“substantialdifferences in the use of self-explanation” between the two groups (Litzinger et al., 2010, p.337). In another study, a small sample of students solving engineering statics problems showedan improved understanding of the problems (measured by verbal and written protocols) after anintervention featuring metacognitive instruction (Steif, Lobue, & Kara, 2010). And,metacognitive instruction has shown student gains in problem solving and design skills in severalother studies (Hanson & Brophy, 2009; Koretsky & Kelly, 2011; Krause, Kelly, & Baker, 2012;Newell, 2004; Pappas, 2009; Zheng, Shih, & Mo, 2009; Zheng & Yin, 2012).Why are Metacognition and Life- Long Learning Important in the EngineeringWorkplace?Several studies have shown
in more detail, including where to find economicinformation and how one can determine how robust the proposed process concept is to fluctuationsin key economic parameters.References 1. Bullard, L., “Ideas to Consider for New Chemical Engineering Educators: Senior Design,” Proceedings of the 2010 Annual Conference and Exposition, ASEE (2010). 2. Dym, C. L., Agogino, A. M., Eris, O., Frey D. D., and Leifer, L. J., “Engineering Design Thinking, Teaching, and Learning,” Journal of Engineering Education 94(1):103-120 (2005). 3. Tadd, A., Wisniewski, E., and Lalwani, L. N., “Revitalizing the Chemical Engineering Senior Design Experience: Empowerment, Entrepreneurship, and a Flipped Classroom Experience.” Proceeding
INTRODUCTION Globally there are calls for “coupling creativity and education” in order to prepare students forthe demands of 21st century professions (Shaheen 2010, p.168). Even in the face of “the stereotypethat science is dictated by unyielding facts and figures, with little room for ambiguity and creativity,”many educators are developing creative assignments (Stockwell 2016, p.95). Engineering educatorsrely on a broad and deep repertoire of pedagogical methods to motivate and stimulate studentinterest and engagement, and some of these methods might be considered “creative.” Over the past 50 years or more, creativity has moved from the narrow definition of “self-expression”to become a prominent concept in learning and teaching. Whether
eachinstitution during this study.Key words: Sustainability, capstone design, mixed methods INTRODUCTION Engineers of the future must be prepared to address the complex, multidisciplinary problemsthat necessitate engineering solutions in sustainable and global contexts. Engineering educationcan provide students with the tools to approach these grand challenges of the 21st century whileconsidering aspects that are key for designing sustainable systems (David Allen et al. 2006, Davidsonet al. 2010). Furthermore, according to the National Academy of Science report, Changing theConversation, youth are seeking careers that make a difference (Sullivan 2011, National Academy ofSciences 2008). Sustainable engineering
RUBRIC and one minor error: stopped instead of triggered, AC (15 pts) Implement a logic circuit in VHDL and simulate all possibilities. 8 instead of DC biased Ind. Pts. Description Shows the full waveform in analog triggered with 0 Nothing provided E 10 correct values for period and voltage 2 Can write VHDL by hand U 3 Can open a program to write VHDL TABLE III 4 Can open
clean soldering job and a working radio. The radio is used in M5 as part of theirbench-top radio station.M2. Introduction to the lab bench equipment. The oscilloscope, digital multimeter (DMM),power supply, function generator and current probe are introduced. By this time in the semester(third week), students have learned about current and voltage dividers in EE 20224. Here, bread-boarding is introduced, and students build simple resistor networks as current and voltagedividers. They use DC and AC sources and measure voltages and currents using the DMM andoscilloscope. A variety of activities allows them to explore the basic functions of each of the corebench tools.M3. Power transmission. Time-wise, this is themost intensive module of the
accepted for publication in Science Scope.4. Daugherty, J., Custer, R. L., Brockway, D., & Spake, D. A. (2012). Engineering Concept Assessment: Design and development (AC 2012-2987). American Society for Engineering Education.5. Greene, B. A. (2015). Measuring cognitive engagement with self-report scales: Reflections from over 20 years of research. Educational Psychologist, 50, 14-30. doi:10.1080/00461520.2014.9892306. Unfried, A., Faber, M., Stanhope, D. S., & Wiebe, E. (2015). The development and validation of a measure of Student Attitudes Toward Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math (S-STEM). Journal of Psychoeducational Assessment, 1-18.7. American Association for the Advancement of Science (2017). Science
Postsand Telecommunications (No. GJJY16-2-07).references [1] L. Cuthbert, Y. Ying, et al, “A Flagship Joint Sino-British Engineering Degree,” Meeting the Growing Demandfor Engineers and Their Educators 2010-2020 International Summit, 2007 IEEE. [2] R. M. Helms, Mapping International Joint and Dual Degrees: U.S. Program Profiles and Perspectives. ACE,CIGE Insights. [3] J. Lee, S. H. Patel, B. Lim, R. D. Geng, and Z. Jiang, “Toward Success of Collaborative Program In School ofEngineering Between the US and China,” ASEE International Forum, New Orleans, LA, 2016. [4] Q. Liu, J. Zhu, and B. Yang, “Impact of International Collaborative Engineering Education upon theEpistemological Development of Chinese Engineering Students,” ASEE Annual Conference
Group Project Setting. in 12th Australasian Computing Education Conference (ACE 2010) 73–78 (2010).30. Getzels, J. W. & Csikszentmihalyi, M. The creative vision: A longitudinal study of problem finding in art. (Wiley, 1976).31. Daly, S. R., Mosyjowski, E. a. & Seifert, C. M. Teaching creativity in engineering courses. J. Eng. Educ. 103, 417–449 (2014).32. Mina, M. & Ringholz, D. Integrating design and bridging activities of the engineering and the design college: Merging language cultures, creativities, and perspectives. in Proceedings - Frontiers in Education Conference, FIE 1626–1628 (2013). doi:10.1109/FIE.2013.668511333. Nguyen, L. & Shanks, G. A framework for understanding creativity in
Assistant Professor with the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Minnesota Duluth, Duluth, MN, USA from August 2010-May 2012. Her research interests include power electronics, microgrids, PWM dc- dc converters, PWM dc-ac inverters, power semiconductors, and high-frequency power magnetics. Ms. Kondrath is a member of IEEE, Tau Beta Pi, and ASEE.Dr. Mark A. Jupina, Villanova University Mark A. Jupina has been a professor in the Electrical and Computer Engineering Department at Villanova University since 1990. He has taught courses in electromagnetics, analog and digital electronics, and solid state materials, devices, and fabrication. Benjamin Franklin once said, ”Tell me and I forget. Teach me
] Willingham, D.T. (2007), “Critical Thinking: Why Is It So Hard to Teach?,” AmericanEducator, AFT, Summer Issue, 8-19.[4] Berge, N.D., and Flora, J.R.V. (2010), “Engaging Students in Critical Thinking: AnEnvironmental Engineering EFFECT,” Proc. 117th ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition,Louisville, KY, AC 2010-1752, 10 p.[5] Pierce, C.E., Caicedo, J.M., Flora, J.R.V., Berge, N.D., Madarshahian, R., and Timmerman,B. (2014), “Integrating Professional and Technical Engineering Skills with the EFFECTsPedagogical Framework,” International Journal of Engineering Education, 30(6B), 579-589.[6] Pierce, C.E., Gassman, S.L., and Huffman, J.T. (2013), “Environments for FosteringEffective Critical Thinking in Geotechnical Engineering Education (Geo-EFFECTs
) Likert Scale Response Year 1 2 3 4 5 Sum Mean SD %Mean %SD 2015-16 0 0 1 14 45 60 4.73 0.48 94.8% 9.5% 2014-15 0 0 1 11 24 36 4.64 0.54 92.8% 10.7% 2013-14 0 0 1 5 27 33 4.79 0.48 95.8% 9.5% 2012-13 0 0 1 11 32 44 4.70 0.50 94.1% 10.1% 2011-12 0 0 0 13 21 34 4.62 0.49 92.4% 9.7% 2010-11 0 0 6 10 34 50 4.56 0.70 91.2% 13.9% 2009-10 0 1 1 10 19 31 4.52 0.71
currently serves as the Executive Director of the West Texas Office of Evaluation and Re- search. She has a Bachelor of Science degree in Mathematics from Texas Tech University and a Master of Science degree in Statistics from SMU.Mrs. Krystal E. Thomasson, Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi Krystal Thomasson was born and raised in Corpus Christi, TX. She earned her Bachelor’s Degree in Liberal Arts, with an emphasis in Communication, from Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi in 2007. Krystal worked with the local ABC affiliate news station KIII-TV3 until 2010 when she was hired as a Program Coordinator for the College of Science & Engineering at her Alma Mater. She has coordi- nated many grant programs
of Global Engineering & Technology, Southco Inc.16. Thomas, A., “Encouraging students in the STEM classroom through Making,” Maker Education, edutopia, September 7, 2012. http://www.edutopia.org/17. Kirk, B. J., “STEM graduation rates show uphill battle with math and science in School District,” December 5, 2011. http://technical.ly/philly/series/state-of-stem18. Landivar, L. C., “Disparities in STEM employment by sex, race, and Hispanic origin,” United States Census Bureau, Report ACS-24, September 2013.19. Rotherham, A. J., “The next great resource shortage: U.S. scientists,” Time Magazine, May 26, 2011. http://content.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,2074024,00.html20. “Talking points: museums, libraries, and
Paper ID #20381Extended Faculty Development Effort Based on Faculty NeedsDr. Shane A. Brown P.E., Oregon State University Shane Brown is an associate professor and Associate School Head in the School of Civil and Environmen- tal Engineering at Oregon State University. His research interests include conceptual change and situated cognition. He received the NSF CAREER award in 2010 and is working on a study to characterize prac- ticing engineers’ understandings of core engineering concepts. He is a Senior Associate Editor for the Journal of Engineering Education.Mr. Matthew Stephen Barner, Oregon State University M.S
VEX Robotics program. After graduation, Brianna plans to continue her academic studies in trans- portation engineering to earn a Master’s and eventually a Ph.D. She stated that conducting undergraduate research has opened her eyes to so many possibilities of what she could do with her future.Dr. Oludare Adegbola Owolabi, Morgan State University Dr. Oludare Owolabi, a professional engineer in Maryland, joined the Morgan State University fac- ulty in 2010. He is the assistant director of the Center for Advanced Transportation and Infrastructure Engineering Research (CATIER) at Morgan State University and the director of the Civil Engineering Undergraduate Laboratory. He has over eighteen years of experience in practicing
Professional Standards Commission/Council for the Accreditation of Educator Preparation. Her teaching experience spans across secondary, adult, technical and higher education. She has presented at state, regional, national and international conferences and has several publications. She has served on ac- creditation committees, K-12 school committees and local community boards and received and managed over two million dollars in federal grants. In addition, Dr. Mosley serves on state and national committees for teacher education.Dr. Mir M. Hayder, Savannah State University Dr. Hayder is an Associate Professor in the Department of Engineering Technology at Savannah State Uni- versity, GA. He received PhD in Mechanical
+ ݉ሺݐሻሿ cosሺ2ߨ݂ ݐሻ, (1)where Ac is the carrier amplitude, m(t) is the arbitrary message signal, and fc is the carrierfrequency. As a result of the modulation property of the Fourier transform, the signal spectrumis given by ܣ ܵሺ݂ሻ = ሾߜሺ݂ − ݂ ሻ + ߜሺ݂ + ݂ ሻሿ + ܯሺ݂ − ݂ ሻ + ܯሺ݂ + ݂ ሻ, (2) 2where the carrier spectrum is composed of two Dirac delta functions at ±fc and the messagesignal spectrum is translated to ±fc.Creation of the AM waveform of Equation (1) can be realized in a three-step process depicted infigure 1. Nonlinear Device
transferring information signals to the amplitude of ahigh-frequency continuous-wave carrier. The modulated AM waveform can be described by ݏሺݐሻ = ሾܣ + ݉ሺݐሻሿ cosሺ2ߨ݂ ݐሻ, (1)where Ac is the carrier amplitude, m(t) is the arbitrary message signal, and fc is the carrierfrequency. As a result of the modulation property of the Fourier transform, the signal spectrumis given by ܣ ܵሺ݂ሻ = ሾߜሺ݂ − ݂ ሻ + ߜሺ݂ + ݂ ሻሿ + ܯሺ݂ − ݂ ሻ + ܯሺ݂ + ݂ ሻ, (2) 2where the carrier spectrum is composed of two Dirac delta functions at ±fc and the messagesignal spectrum is translated to ±fc.Creation of the AM
multiple teaching and advising awards including the COE Excellence in Teaching Award (2008, 2014), UIC Teaching Recognitions Award (2011), and the COE Best Advisor Award (2009, 2010, 2013). Dr. Darabi has been the Technical Chair for the UIC Annual Engineering Expo for the past 5 years. The Annual Engineering Expo is a COE’s flagship event where all senior students showcase their Design projects and products. More than 600 participants from public, industry and academia attend this event annually. Dr. Darabi is an ABET IDEAL Scholar and has led the MIE Department ABET team in two successful ac- creditations (2008 and 2014) of Mechanical Engineering and Industrial Engineering programs. Dr. Darabi has been the
Paper ID #20575 she became the Program Manager for Assessment & Retention for the College of Engineering, coordinat- ing assessment and accreditation efforts for 12 ABET-accredited undergraduate programs and an ACCE accredited program. She created the Academic Center for Engineers (ACE) in the Spring of 2013 to provide tutoring support for engineering courses. She was promoted to Associate Director for Assess- ment & Retention Projects in July 2015. Kristin has completed Drexel’s Supervisory Certificate Program and ABET’s IDEAL Scholar program and is currently working toward completion of an M.S. in Human Resource Development and a second Bachelor’s in Anthropology. She is a member of ASEE and SHRM.Mr. Kevin
University Program at https://www.altera.com/support/training/university/overview.html. 2010.[16] XilinxU. Xilinx University Program at http://www.xilinx.com/support/university.html. 2010.[17] M.D. Takach and A.T. Moser. Improving an introductory course on digital logic. In Frontiers in Education Conference, 1995. Proceedings., 1995, volume 2, pages 4b6.1 –4b6.2, 1-4 1995.[18] Yi Zhu, T. Weng, and Chung-Kuan Cheng. Enhancing learning effectiveness in digital design courses through the use of programmable logic boards. Education, IEEE Transactions on, 52(1):151 –156, feb. 2009. URL http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpls/abs_all.jsp?arnumber=4696063&tag=1.[19] Guoping Wang. Bridging the gap between textbook and real applications: A teaching
(2008, 2014), UIC Teaching Recognitions Award (2011), and the COE Best Advisor Award (2009, 2010, 2013). Dr. Darabi has been the Technical Chair for the UIC Annual Engineering Expo for the past 5 years. The Annual Engineering Expo is a COE’s flagship event where all senior students showcase their Design projects and products. More than 600 participants from public, industry and academia attend this event annually. Dr. Darabi is an ABET IDEAL Scholar and has led the MIE Department ABET team in two successful ac- creditations (2008 and 2014) of Mechanical Engineering and Industrial Engineering programs. Dr. Darabi has been the lead developer of several educational software systems as well as the author of multiple ed
Paper ID #19712When to Provide Feedback? Exploring Human-Co-Robot Interactions in En-gineering EnviromentsChristian Enmanuel Lopez, The Pennsylvania State University Christian Lopez Bencosme, is currently a Ph.D. student at Harold and Inge Marcus Department of Indus- trial and Manufacturing Engineering at the Pennsylvania State University. He has worked as an Industrial Engineer in both the Service and Manufacturing sectors before pursuing his Ph.D. His current research focused on the design and optimization of systems and intelligent assistive technologies through the ac- quisition, integration, and mining of large
Conference of American Society of Engineering Education, San Antonio, Texas.43. Shah, J. J., Vargas-Hernandez, N., & Smith, S. M. (2003). Metrics for measuring ideation effectiveness. Design Studies, 24(2), 111–134.44. Daly, S. R., Yilmaz, S., Seifert, C. M., & Gonzalez, R. (2010). Cognitive Heuristics Use in Engineering Design Ideation. Paper presented at the Proceedings of the American Society for Engineering Education (AC 2010-1032). Washington, DC.45. Yilmaz, S., Daly, S. R., Christian, J. L., Seifert, C. M., & Gonzalez, R. (2013). Can experienced designers learn from new tools? A case study of idea generation in a professional engineering team. International Journal of Design Creativity and Innovation.46. Yilmaz, S
Regions. Environmental Engineering Science. 34 (1), 16-41.4. National Academy of Sciences, National Academy of Engineering, Institute of Medicine. 2010. Rising Above the Gathering Storm, Revisited. Rapidly Approaching Category 5. National Academies Press. Washington D.C.5. Cech, E. 2014. Culture of Disengagement in Engineering Education? Science, Technology, and Human Values, 39 (1): 42-72.6. Canney, N., A. Bielefeldt. 2015. Gender Differences in the Social Responsibility Attitudes of Engineering Students and How they Change over Time. Journal of Women and Minorities in Science and Engineering. 21 (3), 215-237.7. Bielefeldt, A.R., N. Canney. 2016. Relationships between Religion, Spirituality and Socially Responsible
National Agency of Research-ANR-. Authors would like tothank Mr. Ismail Mansour, for the web development tasks of this solution and Mr. SylvainCerny for the 3D virtual environment development.References [1] C. L. Dym, A. M. Agogino, O. Eris, D. D. Frey, and L. J. Leifer, “Engineering design thinking, teaching, and learning,” Journal of Engineering Education, vol. 94, no. 1, pp. 103–120, 2005. [2] D. D. Walden and G. J. Roedler, INCOSE Systems Engineering Handbook: A Guide for System Life Cycle Processes and Activities. no: Wiley, 4 ed., 2015. [3] C. S. Wasson, “Ac 2012-3389: System engineering competency: The missing course in engineering educa- tion,” INCOSE International Symposium Journal, vol. 20, no. 1, p. 21–36, 2010. [4] G.-S
50% 10% 40% 9. First Order Circuits and Oscilloscopes 30% 70% 10. First Order Time Domain Simulation 60% 40% 11. Complex Numbers, Phasors and MATLAB 100% 12. Phasor Nodal, Mesh and MATLAB 100% 13. Measuring AC Circuits 20% 80% 14. Intro to Microcontrollers 30% 50% 20% 15. Frequency Selective Circuits 30% 30% 10% 30%3
epistemology development students.Dr. Nicole P. Pitterson, Oregon State University Nicole is a postdoctoral scholar at Oregon State University. She holds a PhD in Engineering Education from Purdue University and other degrees in Manufacturing Engineering from Western Illinois Univer- sity and a B.Sc. in Electrical and Electronic Engineering from the University of Technology, Jamaica. Her research interest is eliciting conceptual understanding of AC circuit concepts using active learning strategies.Dr. Shane A. Brown P.E., Oregon State University Shane Brown is an associate professor and Associate School Head in the School of Civil and Environmen- tal Engineering at Oregon State University. His research interests include