center for Elementary Science and Mathematics Education as a Senior Curriculum Developer. She recently
Biomedical Engineering. He began here as student near the start of the UW-BME program and earned his BS, MS, and PhD in BME. He is interested in hands-on instruction – teaching and developing courses related to biomaterials and tissue engineering, as well as design. He was awarded the BMES Student Chapter Teaching Award in 2011 and 2013 and the Polygon Outstanding BME Instructor Award in 2012.Mr. Matthew S BollomDr. Willis J. Tompkins P.E., University of Wisconsin, Madison Willis J. Tompkins received the B.S. and M.S. degrees in electrical engineering from the University of Maine at Orono in 1963 and 1965, respectively, and the Ph.D. degree in biomedical electronic engineer- ing from the University of Pennsylvania in 1973
1992; and PhD (Computer Science) from Washington Uni- versity in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO in 1998. Prior to his current position at Vanderbilt University, he was a Member of Technical Staff at Lucent Bell Labs. He is a Senior Member of both the IEEE and ACM.His research interests are in solving distributed systems challenges for real-time and embedded sys- tems through effective software engineering principles and algorithm development. He is applying these expertise to develop an effective, cloud-based and ubiquitous infrastructure for scalable, collaborative STEM education.Dr. John S Kinnebrew, Vanderbilt UniversityProf. Gautam Biswas, Vanderbilt Universityhttp://www.asee.org/public/person sessions/logout Gautam
and education, Dr. Phillips worked in the semiconductor industry for nearly a decade holding positions in production improvement and fabrication process research and development.Mr. William S. Sullivan, DeVry University, Long BeachDr. Robert Aron PhD, DeVry University Robert D. Aron, Ph.D., is Dean of New Program Development for DeVry University where he leads the development of new degree programs and new majors across disciplines. Bob has 30 years of diverse ex- perience in curriculum development, training, and organization development. At Motorola University he provided leadership in global, corporate-wide training initiatives in areas such as technology, leadership, project management, and software engineering
at the valencian Association for Industrial Engineers and apart from his academic responsibilities he is currently Director for International Affairs at UPV where he is responsible for the coordination of several Erasmus Mundus Consortiums. His main research fields are photovoltaic materials, fiber reinforced concrete, performance evaluation and active learning in higher education. In these fields he has published more than 15 papers in leading academic journals.Mr. Joseph S. Sun, University of PennsylvaniaProf. Karen McDonald, University of California, Davis Dr. McDonald is a Professor of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science and Faculty Director of the NSF ADVANCE program at UC Davis. Prior to
industry professionals) in varying contexts.Dr. Carol S Stwalley P.E., Purdue University, West Lafayette Dr. Carol S Stwalley is the Recruitment and Retention Analyst at the Purdue University Minority Engi- neering Program. She holds a doctorate from the Purdue School of Agricultural and Biological Engineer- ing specializing in aquacultural engineering. She has worked to increase underrepresented populations at Purdue since 2000. She is also the President of Paradocs Enterprises, Inc. which has been involved in developing two waste-to-energy processes. Page 24.251.1 c American Society
at many national and regional educational conferences (ASEE, NSTA, CASE, CoCo STEM Forums). Co-authored: Best Practices in High school and Higher education.Dr. Malinda S Zarske, University of Colorado, BoulderDr. Daniel Knight, University of Colorado, Boulder Dr. Daniel Knight is the Program Assessment and Research Associate with the Design Center Colorado in the Department of Mechanical Engineering, College of Engineering and Applied Science at University of Colorado Boulder. Dr. Knight’s duties include assessment, program evaluation, education research, and teambuilding for the Center’s hands-on, industry-sponsored design projects. Dr. Knight’s research interests are in assessment, teamwork, K-12, and engineering
is being integrated into a freshman engineering course, a senior- level Hydrology course at Virginia Tech, and a couple of courses at Virginia Western Community College, Roanoke for enhancing water sustainability education. He is a member of ASCE and ASEE and has published 70+ refereed publications.Mr. Daniel S. Brogan, Virginia Tech Daniel S. Brogan is a PhD student in Engineering Education with BS and MS degrees in Electrical En- gineering. He has completed several graduate courses in engineering education pertinent to this research. He leads the LEWAS lab development and implementation work. He has mentored two NSF/REU Site students in the LEWAS lab. He assisted in the development and implementation of
of Marshall Scholars. He was made an Officer of the Order of the British Empire by Queen Elizabeth in 2001.Dr. Sergey V Vasilev, Yaroslavl State UniversityMr. Ivan FedorovProf. Alexander S. SigovDr. Yakov E. Cherner, ATEL, LLC Dr. Yakov E. Cherner, a Founder and President of ATEL, LLC, taught science, engineering and technology disciplines to high school, college and university students. He has extensive experience in writing curric- ula and developing educational software and efficient instructional strategies. Dr. Cherner introduced an innovative concept of multi-layered simulation-based conceptual teaching of science and technology. He also proposed and implemented the pioneering concept of integrated customizable
Paper ID #10312Mobile App Development: A Cross-Discipline Team-Based Approach to Stu-dent and Faculty LearningDr. Sarvesh S Kulkarni, Villanova University Sarvesh Kulkarni received a B.E. in Computer Engineering from the University of Bombay in 1994, and the M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in Computer Science from the University of Texas at Dallas in 1998 and 2002, respectively. Prior to 2002, he has worked in various industry positions in India and the US. He joined the ECE department at Villanova University in 2002, and is currently an Associate Professor of Computer Engineering. His teaching and research interests are: adaptive
Paper ID #9254STEM High School: Does multiple years of high school engineering impactstudent choices and teacher instruction?Dr. Malinda S Zarske, University of Colorado, Boulder Dr. Malinda Zarske is faculty in the General Engineering Plus department at the University of Colorado Boulder. A former high school and middle school science and math teacher, she has advanced degrees in teaching secondary science from the Johns Hopkins University and in civil engineering from CU- Boulder. Dr. Zarske has been involved in K-12 engineering education for over 14 years, and currently teaches product design courses through General
education experiences, global learning, and preparation of graduate students for future careers.Ms. Sara E Branch, Purdue University, West Lafayette Sara E. Branch is a graduate student in the Department of Psychological Sciences. She studies motivation in the context of academic and career choices.Mrs. Jeremi S London, Purdue University, West LafayetteMr. Benjamin Ahn, Purdue University, West LafayetteDr. Monica Farmer Cox, Purdue University, West Lafayette Monica F. Cox, Ph.D. is an Associate Professor in the School of Engineering Education and is the Inaugu- ral Director of the College of Engineering’s Leadership Minor at Purdue University. She also serves as the Executive Director of the International Institute for
development of faculty expertise in outcomes-based course de- sign through the use of the Instructional Module Development (IMOD) system, a self-guided web-based training tool.Dr. Shawn S Jordan, Arizona State University, Polytechnic campus Shawn Jordan, Ph.D.is an Assistant Professor in theDepartment of Engineering atArizona State Univer- sity. He is the PI on three NSF-funded projects: CAREER: Engineering Design Across Navajo Culture, Community, and Society (EEC 1351728), Might Young Makers be the Engineers of the Future?(EEC 1329321), and Broadening the Reach of Engineering through Community Engagement (BRECE)(DUE 1259356). He is also Co-PI on one NSF-funded project: Should Makers be the Engineers of the Fu- ture
Paper ID #10301Expansion and Evaluation of a Step-Based Tutorial Program for Linear Cir-cuit AnalysisDr. Brian J Skromme, Arizona State University Dr. Brian Skromme is a professor of Electrical, Computer, and Energy Engineering and assistant dean of the Fulton Schools of Engineering at Arizona State University. He holds a Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and was a Member of Technical Staff at Bellcore from 1985 to 1989.Mr. Paul Rayes, Arizona State UniversityDr. Bing ChengBrian McNamaraAaron S GibsonDr. Angela Barrus, Arizona State UniversityJohn M QuickProf. Robert Kenneth
University, West Lafayette Michael Fosmire is Professor of Library Science and Head, Physical Sciences, Engineering, and Technol- ogy Division of the Purdue University Libraries.Dr. Senay Purzer, Purdue University, West Lafayette S¸enay Purzer an Assistant Professor in the School of Engineering Education at Purdue University. In 2011, she received a NSF CAREER award, which examines how engineering students approach innovation. She is also a NAE/CASEE New Faculty Fellow. Purzer conducts research on aspects of design education such as innovation and information literacy.Prof. Amy S. Van Epps, Purdue University, West Lafayette
Paper ID #8570An Integrated Approach to Developing Technical Communication Skills inEngineering StudentsProf. Ronald S Harichandran, University of New Haven Ron Harichandran is the Dean of the Tagliatela College of Engineering at the University of New Haven. He leads the Project to Integrate Technical Communication Habits and implemented a similar program in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Michigan State University when he was the chair there. Dr. Harichandran received his BE in Civil Engineering from the University of Canterbury, New Zealand, and his MS and PhD from MIT. He was a faculty member
Paper ID #10367Information Literacy Skill Development and Assessment in EngineeringDr. Senay Purzer, Purdue University, West LafayetteMr. Michael Fosmire, Purdue University, West LafayetteProf. Amy S. Van Epps, Purdue University, West Lafayette Prof. Van Epps has a BA in engineering science from Lafayette College, her MSLS from Catholic Uni- versity of America, a M.Eng. in Industrial Engineering from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, and is currently working on her PhD in Engineering Education at Purdue.Ruth E. H. Wertz, Purdue University, West LafayetteDr. Kerrie Anna Douglas, Purdue University, West Lafayette Anna Douglas is a
, Arizona State UniversityDr. Shawn S Jordan, Arizona State University, Polytechnic campus Shawn Jordan, Ph.D.is an Assistant Professor in theDepartment of Engineering atArizona State Univer- sity. He is the PI on three NSF-funded projects: CAREER: Engineering Design Across Navajo Culture, Community, and Society (EEC 1351728), Might Young Makers be the Engineers of the Future?(EEC 1329321), and Broadening the Reach of Engineering through Community Engagement (BRECE)(DUE 1259356). He is also Co-PI on one NSF-funded project: Should Makers be the Engineers of the Fu- ture?(EEC 1232772), and is senior personnel on an NSF-funded grant entitled Workshop: I-Corps for Learning (i-Corps-L). He received his Ph.D. in Engineering