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Displaying results 9541 - 9570 of 43018 in total
Conference Session
Successful Outcomes of Student Entrepreneurship
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Jay Porter, Texas A&M University; Joseph Morgan, Texas A&M University; Richard Scruggs, Texas A&M University
Tagged Divisions
Entrepreneurship & Engineering Innovation
and Industrial Distribution Department in 1989 and has served as the Program Director of the Electronics and Telecommunications Programs and as the Associate Department Head for Operations. He received his BS degree in electrical engineering (1975) from California State University, Sacramento, and his MS (1980) and DE (1983) degrees in industrial engineering from Texas A&M University. His education and research interests include project management, innovation and entrepreneurship, and embedded product/system development.Richard Scruggs, Texas A&M University Richard M. Scruggs is the director of Mays Business School's Center for New Ventures and Entrepreneurship at Texas A&M
Conference Session
Engineering Economy -- The Introductory Course
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Joseph Hartman, University of Florida
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Economy
of tactics in order to be efficient with my large class, as well as trying to promote alearning environment. From that information, I found the following to be most useful whenteaching the large class: • Detailed syllabus: The entire course was laid out on the syllabus, including daily lectures, dates of exams, and project due dates. This is clearly the benefit of having taught the course numerous times. It helped alleviate problems with absences before they were to occur (i.e., student travel for job interviews). • Homework: Homework was assigned weekly. From this set of problems, a subset was collected and a further subset (often only one problem) was graded (and the others were merely checked to
Conference Session
Improving ME Education: Trends in Mechanical Engineering I
Collection
2007 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Matthew Knudson, Oregon State University; John Schmitt, Oregon State University
Tagged Divisions
Mechanical Engineering
AC 2007-1918: MENTOR GRAPHICS’ SYSTEMVISION SOFTWARECURRICULUM INTEGRATIONMatthew Knudson, Oregon State University Matt Knudson is a second-year graduate student at Oregon State University. He received his B.S. in Electronics Engineering in 2005 from OSU and is currently working on his Ph.D. in Mechanical Engineering with a graduate minor in Computer Science. His research is in advanced system dynamics and intelligent control systems. Matt has designed and executed computer aided design projects for four academic terms of introductory system dynamics and control and is scheduled to teach introductory mechatronics Spring of 2007 at OSU. Matt currently mentors two senior design teams, one
Conference Session
Innovations in Mechanical Engineering Experiments and Labs
Collection
2007 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Nebojsa Jaksic, Colorado State University-Pueblo; Dawn Spencer, Colorado State University-Pueblo
Tagged Divisions
Division Experimentation & Lab-Oriented Studies
Page 12.229.2and all produce similar results, an organized project type where the instructions are not preciseand allow for some creativity, an open-ended project type where the course instructor has areasonable knowledge of the final outcome, or research where neither the students nor theinstructor know the final outcome of the experiments. Often, open-ended projects are used aspowerful pedagogical tools for discovery-based learning. To minimize the time to buildprototypes and to minimize the cost of such projects by using low-cost plastic parts andenforcing reusability of parts, many instructors adopted LEGO bricks and LEGO computerizedsystems as educational tools. There are hundreds of papers describing the use of LEGO bricks inengineering
Conference Session
ECE Poster Session
Collection
2007 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Doug Sterk, Virginia Tech; Tim Thacker, Virginia Tech; Elizabeth Tranter, Virginia Tech; Richard Goff, Virginia Tech; Janis Terpenny, Virginia Tech
Tagged Divisions
Electrical and Computer
for Louis Stokes Alliance for Minority Participation(LSAMP) Scholars at the Center for Power Electronic Systems (CPES) at Virginia Tech.The REU program “supports active research participation by undergraduate students in any ofthe areas of research funded by the National Science Foundation. REU projects involve studentsin meaningful ways in ongoing research programs or in research projects designed especially forthe purpose. […] Undergraduate student participants […] must be citizens or permanentresidents of the United States or its possessions.”1The CPES REU program seeks to: provide experiences, develop expertise in experimentallaboratory research among undergraduates prior to their senior year of undergraduate study, andto encourage
Conference Session
The Senior Experience: Capstone and Beyond
Collection
2006 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Jennifer Large Seagrave
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
curriculum capstone courses in Civil and other engineering disciplines attempt tofulfill a host of objectives. Most notably, they incorporate design projects and teamwork tofulfill specific criteria of the Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology (ABET).They provide their students with an opportunity for synthesis, employing the technical skills theyhave learned in the program, and introducing elements of professional practice that will easetheir integration into industry after graduation.In order to meet the needs industry has for young engineers, many universities have incorporatedmock corporate environments and real-world clients into the capstone course. Besides familiaritywith a team work environment and real clients, preparation for
Conference Session
NSF Grantees' Poster Session
Collection
2013 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Rebecca L. Damron, Oklahoma State University; Sohum A Sohoni, Arizona State University, Polytechnic campus; YoonJung Cho, Oklahoma State University; Kerri S Kearney, Oklahoma State University
Tagged Topics
NSF Grantees Poster Session
set of digital tools including asoftware development environment (IDE), an instruction set architecture (ISA), a referencedesign in Verilog reflecting a contemporary CPU architecture, and Verilog modules for input-output interfacing. In addition to the software and hardware, PLP provides curricular materialslike tutorials, projects, and quizzes. All parts of the system are open-source and publicly hosted;a public mailing list serves as a communication channel between users and developers of thesystem. PLP’s strengths are its vertical integration and ability to connect fundamentals likeprogramming and compiling with the underlying hardware.With an overarching system like PLP, different aspects are taught and used in different courses,and
Conference Session
Capstone Design
Collection
2013 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
David A Saftner, University of Minnesota Duluth; Sara D. Ojard, University of Minnesota Duluth; Eshan V. Dave, University of Minnesota, Duluth; Nathan William Johnson, University of Minnesota Duluth; Eil Kwon; Rebecca Teasley, Civil Engineering University of Minnesota Duluth
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education
a New ProgramABSTRACTThe University of Minnesota Duluth’s Department of Civil Engineering accepted its firststudents in 2008, graduated its first class in 2012, and first offered a capstone design course inthe spring semester, 2012. Groups of five to six students designed a building on a local site.Students organized their teams based on interest in a particular branch of civil engineering,allowing individual students to focus their efforts on a particular subject. Based on feedbackfrom faculty, practicing engineers, and students, several changes were implemented prior to thefall 2012 semester. These changes included making the group size smaller, modifying the gradedsubmissions, and changing the project location. Most significantly, the
Conference Session
Partnerships in IE Education
Collection
2003 Annual Conference
Authors
Susan Griffin; Paul Griffin; Donna Llewellyn
The Impact of Group Size and Course Lengthon a Capstone Design CoursePaul M. Griffin¹, Susan O. Griffin and Donna C. Llewellyn²¹School of Industrial and Systems Engineering²Center for Excellence in Teaching and LearningGeorgia Institute of TechnologyAtlanta, GA 30332January 15, 2003AbstractIn the spring semester of 2003, the School of Industrial Engineering at Georgia Tech ranan experimental one-semester version of their capstone course, Senior Design. Thestandard version is two semesters in the length, and the purpose of the experiment was tocompare the marginal benefit of the second semester for the student (and project sponsor)to the cost of running the second semester in terms of faculty and sponsor resources. Inaddition, a survey was
Conference Session
Engineering / Education Collaborations
Collection
2003 Annual Conference
Authors
Steve Shooter; Micheal Hanyak; Matt Higgins; Marie Wagner; Ed Mastascusa; Dan Hyde; Brian Hoyt; Bill Snyder; Michael Prince
Session 3531 Engineering Engineering Education A Conceptual Framework for Supporting Faculty in Adopting Collaborative Learning Brian Hoyt, Michael Prince, Steve Shooter, Michael Hanyak, , E.J. Mastascusa, William Snyder, T. Michael Toole, Mathew Higgins, Daniel C. Hyde, Marie Wagner, Margot Vigeant Bucknell UniversityAbstractOver the last three years, nearly a quarter of Bucknell’s engineering faculty haveparticipated in Project Catalyst, a NSF funded project to promote systemic change
Conference Session
ASEE Multimedia Session
Collection
2003 Annual Conference
Authors
Steven Beyerlein; Michael Klein; Matt Walker; Kevin Organ; Dan Gerbus
(IEW) at the University ofIdaho is formed of a diverse group of graduate students whose purpose is to develop anenvironment that fosters professional as well as technical excellence. This paper analyzes theactions taken each year by IEW leading to the formation of well-trained, collaborative, and highly-reflective cohort of graduate students that support design education. This team is developedthrough directed study courses, team projects, personal reflections and monumental technical andinterpersonal challenges. Since 1994, IEW has been successful in delivering hardware thatexceeds expectations of industry customers, shortening time frames required for large-scaledesign projects, enriching senior design mentoring, and expanding the number of
Conference Session
Energy, the Environment, and Nano Technology
Collection
2012 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Dhananjay Kumar, North Carolina A&T State University; Devdas M. Pai, North Carolina A&T State University; Kwadwo Mensah-Darkwa; Robin Guill Liles, North Carolina A&T State University; Mainul Kader Faruque, North Carolina A&T State University; Courtney Lambeth, North Carolina A&T State University
Tagged Divisions
Multidisciplinary Engineering
laboratories. These efforts have been primarily supported by two successive NSF NanoUndergraduate Education (NUE) projects. Our first activity for enhancing nanoscience andnanoengineering education was to introduce simple concepts of nanoscience and technology intoexisting required undergraduate engineering courses. These modules covered the core conceptsof nanomaterials and unique phenomena at the nanoscale. Introducing the concepts ofnanoscience and engineering at this early stage of undergraduate education was found topositively impact student interest in registering for a technical elective nanotechnology coursethat we developed as our second initiative. An interdisciplinary 3-credit nanotechnology course(Nanotechnology I) with a significant hands
Conference Session
Curriculum in Mechanical Engineering Technology: Part II
Collection
2010 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
B. Sridhara, Middle Tennessee State University
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Technology
-on project and an industrial visit. The student teams are required to design, build and test aHelmholtz resonator. A Helmholtz resonator, which can be modeled as a spring-mass system,consists of a body (cavity) and a neck whose dimensions can be selected to tune the resonator torespond at a desired natural frequency. In the fall of 2007 student teams as well as the authorbuilt resonators using steel and aluminum. We used a laptop computer and a freeware (software)to test the resonators. The testing included pressing the resonator neck opening against our lowerlip and quickly blowing once and simultaneously recording the time domain data. The freewarewas useful in recording the time domain data but the frequency response was not good because
Conference Session
Undergraduate-Industry-Research Linkages
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
Clair Nixon
financial information ofthe aerospace industry and included analysis of specific aerospace projects. It wasassumed that the students had little to no prior exposure to basic business principles.Class exercises were used to determine the level of competency in applying thesebusiness principles to engineering problems. The design of the interview instrument usedin the Welliver Program was determined after the completion of this course and wasbased in part on the perceptions of the value of the information for these universitystudents. Further, multiple discussions were held with engineering and business faculty aswell as Boeing personnel prior to the final development of the interview instrument andthe start of the interview period. Over a
Conference Session
Research in Graphics Education
Collection
2010 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Derek Yip-Hoi, Western Washington University
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Design Graphics
-ended individual projects where students get to select a mechanism to modeland analyze are presented. In addition an overview of the strategy adopted and experiences inconducting a collaborative team project for creating a complex mechanism will be discussed.This strategy enables a realistic model of an assembly with over 100 components to be modeled,simulated and analyzed within a 10 week term.The paper concludes with a discussion of observations made on how students benefit from theinstruction, assignments and project work in this advanced area of CAD. This includes theirability to assimilate and apply both the mechanics and strategies of advanced assembly modelingand the challenges faced in collaboratively creating large
Conference Session
Forum for Nontraditional Engineering Programs
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Sanjay Raman
traditionalRF/microwave background). These tutorials will be discussed further below.The course fundamentally involves “hands-on” circuit design at the IC level; state-of-the-artcommercial RF/microwave CAD and layout software is used in conjunction with the course.The CAD environment will be discussed further below. The culmination of the course is amajor course design project involving the design and full-custom layout of a functionalblock/component RFIC for wireless communications applications. The project guidelines arepromulgated, and student design teams (typically 2-3 students per team) are assigned, ~10weeks into the semester; the projects are due at the end of the semester. Typically no finalexam is given, and the final design project report
Conference Session
Entrepreneurship & Engineering Innovation Division Technical Session 6
Collection
2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Andrew L. Gerhart, Lawrence Technological University; Donald D. Carpenter, Lawrence Technological University; Robert W. Fletcher, Lawrence Technological University; Eric G. Meyer, Lawrence Technological University
Tagged Divisions
Entrepreneurship & Engineering Innovation
Page 24.288.1 http://www.ltu.edu/engineering/experimental biomechanics lab.asp Dr. Meyer directs the Experimental Biomechanics Laboratory (EBL) at LTU with the goal to advance ex- perimental biomechanics understanding. He developed and teaches a number of courses in the Biomedical c American Society for Engineering Education, 2014 Paper ID #10438Engineering program, including; Introduction to Biomechanics, Biomechanics Lab, Tissue Mechanics,Medical Imaging, Orthopedics, BME Best Practices, Intro to BME, and Fundamentals of EngineeringDesign Projects. Recently, the EBL has partnered with ME and EE faculty to
Conference Session
BME Technical Modules and Laboratories
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
William Waugaman; Brian Self
focused primarily on physiology, the second on electrical engineering topics, and thethird on mechanics issues. At the end of the course, teams of students completed a final projectwhich focused on some type of control system within an aerospace cockpit. The teams had tocreate working hardware that collected some type of physiologic signal that would indicate pilotstressors, then determine some action based on these signals. Examples of projects includecollecting electro-oculography to determine if a pilot is spatially disoriented, usingelectromyography and heart rate to predict G- induced loss of consciousness, and using thermalsensors to help control pilot stress and over heating. The course content attempted to provide thestudents with
Conference Session
Lean Manufacturing and Integration
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
Michael Lobaugh
groups, once formed, go to the Champion’s industrial location for a tour to discussopportunities for improvement through lean practices. The groups follow the guidelines ofValue Stream Mapping1 to “map” the processes with the plant. The team then chooses one leanpractice within the plant to concentrate on, and analyzes the best methods for initiating changes.At the end of the course, each group presents their findings and turns in a written report coveringthe entire project. The “Champion” then has the opportunity to present the project paper to theirmanagement for review and possible implementation.Penn State Erie - The Behrend College is currently in the second year of teaching this course.Lean Manufacturing is offered only in the fall
Conference Session
Trends in Biological & Agricultural Engineering
Collection
2003 Annual Conference
Authors
Ron Lacey; Ann Kenimer
Session 2003-1240 Teaming Freshmen with Seniors in Design Ann Kenimer, Ronald Lacey Associate Professors, Biological and Agricultural Engineering, Texas A&M UniversityIntroductionThe Department of Biological and Agricultural Engineering at Texas A&M University offersdesign-focused courses for freshman and senior engineering students. The senior-level coursesconstitute the curriculum’s capstone design experience. Seniors work in teams of four to five on adesign project suggested by industry clients. Many of these same projects are used in the freshman
Collection
2001 Annual Conference
Authors
Walter E. Thain Jr.; Thomas Fallon
theoretical foundation intelecommunications.The five technical courses in the BSTCET degree are designed to teach students about suchtopics as communication protocols, wide- and local-area networks, managing network resources,Internet-related concepts and development, and network security issues. These courses aresupported by numerous hands-on laboratory experiences. The four management courses providestudents with the principles necessary to manage people and projects. This paper discusses issuesconsidered during the development of the program, classroom and laboratory curricula, problemsconfronting the program today, and assessment.I. IntroductionTremendous growth in the telecommunications industry has inspired a similar growth ineducation
Conference Session
Trends in Energy Conversion/Conservation
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Doug Ramers
Session 1346 An Undergraduate Research Experience in New Technology Commercialization of PEM Fuel Cells Doug Ramers University of North Carolina, CharlotteIn 1997, I was asked as a faculty member of Gonzaga University to participate on a project todevelop a commercializable polymer exchange membrane fuel cell (PEMFC) technology forpower plants in the 1-10kw range. The project was managed, sponsored, and funded jointly byWashington Water Power (WWP) and the Spokane Intercollegiate Research and TechnologyInstitute (SIRTI). Our Gonzaga engineering team, which
Conference Session
First-year Programs Division Poster Session
Collection
2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Lisa A. Pruitt, University of California, Berkeley
Tagged Divisions
First-Year Programs
California at San Francisco, School of Medicine, San Francisco, CA, 2001-present Adjunct Professor of Orthopaedic Surgery, 2001- present Research is focused on structureproperty relationships in orthopedic tissues, biomaterials and medical polymers. Current projects include the assessment of fatigue fracture mechanisms and tribological per- formance of orthopedic biomaterials, as well as characterization of tissues and associated devices. Surface modifications using plasma chemistry are used to optimize polymers for medical applications. Attention is focused on wear, fatigue, fracture and multiaxial loading. Retrievals of orthopedic implants are char- acterized to model in vivo degradation and physiological loading
Conference Session
Capstone Courses and Design Education
Collection
2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Bobby G. Crawford, U.S. Military Academy
Tagged Divisions
Mechanical Engineering
American Society for Engineering Education, 2011 Undergraduate Capstone Design: Inductively EnhancedAbstractThe Department of Civil and Mechanical Engineering at the United States Military Academy atWest Point, New York requires its graduates to complete an integrative, year-long capstonedesign during their senior year. One of the capstone projects available to the mechanicalengineering students in the department’s aerospace sub-discipline requires the design,construction, testing, and demonstration of a small, highly autonomous Uninhabited AerialVehicle (UAV) for a Department of Defense client. This particular project was added to the listof available capstone options in the fall of 2005
Conference Session
From Entrepreneurship Education to Market
Collection
2012 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Donte Harris, Southern Illinois university Edwardsville; Sohyung Cho, Southern Illinois University, Edwardsville; H. Felix Lee, Southern Illinois University, Edwardsville; Kevin M. Hubbard, Southern Illinois University, Edwardsville; Luis T. Youn, Southern Illinois University, Edwardsville
Tagged Divisions
Entrepreneurship & Engineering Innovation
Advanced Manufacturing (SIAM) Center at Southern Illinois University, Edwardsville. Hubbard has worked in the field of manu- facturing engineering for 20 years, and has conducted more than 120 research projects for manufacturing and technical enterprises across the United States.Dr. Luis T. Youn Page 25.418.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2012 Developing a State-of-Art Supply Chain Test-bed for Engineering Education and Research Donte J Harris, Sohyung Cho, H. Felix Lee, Kevin Hubbard, and Luis Youn School
Conference Session
Mechanics Concepts II
Collection
2012 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Sinead C. Mac Namara, Syracuse University
Tagged Divisions
Mechanics
AC 2012-4322: THE DESIGN COMPETITION AS A TOOL FOR TEACH-ING STATICSDr. Sinead C. Mac Namara, Syracuse University Page 25.1283.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2012 The Design Competition as a Tool for Teaching Statics.1. IntroductionThis paper describes ongoing efforts at Syracuse University to re-engineer the traditionalstatics course. This course forms part of a larger NSF funded project aimed at increasinginnovation and creativity in engineering curricula. The principal aim of the overallproject is to find strategies to foster and reward creativity in engineering students.This study examines a design
Collection
2000 Annual Conference
Authors
Jeremy Koczenasz; Bradley Bashford; Anil Sawhney; Andre Mund
Session 3226 Internet-Based Interactive Construction Management Learning System Anil Sawhney, Jeremy Koczenasz, Brad Bashford, and André Mund Arizona State UniversityAbstractThe Del E. Webb School of Construction is currently involved in a three-year project aimed atenhancing the construction management education. The primary undertaking of this project—in itssecond year—is to incorporate practical content in the construction curricula thus bridging the gapbetween the classroom and the construction
Collection
1998 Annual Conference
Authors
Robert Knecht; Randal Ford
applications.Central to the curriculum is a project which requires teams to make decisions based onassumptions and constraints imposed by the problem, situation and client. This project providesan opportunity to exercise both creative thinking (brain storming and data gathering) and criticalthinking (technical assessment and economic analysis). Teams assess various design parametersto develop the “best” solution through evaluation, analysis and synthesis of alternatives. Second -Year Students Propose A ProjectSecond-year students proposed to the Director of Design (EPICS) that they use their production Page 3.224.1of The Music Man as a
Collection
1998 Annual Conference
Authors
Gulcin Cribb
"students will be more responsible for their learning. The highlystructured and prescriptive nature of traditional undergraduate courses in engineering willbe replaced by programs affording greater freedom of choice." Project-based, problem-based or inquiry-based education encourages the shift in ownership of the educationprocess from staff to students, from teacher to learner. Dependence on reading lists, oneor two text books, lecture notes and the pearls of wisdom coming from the teacher do notallow students to take responsibility for their own learning, rather, it restricts their abilityto be independent seekers of information and knowledge and to be able to solve problemson their own in a creative and independent way.Engineering education, like
Collection
1997 Annual Conference
Authors
Kirk E. Hiles; David L. Walters; Vincent Wilczynski
courses "Mechanical Control of Dynamic Systems" and"Experimental Methods in Thermal and Fluids Sciences" is to use design projects to demonstratephenomena and solve problems. A unique project, involving having students design a bungee cord tominimize the distance from the ground that an attached egg reaches when released from a distance of 35feet above the ground. In the mechanical controls class, the students design the bungee cord system andin the experimentation course, the bungee cord's characteristics are determined and the experiments isconducted. Since the project includes mathematical modeling, numerical methods solutions ofdifferential equations, design, system response, and the collection and analysis of experimental data, theexercise