Introduction to Engineering, Introduction to Materials and Manufacturing, and Structural and Chemical Characterization of Materials. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2019 Students’ Perceptions of Team SupportsAbstractIn this evidence-based practice paper, we report on a variety of interventions we provide in anattempt to support first-year student teams in a project-based learning course. At the end of thesemester, we surveyed students to ask their perception of the usefulness of each of theintervention strategies. While a majority of students rated each of the strategies as useful, the twostrategies rated highest were peer mentoring and progress meetings with the
, special education and engineering education.Ms. Yuxin Xu, University of Washington Yuxin (Ziva) Xu is a second-year undergraduate student at University of Washington, Seattle. Her research areas of interest include reflection in engineering education, equity in engineering, and human-computer interaction. Address: 746 1035 NE Campus Pkwy, Seattle, WA 98105 Phone: 206-209-6202 Email: yxxuziva@uw.edu c American Society for Engineering Education, 2019 Students’ engagements with reflection: Insights from undergraduatesIntroductionIn this research paper, we situate our work in an understanding of reflection as a form of thinkingthat involves stepping out, thinking about, and connecting forward [1
Technology Education in a So- cietal and Student Oriented Context, www.cetuss.se) and the IEEE Education Society Nordic Chapter. He as a reviewer for a number of major journals and conferences, including the Computer Science Education Journal (Taylor and Francis), the ACM SIGCSE and ITiCSE and Koli Calling International Computer Science Education conferences.Dr. Niall Seery, Athlone Institute of Technology Dr. Niall Seery is also the Director of the Technology Education Research Group (TERG) c American Society for Engineering Education, 2019 Theorising the Role of Engineering Education for Society: Technological Activity in Context?AbstractThis paper establishes a
. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2019 Introducing EngOTG: A Framework for an Audio Study Material App for Engineering StudentsABSTRACTAuditory learning tools, such as recorded study materials, are very commonly used in manydisciplines and have proven to be effective for second-language learners, learning-disabledstudents, and struggling readers. However, such tools have been seldom used in science,technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) education, mostly because of the technicalnature of the subjects. The objective of this study is to investigate the features of audio studymaterials that could improve student learning and
on which to draw to help mentor the engineering leaders of the future. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2019 Making Connections Across a Four-Year Project-Based Curriculum: ePortfolios as a Space for Reflection and Integrative LearningAbstractThe systematic use of reflection and integrative learning across experiences in thecurriculum and co-curriculum has often been neglected in engineering education,yet these processes are essential for deep and transferable learning. This paperreports on the use of ePortfolios to provide a mechanism for reflection andintegrative learning in a four-year, project-based curriculum. Student use ofePortfolios was introduced in the
professional member of the American Society for Engineering Education (ASEE).Dr. Jinan Ziade, Westcliff University Jinan Ziade, PhD, holds a doctorate of management in Organizational Leadership and information sys- tems technologies from the University of Phoenix (UOPX), also a graduate Executive Transformation Certificate in Strategic Diversity and Inclusion Management from Georgetown University. Dr. Ziade is an Assistant Professor and a member of the Diversity and Inclusion committee at Westcliff University, teach- ing managing global diversity, corporate social responsibility and organizational behavior. Additionally, Dr. Ziade is a postdoc research fellow and a member of the Center of Entrepreneurship and Innovation
arid soils, piled foundations, pavement design & materials, and concrete durability. His interests also include: contemporary issues of engineering education in general, and those of the Middle East and the Arab Gulf States in particular. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2019 On the Contribution of Adjunct Engineering Faculty to Learning Programs: Enhancing the Practice and Providing Guidance to Solving Real ProblemsAbstract: The paper (an Evidence-based Practice paper) examines the status quo of adjunctfaculty in engineering institutions and argues for the positive contributions adjuncts, withpractical experience, could make by bringing their experience into the classroom. Also, in
EEDP Program, where he mentored interns, co-ops and Edison associates from the Middle East and Africa regions by developing and teaching a technical training cur- riculum, providing guidance for graduate school applications, and providing career consultation. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2019 Capturing the Experiences of ESL Graduate Students in Engineering Education AbstractDoctoral education can be a challenging and overwhelming journey for many graduate students.Engineering Education as an interdisciplinary and emerging field welcomes diverse students interms of race and ethnicity, gender, nationality, sexual orientations, abilities, and
Case Study on Course-Based Outcomes Assessment toEnhance Student Learning and Course Delivery in the Engineering Sciences Core Curriculum”,Paper No. IMECE 2009-12946, ASME International Mechanical Engineering Congress andExposition, November 13 – 19, Lake Buena Vista, Florida, 2009.[2] A. Ghosh and E.C. Hensel, “An interpretive assessment of engineering science core courses”,Paper No. IMECE-12939, ASME International Mechanical Engineering Congress andExposition, November 13 – 19, Lake Buena Vista, Florida, 2009.[3] ABET Self Study Report, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Rochester Institute ofTechnology, June 2010.[4] A. Ghosh, ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition, Tampa, Florida, 2019 (in preparation)[5] W. T. Thomson, and M. D Dahleh
c American Society for Engineering Education, 2019 Cornerstone Design for Sociotechnical “Grand Challenges”IntroductionThis Evidence-based Practice paper describes the development and evolution of aninterdisciplinary First Year Seminar providing a cornerstone design experience addressingthe Grand Challenges. The sociotechnical nature of the Challenges is emphasized, makingclear the need to develop sociotechnical skills and practice, and a sense of sociotechnicaljustice. The authors are an engineer (with expertise in biomedical engineering and design)and a political scientist (with expertise in the politics and gender of development in theGlobal South) who sought to collaborate in the development and teaching of the course.Building
Ph.D. (Aerospace Engineering Science) from the University of Colorado at Boulder. He has worked for Texas Instruments, Lockheed Martin, NASA, University of the Pacific, Lawrence Berkeley National Lab and MSC Software Corp. His research includes design of Micro Air Vehicles, development of innovative de- sign methodologies and enhancement of engineering education. Dr Jensen has authored over 120 refereed papers and has been awarded over $4.5 million of research grants. He is a Fellow at the Singapore Univ. of Technology and Design’s International Design Center. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2019 Creativity exercises to enhance innovation in undergraduate
Linguistics in 2005. April worked at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte in residence life for two years and as an Instructor for two years. She also worked at Texas A&M University in College Station, TX for 7 years as a student affairs professional in residence life. Currently, April is a program coordinator for the THRIVE Technical Assistance Program with College & Community Fellowship. Her position includes research and training for agencies looking to strengthen their service delivery to citizens with criminal justice involvement as well as increasing agencies knowl- edge regarding an underutilized labor force. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2019
teaching methods has been supported by the National Science Foundation and the Sloan Foundation and his team received Best Paper awards from the Journal of Engineering Education in 2008 and 2011 and from the IEEE Transactions on Education in 2011 and 2015. Dr. Ohland is an ABET Program Evaluator for ASEE. He was the 2002–2006 President of Tau Beta Pi and is a Fellow of the ASEE, IEEE, and AAAS. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2019 A Systematized Review: Gender and Race in Teamwork in Undergraduate Engineering Classrooms AbstractTeamwork is an essential skill for undergraduate engineering students, and
University.Dr. Jenn Stroud Rossmann, Lafayette College Jenn Stroud Rossmann is Professor of Mechanical Engineering at Lafayette College. She earned her BS in mechanical engineering and her PhD in applied physics from the University of California, Berkeley. Prior to joining Lafayette, she was a faculty member at Harvey Mudd College. Her scholarly interests include the fluid dynamics of blood in vessels affected by atherosclerosis and aneurysm, the cultural history of engineering, and the aerodynamics of sports projectiles. She writes the essay series ”An engineer reads a novel” for Public Books. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2019 An Integrative Education in Engineering and
Evaluation.Dr. Amanda Portis Malefyt, Trine University Amanda Malefyt is currently Chair and Associate professor in the McKetta Department of Chemical and Bioprocess Engineering at Trine University. She received her bachelor’s degree from Trine (formerly Tri- State) University and Ph.D. from Michigan State University. Her research interests include engineering education and nucleic acid therapeutics. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2019 Assessing the reliability of a chemical engineering problem- solving rubric when using multiple ratersAbstractThis evidence-based practice paper discusses the preliminary validation of a project modifiedversion of the Promoting
, particularly in higher education; learning in the workplace; curricular and pedagogical development; and the preparation of professionals for social justice goals. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2019 Practitioner Learning Community: Design of instructional content, pedagogy and assessment metrics for productive, inclusive and socially just teaming practice AbstractThis paper describes the development of and outcomes from a Practitioner Learning Community(PLC) model used to design instructional content, pedagogy, and assessment metrics forinclusive, socially just teaming practices. Comprised of postdoctoral
University, Los Angeles. She earned her BS in Electrical Engineering from Northwestern Polytechnical University, Xi’an, China, and her MS in Electrical Engineering, MS in Aerospace Engineering, and PhD in Mechanical Engineering from University of Central Florida. She previously served as a lecturer at University of Central Florida. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2019 Iterative Improvement in Flipped Classroom Teaching of Lower Division Engineering CoursesAbstract: Lower division engineering courses are important yet hard to teach as many studentsfind these highly abstracted material hard to comprehend. Recent studies have suggested thatflipped classroom teaching
University. She teaches the Cornerstone of Engineering courses to first- year students as well as courses within the Civil and Environmental Engineering Department. She is a recent recipient of the Outstanding Teacher of First-Year Students Award and is interested in research that compliments and informs her teaching. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2019 Preparing First Year Engineering Students for a Career where Communication Skills MatterAbstractThis complete evidence-based practice paper describes the techniques used in the project basedfirst-year Cornerstone of Engineering courses at Northeastern University to address the need forbuilding communication
. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2019 A Course in Differential Equations, Modeling and Simulation for Engineering StudentsIntroductionA course in differential equations generally is taken at a critical point in engineeringcurricula – where a turn is made away from basic math and science courses towardscourses in which basic skills and knowledge are synthesized and applied. This raises thequestion of whether the course should be a mathematics course, an engineering course, ora hybrid. It has been argued [1], with supporting results, that the teaching of differentialequations through the modeling of physical and chemical phenomena is effective becauseit allows students to overcome the cognitive
. Affiliations include Fellow of ASME, member of ASEE, AIAA, the Penn State Alumni Association, Centre County Chapter Board of Directors, President’s Club, Nittany Lion Club. He has been honored with a LMC Leadership Award, GE Phillippe Award, PSEAS Outstanding service award, Jaycee International Senatorship, and an ESM Centennial Fellowship.Dr. John Jongho Park, Pennsylvania State University, University Park Dr. Park is an assistant research professor in the Engineering Leadership Program at Penn State Uni- versity. There is four interrelated areas of inquiry characterize Dr. Park’s scholarship: psychological attributes, professional identity development, group processes, and leadership development. Particularly, he examines
years. Awards: Alan is the recipient of the Hope of America award (1987), and the Eagle Scout award (1993). Personal: Alan lives in the Salt Lake Valley, is married, and has six children.Dr. Nick Safai, Salt Lake Community College Dr. Nick M. Safai is an ASEE Fellow. He has been an ASEE officer and member for the past 30 years. He has been the six-time elected as the Program Chair of the ASEE International Division for approximately the past 15 years. Three times as the Program Chair for the Graduate Studies Division of ASEE. Nick has had a major role in development and expansion of the ID division. Under his term as the International Division Program Chair the international division expanded, broadened in topics
Region College Educator Award for Excellence in Teaching by the American Chemical Society. He has presented at the Southeastern Arizona Teachers Academy, the ASTA Annual Conference, NSTA, ACS, and the Biennial Conference on Chemical Education (BCCE). He is a member of ASEE, ASTA, NSTA, AAPT, ACS, and 2YC3. He is the current membership secretary of ASTA, a position which he has held since 2010. He has been a volunteer with the Boy Scouts of America for the past 25 years and was a recipient of the Silver Beaver Award. For the past 12 years, he has served as Dean of Instruction, while continuing to teach Organic Chemistry.Dr. Clark Vangilder, Central Arizona College c American Society for
Paper ID #27175Stuck on the Verge or Perpetually Reinventing? What Papers from the 2018Annual Conference Tell Us about Change and Continuity in Liberal Educa-tion for EngineersDr. Kathryn A. Neeley, University of Virginia Kathryn Neeley is Associate Professor of Science, Technology, and Society in the Engineering & Society Department of the School of Engineering and Applied Science. She is a past chair of the Liberal Educa- tion/Engineering & Society Division of ASEE and is particularly interested in the role of liberal education in developing engineering leaders. c American Society for
Mechanical Engineering at Florida Institute of Technology. Her research focuses on the impact of motivation on performance and persistence in mechanical engineering design courses under the guidance of Dr. Beshoy Morkos. She also serves as a graduate student advisor to senior design teams within the mechanical engineering department. Elisabeth is a member of ASME, ASEE, Tau Beta Pi Engineering Honor Society and Pi Tau Sigma International Mechanical Engineering Honor Society.Miss McKenzie Carol Clark, Florida Institute of TechnologyDr. Beshoy Morkos, Florida Institute of Technology Beshoy Morkos is an associate professor in the Department of Mechanical and Civil Engineering at the Florida Institute of Technology where he
. degrees in Civil Engineering from the South Dakota School of Mines & Technology. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2019 To Be or Not to Be: A Dialogic Discussion of Two Researchers’ Hidden and Transitioning Identities Introduction Simplicities are enormously complex. Consider the sentence “I am”. With this opening adapted from a poem by Richard O. Moore (2010), we emphasize howsome of the simplest aspects of the human experience contain vast complexity: identity;belonging; education; justice. The CoNECD community focuses on these aspects and centers thescholarship and practice of equity and
Learning TrajectoriesDr. Cindy Rottmann, Prof. Doug Reeve, Dr. Serhiy Kovalchuk, Mike Klassen, Milan Majkovic, Prof. Emily MooreTroost Institute for Leadership Education in Engineering (Troost ILead)Paper accepted to the 126th American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition—Tampa, Florida, June 16-19, 2019. To be published in the ASEE conference proceedings on June 16th, 2019.Abstract:In the early 1950s, many science and technology focused organizations in the United States andCanada began to formalize a technical career track to accommodate the professional aspirationsof engineers reluctant to abandon technical work for management [1-7]. While the resulting dualcareer track model
recipient of 2014-2015 University Distinguished Teaching Award at NYU. His scholarly activities have included 3 edited books, 9 chapters in edited books, 1 book review, 62 journal articles, and 154 conference pa- pers. He has mentored 1 B.S., 35 M.S., and 5 Ph.D. thesis students; 58 undergraduate research students and 11 undergraduate senior design project teams; over 500 K-12 teachers and 118 high school student researchers; and 18 undergraduate GK-12 Fellows and 59 graduate GK-12 Fellows. Moreover, he di- rects K-12 education, training, mentoring, and outreach programs that enrich the STEM education of over 1,000 students annually. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2019
Engineering Education, 2019 Paper ID #25044 Planning in the Community & Regional Planning program. He has served as a graduate research assis- tant on an NSF-funded project, Revolutionizing Engineering Departments, and has been recognized as a Graduate Studies student spotlight recipient and teaching scholar. Jordan studies learning in authentic, real-world conditions utilizing Design-Based Research methodologies to investigate design learning and social engineering, in which he studies urban planners who design real-world interventions for commu- nities and students who use design to learn. A member of the Grand Portage Band of
Computer Engineering & Computer Science student at Northeastern University. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2019 Community Engagement and Service-Learning: Putting faces to a community to create better engineersAbstractThis complete evidence-based practice paper presents how Service-Learning (S-L) helped first-year engineering students attending an urban institution to grow their concept of community.When S-L is incorporated into a first-year engineering design course, students expand theirlearning as they work and teach in the community. In addition, students get a chance to see andexperience the greater community to which they belong. Through S-L, engineering students
Transportation Engineering in the School of Civil and Construction Engineering at Oregon State University and is the Director of the OSU Driving and Bicycling Simulator Laboratory. Dr. Hurwitz conducts research in transportation engineering, in the areas of traffic operations and safety, and in engineering education, in the areas of conceptual assessment and curriculum adoption. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2019 Factors Contributing to the Problem-Solving Heuristics of Civil Engineering StudentsIntroductionProblem solvers vary their approaches to solving problems depending on the context of theproblem, the requirements of the solution, and the ways in