an AISC award which provided the winning studentan opportunity to list an industry award on their resume. A similar assignment can be used forany STEM course.The majority of students recommended the assignment be used again next year, showing thatengineering and writing are perfect together!References[1] K. Levine, S. Allard, and C. Tenopir, “The Changing Communication Patterns of Engineers,” School of Information Sciences – Faculty Publications and Other Works, 2011. [Online]. Available: https://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_infosciepubs/84 [Accessed Jan. 16, 2022].[2] A. Peck, J. E. Nydahl, and C. K. Keeney, “Effective Strategies to Motivate Engineering Students to Develop Their Technical Writing Skills,” American Society for Engineering
MedicalBranch/ Western Gulf Center for Excellence in Vector-Borne Diseases. Moreover, this work wassupported by Dr. B. Hur’s Texas A&M research fund and resources.References[1] T. G. Floore, “Mosquito larval control practices: past and present." Journal of the American Mosquito ControlAssociation,” vol. 22, no. 3, pp. 527-533, 2006.[2] L. Zou, S. N. Miller, and E. T. Schmidtmann, “Mosquito larval habitat mapping using remote sensing and GIS:implications of coalbed methane development and West Nile virus,” Journal of medical entomology, vol. 43, no. 5,pp. 1034-1041, 2006.[3] B. Hur, K. Myles, Z. N. Adelman, M. Erraguntla, M. A. Lawley, E. J. Kim, J. L. Burgi, K. Price, K. Fritz, D. H.Stalcup, Z. Pan, Z. Stokes, B. W. Harris, F. Aguado, C. B. Wheat
/download/447/297.[3] O. B. Adedoyin and E. Soykan, “Covid-19 pandemic and online learning: the challenges and opportunities,” Interact. Learn. Environ., pp. 1–13, 2020, doi:10.1080/10494820.2020.1813180.[4] C. B. Hodges, S. Moore, B. B. Lockee, T. Trust, and M. A. Bond, “The difference between emergency remote teaching and online learning,” 2020, http://hdl.handle.net/10919/104648[5] A. Bozkurt et al., “A global outlook to the interruption of education due to Covid-19 pandemic: Navigating in a time of uncertainty and crisis,” Asian J. Distance Educ., vol. 15, no. 1, pp. 1–126, 2020, http://asianjde.com/ojs/index.php/AsianJDE/article/download/447/2.[6] J. Whalen, “Should teachers be trained in emergency remote teaching? Lessons
student(s)receives a stipend of $1,000.The SURE Program strives to improve student skills integral to performing research. Studentsand their research mentors are expected to work together for eight hours per week for one-on-oneinstruction and research skill development. Each discipline required specific skills be developed,and the skills developed evolved over the course of the summer. In general students wereinitially taught how to perform several experiments. Once the students could collect data, thementors assisted the students in evaluating their data. By the end of the summer mentorsstrengthened student capabilities in finding/assessing relevant literature related to their work. Aweekly group meeting served as a structured event that
: achievements of the ELLI project at the TU Dortmund University." Procedia manufacturing 26 (2018): 1349-1360.16. S. Das, D. K. Kleinke, and D. Pistrui, "Reimagining engineering education: does industry 4.0 need education 4.0?." 2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access. 2020.17. C. Terkowsky and T. Haertel. "Fostering the creative attitude with remote lab learning environments–an essay on the spirit of research in engineering education." Engineering Education 4.0. Springer, Cham, 2016. 197-212.18. K. Schuster, K. Groß, R. Vossen, A. Richert, and S. Jeschke. "Preparing for industry 4.0– collaborative virtual learning environments in engineering education." In Engineering Education 4.0, pp. 477-487. Springer
trend studieshow immersive technologies enhance user performance through, for example, learning andteaching effectiveness, task performance, and pain management. The authors identified the flowtheory as the most popular theoretical foundation employed in existing immersive technologystudies. Other theoretical perspectives used were situated cognition theory, media richnesstheory, the Stimulus–Organism–Response (S-O-R) model, and the technology acceptance model.The experimental method and the survey method were the most implemented research methods.Suh and Prophet [10] provided a four-component (stimuli, organism, response, and individualdifferences) classification framework for immersive technology use. The authors conclude thatmore empirical
responses for “Did your team rotate team roles?” (Q8),revealed an inaccuracy in either the team size or role rotation for at least two participants. Eitherthey made mistakes in reporting answers or participants from the same team differed in theirdefinition of role rotation. The ambiguity in defining role rotation is more likely whenconsidering their statements on what led them to assume the role(s) they have had. For example,the following quotes are from (a) a participant who reported that their team rotated roles, and (b)a participant that reported their team did not rotate roles. a) “The way our team currently works is we all contribute wherever needed a sort of hands all hands on deck type approach during this type of approach or I am
STEM Education Landscape, Washington, DC: The National Academies Press, 2012, pp. 23–28.[10] R. M. Ryan and E. L. Deci, “Self-determination theory and the facilitation of intrinsic motivation, social development, and well-being.,” Am. Psychol., vol. 55, no. 1, p. 68, 2000.[11] B. D. Jones, “Motivating Students to Engage in Learning: The MUSIC Model of Academic Motivation.,” Int. J. Teach. Learn. High. Educ., vol. 21, no. 2, pp. 272–285, 2009.[12] P. M. King and K. S. Kitchener, Developing reflective judgment: understanding and promoting intellectual growth and critical thinking in adolescents and adults. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass Publishers, 1994.[13] D. A. Schön, Educating the Reflective Practitioner
Paper ID #36783Analysis of STEM Students Accumulating CalculusKnowledge to Graph a FunctionEmre Tokgoz (Associate Professor)Samantha Scarpinella Pennsylvania State University Industrial Engineering PhD Student © American Society for Engineering Education, 2022 Powered by www.slayte.comAnalysis of STEM Students Accumulating Calculus Knowledge to Graph aFunction1 Emre Tokgöz, 1Elif. N. Tekalp, 1Berrak S. Tekalp, 2Hasan A. Tekalp, 3Samantha Scarpinella,3 Michael Giannone1 Emre.Tokgoz@qu.edu, 1Elif.Tekalp@qu.edu, 1Berrak.Tekalp@qu.edu, 2Hasan.Tekalp@qu.edu3 ses6506@psu.edu
the creation of the single-document labs and thecollection of survey data for this work.References [1] S. Wentworth, D. Silage, and M. Baginski, “Individualized Matlab projects in undergraduate electromagnetics,” in 2010 Annual Conference & Exposition, no. 10.18260/1-2–15655. Louisville, Kentucky: ASEE Conferences, June 2010, https://peer.asee.org/15655. [2] R. Hensel and Y. Sun, “Application of object scaffolding to develop a hands on, problem centered, and project based freshman Matlab® course,” in 2006 Annual Conference & Exposition, no. 10.18260/1-2–1307. Chicago, Illinois: ASEE Conferences, June 2006, https://peer.asee.org/1307. [3] R. J. Sassenfeld and J. R. Tapia, “Teaching a college-wide introductory
Paper ID #36784STEM Students’ Technology Choice Differences for Solving aGraphing Question - Two Different Institution Students’Preferences for Solving a Graphing QuestionEmre Tokgoz (Associate Professor)Samantha Scarpinella Pennsylvania State University Industrial Engineering PhD Student © American Society for Engineering Education, 2022 Powered by www.slayte.comSTEM Students’ Technology Choice Differences for Solving a GraphingQuestion - Two Different Institution Students’ Preferences for Solving aGraphing Question1 Emre Tokgöz, 1Elif. N. Tekalp, 1Berrak S. Tekalp, 2Hasan A. Tekalp
strongly that checking for assignments and exams on platforms for academic assistance would mitigate cheating, potentially indicating a discrepancy in how often these tools are relied upon.Based on this piloting effort on addressing academic dishonesty in the university, differencesbetween undergraduate students and faculty are identified. The next phase will be to develop aninnovative method and application to reduce the gap between students and faculty in academicdishonesty.References[1] A. Amigud and T. Lancaster, “I will pay someone to do my assignment: an analysis of marketdemand for contract cheating services on twitter,” Assessment & Evaluation in higher education,vol. 45, no. 4, pp. 541–553, 2020.[2] S. B. Bayaa Martin
Paper ID #36862CubeSat Design Competition to Foster K-12 STEMParticipation in MaineScott Joseph Eaton (Assistant Professor)Warren H Ziegler (Space Technologist)Daniel FransiscusTyler D Werner © American Society for Engineering Education, 2022 Powered by www.slayte.com CubeSat Design Competition to Foster K-12 STEM Participation in Maine Scott J. Eatona,*, Asheesh R. Lanbaa, Jeremy S. Quallsb, Warren H. Zieglera, Tyler D. Wernera, Caleb Baileyc,d, Hung Nguyena and Daniel Fransiscusa,d a Department of Engineering, University
mentorship through research or intern experiences. Inaddition, while the engineering faculty teaching these courses may have developed effectivetechnical communication skills through practice, they have typically not undergone pedagogicaltraining in technical communication or technical writing. Recognizing the institution’s need given the lack of an official WAC program, inAY2020 the Writing Center Director initially launched an “Integrating Writing into STEM”faculty grant program. The program was based off the model described by S. Wilhout, “WACwithout a WAC Program, (p. 79 in Sustainable WAC)”[8]. Knowing that students needmeaningful writing experiences integrated into their college curriculums and that faculty do notalways intentionally
domain by sharing ourexperiences. Through this autoethnographic approach, we were able to share our livedexperiences while systematically analyzing them.To examine our experiences, we collectively developed a set of reflection questions, listedbelow. We then each answered them independently about our work in our specific informallearning context. We each reflected on the following prompts: • Describe the setting in which you have conducted research and assessments in informal STEM settings. • What questions were you investigating, and what methods were used? • What population(s) were you focused on? • How did you recruit participants? What went well? What were the challenges? • How did you collect data? What went well? What
8: What did you like and/or dislike about this project?Question 9: Would you recommend something be done differently for this project?Question 10: Do you have any other comments or questions about this project?References[1] "2020 National Membership Information," Engineers Canada, [Online]. Available: https://engineerscanada.ca/2020-national-membership-information. [Accessed 28 January 2022].[2] "Enrolment and Degrees Awarded Report," Engineers Canada, [Online]. Available: https://engineerscanada.ca/reports/enrolment-and-degrees-awarded-report. [Accessed 28 January 2022].[3] S. C. 2. Census, Data on Visibile Minority Labour Force Status in STEM, Statistics Canada, 2016.[4] "Indigenous Engineering in Canada," Engineers Canada
Planning 0.51 approach my problem-solving on this topic? How am I clarifying the confusions I am having about my solution via resources or2 Monitoring 0.90 opportunities available to me before submitting the final solution? Based on your work and experience with this week’s in-class exercises (week 3),3 evaluate your performance as either good or in need of improvement, and state what Evaluation 0.73 you should do to either maintain your good performance or improve it if necessary. How can I do a better job on this week’s (week 4’s) in-class problem-solving based on4
% 100%Figure 3. Recall of concepts, listed in the survey, measured by students’ primary descriptions,ordered from highest to lowest recall. References1. Duderstadt, J. J. (2010). Engineering for a changing world. In Holistic engineering education (pp. 17-35). Springer, New York, NY.2. Crawley, E., Malmqvist, J., Ostlund, S., Brodeur, D., & Edstrom, K. (2007). Rethinking engineering education. The CDIO Approach, 302, 60-62.3. Kouzes, J. M., & Posner, B. Z. (2007). The five practices of exemplary leadership. The Jossey-Bass reader on educational leadership, 63-74.4. Partlow, P. J., Medeiros, K. E., & Mumford, M. D. (2015). Leader cognition in vision
university. Students volunteered to participate in the study without any incentivesoffered.Design of the study An open-ended design problem was assigned to the class. A description of the design taskas it was given to the students is provided below. Students were instructed to focus ondeveloping a solution(s) to the given problem that satisfied the requirements and constraints ofthe problem. Students were also told that CAD drawings were not necessary, only simplesketches were required, and no prototype development or testing of solutions was necessary.Following completion of the design project, participants were interviewed using a semi-structured interview protocol using the research questions stated above to guide the interview.The semi
= 1 h−1 (maximum specific reaction rate), Ks = 0.2 g/l (constant of saturation, whichprovides 1/2 of the maximum specific growth rate), Yc/s = 0.5 g/g (yield coefficient). mass of new cells formed Yc/s = (2) substrate consumedThe reaction is to be carried out in a batch reactor with the initial cell concentration of Cc0 = 0.1 g/land substrate concentration of Cs0 = 20 g/l. Cc = Cc0 + Yc/s (Cs0 − Cs ) (3)Solve the problem numerically and plot −rs , −rc , Cs , Cc as a function of time. • Rate of
) Grant (DUE 2120936). Anyopinions and findings expressed in this material are of the authors and do not necessarily reflectthe views of the NSF.References[1] D. McKenzie, "Identifying and Spurring High-Growth Entrepreneurship: Experimental Evidence from a Business Plan Competition," American Economic Review, vol. 107, pp. 2278-2307, 2017.[2] C. C. Y. Kwong, P. Thompson, and C. W. M. Cheung, "The Effectiveness of Social Business Plan Competitions in Developing Social and Civic Awareness and Participation," Academy of Management Learning & Education, vol. 11, pp. 324-348, 2012/09/01 2012.[3] S. Kulturel-Konak, "Overview of Student Innovation Competitions and Their Roles in Stem Education," in 2021 Fall
capabilities dimension, a scientifically literate person ought to have arange of hands-on skills; be able to pose and evaluate arguments based on evidence and to drawand apply conclusions from such arguments appropriately [e.g., 42]; be able to describe, explainand predict natural phenomena. In terms of cognition and habits of mind and decision making, ascientifically literate individual would be expected to ask questions, manifest inquisitiveness, beopen-minded, value the scientific approach to inquiry, and maintain a commitment to itsevidence [e.g., 16].Technology LiteracyThe term “technological literacy”, emerged in the early 1970’s, conveyed the embodiment ofknowledge and skills needed to function in a society dominated by technological
rate (percentage of total students receiving a gradeof D or F or withdrawing from a course), particularly in foundational courses typically taken inthe students’ first two years of the program. Table 1 summarizes the results for both Statics andDynamics.Following the completion of Statics and Dynamics, most students go on to successfully completethe Bachelor of Science degree requirements for the engineering program(s). Therefore, it isimperative for the continued success of the program(s) to increase retention amongst studentstaking these courses, forming the impetus for the proposed changes documented within thispaper.Table 1: DFW Rates for Engineering Mechanics Courses at Angelo State University
appear opposing one another, these attributes are mutuallysupportive. Social contexts and communication styles which are autonomy-supportive, versuscontrolling styles, are key for well-being. In turn, positive well-being increases learning,socialization, and prosocial behaviors [2].SDT metrics continue to evolve. The Center for Self- Determination Theory website includesseveral psychological needs satisfaction scales which are tailored for specific contexts such aslearning and sports [9]. Johnson and Finney have laid the foundation for development work on abasic needs satisfaction scale. Johnson and Finney caution against inappropriate application andlimitations of versions including the Basic Needs Satisfaction in General Scale (BNSG-S
engineering-related outcomes to familyvalues of facilitating, teaching, and acting as a peer for children.21 Teachers can act as similarrole models for their students by regularly introducing new topics and helping students to explorethe ones that interest them. Even if the entire class is not interested in pursuing a career in STEMfields, they can still be interested in and find enjoyment in related activities. This can be seen inBonnet de León et al.’s cutting plotter project 6 observed in Spanish secondary schools. Theprojects used low-cost laser paper cutters and plotting software to teach students about vectors in 14
also asked toevaluate the success of community coordination efforts in a survey given at the end of eachterm. 2.2. Survey Tool & Data CollectionWe developed our primary survey tool for this study, for which we have approval through ourinstitutional review board for research with human subjects, by adapting questions to addressMezirow’ s phases of transformative education [3]. We delivered the survey to all students in ourECE/CS Senior Design Capstone course at the end of the spring term. This allowed us tocapture responses across multiple years one time per student and to determine whether theyparticipated in a CoP at any point during their junior or senior years. Initially, we asked foridentifying and demographic information
Paper ID #37404The Engineering Design Process Portfolio Scoring Rubric(EDPPSR) – Initial Validity and Reliability (Fundamental)Stacy S Klein-Gardner (Adjunct Professor) Stacy Klein-Gardner's career in P-12 STEM education focuses on increasing interest in and participation by females and URMs and teacher professional development. She is an Adjunct Professor of Biomedical Engineering at Vanderbilt University where she serves as the co-PI and co-Director of the NSF-funded Engineering For US All (e4usa) project. She also serves as the co-PI, Lead Engineer, and Director of Partnerships for Youth Engineering Solutions
Timoshenko Problem Solved Using All the Five SIMS.A rigid bar AB with rollers of weights P = 40 N at end A and Q = 80 N at end B is placedinside a circular ring in a vertical plane as shown in the system space diagram. Radius of the ringand the length AB are such that the radii AC and BC make a right angle at the center of the ringC. Neglecting friction and the weight of the bar AB, prove that the angle ψ, AB makes with thehorizontal is [(α – β) / 2]. Find α, β & ψ; the contact (normal) reactions NA & NB at A and B. and the axial compressive force S in the bar AB. P C QThe author was inspired in 2015, by this classic A αhomework problem by