AC 2010-799: INVOLVING HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS IN CONSTRUCTINGAND USING DEVICES FOR AUTOMATION OF CHEMISTRY LABORATORYIgor Verner, Technion-Israel Institute of Technology Igor M. Verner is Associate Professor and Coordinator of Technology Education at the Department of Education in Technology and Science, Technion – Israel Institute of Technology. He received the M.S. degree in Mathematics from the Urals State University and the Ph.D. in computer aided design systems in manufacturing from the Urals State Technical University, Yekaterinburg, Russia. His research interests are in engineering education with emphasis on experiential learning in technological environments, educational robotics
University, where she also serves as director of the Usability Lab. Dr. Zhang holds a Ph.D. and an M.S. in informatio ©American Society for Engineering Education, 2024 Preparing Undergraduate Data Scientists for Success in the Workplace: Aligning Competencies with Job Requirements1. Introduction The increased use of Data Science technologies, particularly artificial intelligence andmachine learning has caused an increase in demand for skilled Data Science professionals[1,2,3]. This demand is driven by the rising dependence of businesses on these technologies toinform strategic decisions [1,2,3]. The Data Science domain is multidisciplinary, encompassingskill sets, including statistics
Paper ID #17653Developing Custom Hardware to Teach Digital Design Courses: Added Valueor Added Headache?Prof. Kevin P. Pintong, Oregon Institute of Technology Kevin Pintong is an assistant professor at Oregon Institute of Technology in Klamath Falls, Oregon.Mr. Alexander Hogen, Oregon Institute of Technology Alexander Hogen is a Firmware Engineer. He has been a user, tester, and creator of hardware platforms for education at Oregon Institute of Technology. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2017Developing Custom Hardware to Teach Digital Design Courses: Added Value or
Paper ID #15445MAKER: A Braille ClockSaneela Rabbani, Vaughn College of Aeronautics and Technology Saneela Rabbani is a senior in Mechatronics Engineering at Vaughn College of Aeronautics and Tech- nology. She is the secretary of the Society of Women Engineers, Vaughn Chapter and secretary of the Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Club. She is a Tutor and Laboratory Technician at Vaughn College. She dis- covered her passion for teaching at an early age and aspires to obtain her graduate degrees in the field of Engineering and teach on a collegiate level.Mr. Josiah David D’Arrigo, Vaughn College of Aeronautics and Technology I am
Paper ID #8423A Real-Time Model to Assess Student Engagement during Interaction withIntelligent Educational AgentsMs. LaVonda N. Brown, Georgia Institute of Technology LaVonda Brown received her B.S. (2010) in Electronics Engineering from Norfolk State University and M.S. (2012) in Electrical and Computer Engineering from Georgia Institute of Technology. She is cur- rently pursuing a Ph.D. at the GT Human-Automation Systems (HumAnS) Lab. Her research interests include engagement, educational robotics, and socially interactive robots.Dr. Ayanna M Howard, Georgia Institute of Technology
Paper ID #36244Determination of hBN thickness by optical contrastTedi Qafko, Wentworth Institute of TechnologyMr. Trevyn LarsonDr. Andrew Michael Seredinski, Wentworth Institute of Technology Andrew Seredinski is an Assistant Professor of Physics at the Wentworth Institute of Technology in Boston, MA. He completed his PhD in Physics at Duke University in 2020. His research interests are in van der Waals materials, superconductivity, nanoscience, and physics education. American c Society for Engineering Education, 2022 Determination of hBN Thickness by Optical
Paper ID #16243Shaping New Student Identity as ”Creatives” in the 21st Century GlobalEconomyDr. David Brookstein, Temple College of Engineering Dr. David Brookstein is Professor of Mechanical Engineering and Associate Dean for Undergraduate Affairs. He is a Fellow of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers and has 12 U.S. patents. DEGREES Doctor of Science in Field of Mechanical Engineering, MIT, 1976 Master of Science in Textile Technology, MIT, 1973 Bachelor of Textile Engineering, Georgia Tech, 1971Dr. David Brookstein, Temple University David Brookstein is Associate Dean for Undergraduate Affairs and Professor of
Paper ID #20406Adaptive Comparative Judgment in Graphics Applications and EducationDr. Scott R. Bartholomew, Purdue University I have instructed classes related to all CTE areas at the Junior High, High School, and College Level over the past 10 years. In addition to research activities I enjoying working with future and current Engi- neering/Technology Teachers. My interests revolve around adaptive comparative judgment, engineering design, teacher training, self-directed learning, and mobile devices in K-12 classrooms.Dr. Patrick E. Connolly, Purdue University, West Lafayette (College of Engineering) Dr. Patrick Connolly
articles in pedagogics and psychology. Research interest include the possibility of the use of the functional approach to the analysis and design of multi-level system of training of professionals, and also points of contact of competence-based and functional approach from the perspective of activity-based concept.Dr. Galina Romanova, Kazan National Research Technological University Dr. Galina Romanova is a researcher in the field of engineering education and applied learning theory. She was graduated in 2002 from the State Pedagogical University of Kazan. During her doctoral research Galina Romanova continued to investigate learning theories in engineering and teaching ESL. In 2006, she was awarded her PhD on the topic
Paper ID #38228Building Capacity: Enhancing Undergraduate STEMEducation by Improving Transfer SuccessPamela Ann BrownMelanie Villatoro (Associate professor) Melanie Villatoro is an Associate Professor and Chairperson of the Department of Construction Management and Civil Engineering Technology at City Tech. Prof. Villatoro holds a Bachelors of Engineering degree from The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art, and a Masters of Science degree in Geotechnical Engineering from Columbia University. She is a licensed Professional Engineer in the state of New York. Prof. Villatoro is passionate about
AC 2010-1436: REMOTE USE OF A LINEAR AXIS RAPID DEVELOPMENTSYSTEMLie Tang, Missouri University of Science and TechnologyRobert Landers, Missouri University of Science and Technology Page 15.1027.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2010 Remote Use of a Linear Axis Rapid Development SystemAbstractA Linear Axis Rapid Development System (RDS) was developed and tested in a previousresearch study. The Linear Axis RDS, which is based on Matlab Simulink, provides the studentwith a tool to explore all phases of controller development (i.e., simulation, emulation, andimplementation) after the theoretical work is complete. However, the Linear Axis RDS did notprovide
research focuses on storage security, applied cryptography, and security aspects of wireless networks. He is a member of the ACM and the IEEE Computer Society.Dr. John D. Carpinelli, New Jersey Institute of Technology Dr. John D. Carpinelli is a Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering and Executive Director of the Center for Pre-College Programs at the New Jersey Institute of Technology. He has served as coordinator of activities at NJIT for the Gateway Engineering Education Coalition and as a member of the Coalition’s Governing Board. He previously chaired NJIT’s Excellence in Teaching Awards Committee and is Past Chair of the University Master Teacher Committee.Dr. Linda S. Hirsch, New Jersey Institute of
Paper ID #37360Instructing First-Year Engineering Students on the Ethics ofAlgorithms through a Role-PlayAshish Hingle Ashish Hingle (he/his/him) is a Ph.D. student in the College of Engineering & Computing at George Mason University. His research interests include technology ethics, information systems, and student efficacy challenges in higher education.Aditya Johri (Professor)Cory Brozina (Assistant Professor and Director of First Year Engineering) Dr. Cory Brozina is the Associate Chair for the Rayen School of Engineering at Youngstown State University. © American Society for
AC 2008-2821: THE INDO-US ENGINEERING FACULTY INSTITUTES - AMODEL FOR INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATIONKrishna Vedula, University of Massachusetts-LowellHans Hoyer, American Society for Engineering Education Page 13.1240.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2008 Indo US Engineering Faculty Leadership Institute Summer 2008 May 26 to June 13 & June 30 to July 18, 2008 Global Education Center, Infosys Technologies Ltd., Mysore FACULTY DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMMES Offered by Indo US Collaboration for Engineering Education (IUCEE) Information Brochure
AC 2007-3125: DEMONSTRATING CONSTRUCTION PRODUCTIVITYKris Mattila, Michigan Technological UniversityKe Li, Michican Technological UniversityJames Pocock, U.S. Air Force Academy Page 12.444.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2007 Demonstrating Construction Productivity Kris G. Mattilaa, Ke Lia, and James Pocockb a Michigan Technological University/bUnited States Air Force AcademyAbstractFor many construction estimating and scheduling activities, it is generally accepted that twoworkers can perform a given task twice as fast as one worker. Similarly, four workers canperform the same task in a quarter of the time
, such as the mid-Atlantic, to prevent more disasters at sea.The OceanGate disaster can be used as a valuable lesson to educate the future leaders ofengineering. Cultural vitality and social responsiveness must come from the design of thetechnology itself rather than the dreams and ideas of one person. This shift encourages acollaborative engineering community during design and development to provide a diverse rangeof perspectives. Emerging leaders in technology must serve as role models for those whoendeavor new technology and must demonstrate responsible and ethical engineering while stillstriving for innovation. Additionally, sound engineering choices benefit society as a whole. HadOceanGate not sunk, the American and Canadian coast guards
consequences of Stereotype Threat which may be contributing to the lack of persistence of female and minority students in engineering education.Prof. Nathan Mentzer, Purdue University, West Lafayette Nathan Mentzer is an assistant professor in the College of Technology with a joint appointment in the College of Education at Purdue University. He prepares Engineering/Technology candidates for teacher licensure. Dr. Mentzer’s educational efforts in pedagogical content knowledge are guided by a research theme centered in student learning of engineering design thinking on the secondary level. Nathan was a former middle and high school technology educator in Montana prior to pursuing a doctoral degree. He was a National Center
Paper ID #7052High School Students Modeling Behaviors During Engineering DesignMr. Tanner J Huffman, Purdue University Tanner Huffman is a research assistant and Ph.D. candidate in the Technology, Leadership and Innovation department at Purdue University. Additionally, he is an engineering and technology instructor at Richland Senior High School (7-12) in Johnstown, Pa. Tanner has experience writing integrated STEM curriculum and delivering professional development workshops on ITEEA’s Engineering by Design program. His research interests include modeling and design in STEM education, as well as STEM teacher professional
overallresults and analyzed the wording, key phrases and key words in their explanations, to create aninitial concept inventory specific to telecommunications.This concept inventory will allow instructors to prepare their instructional material and tune theirdidactic approaches to meet specific student need - some of which may be related to culture andexperience.IntroductionThe context of this work is an engineering technology program that offers telecommunicationsand networking courses at both the undergraduate and graduate level. The vast majority ofundergraduate students are American, whereas the graduate students are largely from India. Overthe years, the authors have observed (anecdotally) that each of the two groups of students facedifferent
Engineering course to incoming freshmen and lead the first ever Summer Engineering Experience for Students with Visual Impairments or Blindness at NC State University. She is also the Program Manager for the NSF funded Grand Challenges Themed Research Experience for Teachers program at NC State University.Mrs. Diane Brauner, Perkins School for the Blind Diane Brauner is an educational accessibility consultant currently collaborating with Perkins School for the Blind to create and manage the Paths to Technology - a website for educators to learn and stay current on technology for students with visual impairments and blindness (VIB). With the accessibility team at SAS, Diane has participated in a variety of assistive
hours after Bob received his Bachelor of Science Degree in Mechanical Engineering Technology from California Polytechnical University, he began his career with General Motors in Southern California. Bob had many challenging assignments in the vehicle assembly side of the business on the factory floor in Industrial Engineering, Tooling, Production Supervision and Future Production Planning. His manufacturing expertise lead to assignments in vehicle design bringing real world production concerns and processes into the product engineering activity to design in quality and buildability. Bob’s manufacturing and engineering expertise were also applied during an assignment at Hughes Aircraft on
Calgary Page 23.385.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2013 Developing a cross-disciplinary curriculum for the integration of engineering and design in elementary educationAbstractSeveral studies show that students have lost interest in the domains of science, mathematics,engineering and technology (STEM) before reaching high school and believe that these areas arenot innovative or creative. Using the CDIO educational framework, cross-disciplinary moduleswere developed to teach engineering design concepts as part of regular curriculum activities,such as English, social
Szajnfarber Dr. Zoe Szajnfarber is an Assistant Professor of Engineering Management and Systems Engineering at the George Washington University. Her research seeks to understand the fundamental dynamics of inno- vation in technology-intensive governmental organization, as a basis for decision-making. She received her bachelor’s degree in Engineering Science from the University of Toronto. Szajnfarber conducted her graduate work at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, earning dual masters’ degrees in Aeronautics & Astronautics and Technology Policy and a doctorate in Engineering Systems. Her dissertation focused on technology infusion at NASA and involved substantial field work at the Goddard Space Flight Cen
: ● Technology is not inevitable and does not always improve society. Engineering and computing are subjective, require judgment, and require tolerating uncertainty – there is never one right solution or decision. ● Data, algorithms, and technology are neither neutral nor objective. Technology embodies the dominant values of society and the creators who design it, which tends to reproduce and/or exacerbate existing inequalities. 3 ● The effects of technology are unevenly felt across groups of people and more-than-human actors. Who/what benefits and who/what is harmed typically aligns with historical
Paper ID #26091Intercultural and Interdisiplinary Communication Skills as a Component ofEngineering Education: International Design ProjectsProf. Anna Friesel, Technical University-Copenhagen Anna Friesel is Professor at the Center for Electro-technology, DTU Diplom - Technical University of Denmark, Campus Ballerup. She is also the president of the EAEEIE - European Association for Educa- tion in Electrical and Information Engineering, which is a European non-profit organization, with mem- bers from nearly seventy European Universities, most of them teaching in the area of Electrical and In- formation Engineering (EIE). Anna
2006-89: A PERSPECTIVE ON INITIATIVES IN DIVERSITY AND OUTREACHACTIVITIES OF ASME, AN INTERNATIONAL SOCIETYMulchand Rathod, Wayne State University Mulchand S Rathod, PhD, PE, professor of Division of Engineering Technology, Wayne State University, Detroit, Michigan is recognized for a career of dedicated, unselfish service to engineering and technology education, as a leader in education, faculty member, and as a contributor to professional societies. Dr Rathod lead the Division of Engineering Technology as director and chair during 1987-2003. Prior to joining WSU, he worked at State University of New York at Binghamton as coordinator of mechanical engineering technology program and assistant
Paper ID #6559Microcontrollers for Mechanical Engineers: From Assembly Language toController ImplementationMr. Noah Salzman, Purdue University, West Lafayette Noah Salzman is a graduate student in engineering education at Purdue University. He received his B.S. in engineering from Swarthmore College, his M.Ed. in secondary science education from University of Massachusetts, Amherst, and his M.S. in Mechanical Engineering from Purdue University. He has worked as an engineer and has taught science, technology, engineering, and mathematics at the high school level. His research focuses on the intersection of pre-college and
AC 2009-745: IMPLEMENTATION AND EVALUATION OF A LINEAR AXISRAPID DEVELOPMENT SYSTEMMike Fleming, Missouri University of Science and TechnologyVedant Jain, Missouri University of Science and TechnologyRobert Landers, Missouri University of Science and TechnologyHong Sheng, Missouri University of Science and TechnologyRichard Hall, Missouri University of Science and Technology Page 14.688.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2009 Implementation and Evaluation of a Linear Axis Rapid Development SystemAbstractIn most control courses the topic of feedback control is introduced at a theoretical level. Atypical assignment, for
an academic transcript. Moreover, even if this expertise were available, mostboards simply would not have the time to perform such evaluations.Historically, the U.S. licensure system has addressed this limitation through accreditation. Thelicensure community supported the establishment of the Engineers’ Council for ProfessionalDevelopment (ECPD) in 1932 to develop a system “whereby the progress of the young engineertoward professional standing can be recognized by the public, by the profession, and by the manhimself, through the development of technical and other qualifications which will enable him tomeet minimum professional standards.”2 ECPD was subsequently renamed the AccreditationBoard for Engineering and Technology (ABET); and while
AC 2010-95: BEST PRACTICES PANEL 2010Stacy Klein-Gardner, Vanderbilt University Stacy Klein-Gardner is the Associate Dean for Outreach at the Vanderbilt University School of Engineering. A former high school teacher and active K-12 engineering curriculum developer, Dr. Klein-Gardner leads the Best Practices Panel committee's work for the K12 Division.Marlene Aviles, Dr. Ercel Webb School # 22, Jersey City School District Marlene Aviles is an elementary school teacher at the Dr. Ercel Webb School #22.Augusto Macalalag , Stevens Institute of Technology Augusto Z. Macalalag, Jr., is a professor at Stevens Institute of Technology.Jennifer Case, East Middle School Jennifer Case is a middle school