AC 2011-280: A MODEL FOR INITIATING ABET-ACCREDITED ENGI-NEERING DEGREE PROGRAMS USING DISTANCE EDUCATIONDarrin S. Muggli, Benedictine College Dr. Muggli is a Professor and Chair of the Engineering Department at Benedictine College. Previously, he was a Professor in the Department of Chemical Engineering at the University of North Dakota, where he taught both traditional and distance courses for ten years. Dr. Muggli received his Ph.D. from the University of Colorado at Boulder in 1998. He has taught a broad range of chemical engineering and foundational general engineering courses.Brian Tande, University of North Dakota Brian Tande is an assistant professor in the Department of Chemical Engineering at the
system starting with the panel to end user arevirtually absent in the literature. Many courses across the nation are ME courses that focus moreon solar radiation and the thermal aspect. A few EE courses devote about fifty percent of thecourse to semiconductors and the remaining to system hardware. The fundamentals of the systemcomponents are covered in other courses in EE curriculum and no focus on integration to solarconversion is presented. However this approach needs serious revision in view of the importanceand national focus on harnessing alternate energy, and the need for graduates trained in this field.In the design of the proposed course materials, emphasis will be placed on the hardware designstarting from the solar panel output to end
interests include Robotics, Vibrations, Controls Systems, Internet-based Quality Control, and Renewable Energy Systems. Page 22.515.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2011 E-Quality Control Method for Measuring Solar Cell EfficiencyAbstractRecent results of laboratory and course development under an NSF, CCLI sponsored project,“CCLI Phase II: E-Quality for Manufacturing (EQM) Integrated with Web-enabled ProductionSystems for Engineering Technology Education” (NSF Award # 0618665) are presented. Thispaper discusses an educational effort that incorporates Renewable Energy in a senior
mounting a campaign to a) take computer science to the high schools, b)increase the visibility of computing as a career, and c) develop curriculum and studies on how toconvey an appealing message that describes the opportunities and challenges of the field24.Compounding this problem is the fact that once we have prospective majors in the classroom,their prospects for success are not great. Low enrollments and high DFW rates are obviouslyconnected. Although computer science advocates claim computer science is not about mindless Page 22.985.6abstract programming done by lone hackers late at night, that is almost exactly what mostintroductory
, we report on the creation of the DLCI, particularly the public Page 22.142.2dissemination of version β1.0 at several institutions. The construction and dissemination of theDLCI were supported through funding under the Course, Curriculum, and LaboratoryImprovement Program of the National Science Foundation. To maintain the integrity of the instrument, we do not provide the whole DLCI. The DLCI isavailable only by request to the authors.2. Background To better explain the purpose of the DLCI, we first define what a CI is and what it is not. A CI is a short, multiple-choice test that can classify a student as someone who thinks in
AC 2011-1091: ENGINEERING EDUCATION RESEARCH TO PRACTICE(E2R2P)Steven W. Villachica, Boise State University Steven W. Villachica, PhD, CPT, is an Associate Professor of Instructional and Performance Technology (IPT) at Boise State. His research interests focus on leveraging expertise in the workplace. A frequent conference presenter and author, Steve co-authored a chapters on cognitive task analysis and performance support systems that appears in the Handbook of Human Performance Technology and the Handbook of Training and Improving Workplace Performance: Volume 1. Instructional Design and Training Deliv- ery. A certified performance technologist, he completed his doctorate in educational technology at the
AC 2011-1328: ISES A LONGITUDINAL STUDY TO MEASURE THE IM-PACTS OF SERVICE ON ENGINEERING STUDENTSChristopher W. Swan, Tufts University Chris Swan is an associate professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering with additional appoint- ments in the Jonathan M. Tisch College of Citizenship and Public Service and the Center for Engineering Education and Outreach at Tufts University. Dr. Swan has also served as chair of Tufts CEE depart- ment (2002-2007) and as an officer in the Environmental Engineering division of ASEE (2001-2005). Dr. Swan’s current interests lie in the areas of waste reuse, and service-based educational efforts in the engineering curriculum. Specific efforts involving engineering education concern
and encouraged. Group study sessions willbe held the evening before exams and the student groups are not allowed access to the devicesduring those periods or the exams.Although the entire point of this project is to create an integrated learning environment thatfosters inclusiveness and improves learning outcomes and success for all students, but especiallyfor women and students from other underrepresented groups, we know that providing additionalopportunities for outreach in materials engineering education is also important. The applicationswill be placed on the Apple Applications store for free as soon as they are robust enough to doso. If our project is successful and has the intended outcomes, it is intended that the applicationsbe
theundergraduate engineering curriculum are: (1) an authentic performance task in the form of ascenario and prompts to elicit the ABET professional skills; (2) establishment of initial reliabilityand validity of the measurement instrument – the Engineering Professional Skills Rubric (EPSRubric) (Appendix A); and (3) a dedicated community of 40+ engineering faculty using directassessment to evaluate the efficacy of their own programs, and to plan and implementimprovement at both course and program levels.The EPSA method is a discussion-based performance task designed to elicit students’ knowledgeand application of the ABET professional skills. In a 45-minute session, small groups of studentsare presented with a complex, real-world scenario that includes
of this project, a map of coalition campus locations throughout thestate of Pennsylvania is shown in Figure 1, below. The interventions initiated by Toys’n MOREare being administered at 15 of these regional campuses. The University Park campus is thelargest campus and the administrative home of the University and the Toys’n MORE project.With close to 18,000 STEM students enrolled full and part-time at these geographically-dispersed locations, the regional coalition campuses are an integral part of the Penn State system. Figure 1: Regional Coalition Campus Locations across Pennsylvania.Collectively, the participating regional coalition campuses offer 32 associate degrees and 26baccalaureate STEM degrees in majors such as biology
and testing assessments and curriculum materials for engineering design and professional skills, especially for use in capstone engineering design courses. He has been a Fellow of the American Society for Engineering Education since 2002.Steven W. Beyerlein, University of Idaho, Moscow Dr. Beyerlein serves as the coordinator for an inter-disciplinary capstone design course in the College of Engineering at the University of Idaho. In this endeavor, he collaborates with five other colleagues from the departments of Mechanical Engineering, Electrical Engineering, Computer Engineering, Biological Engineering, and Computer Science. He is engaged in multiple research projects associated with engine testing, alternative