in industry and is now a standard engineering tool for both analysis and design.When FEM first appeared in the 1960’s it was introduced into the engineering curriculum at thegraduate level. As the method and computer technology matured, FEM was introduced at theundergraduate level in engineering and engineering technology programs, even in some two-yearengineering technology programs. Today, FEM is primarily offered as an elective undergraduatecourse in mechanical, civil, and aeronautical engineering programs. Fatigue analysis that in the past was carried out by hand and/or in-house computer programsis now done using commercial FEM software. Fatigue design modules have recently beenintegrated into commercial FEM codes that include ABAQUS
in industry and is now a standard engineering tool for both analysis and design.When FEM first appeared in the 1960’s it was introduced into the engineering curriculum at thegraduate level. As the method and computer technology matured, FEM was introduced at theundergraduate level in engineering and engineering technology programs, even in some two-yearengineering technology programs. Today, FEM is primarily offered as an elective undergraduatecourse in mechanical, civil, and aeronautical engineering programs. Fatigue analysis that in the past was carried out by hand and/or in-house computer programsis now done using commercial FEM software. Fatigue design modules have recently beenintegrated into commercial FEM codes that include ABAQUS
high school students’ interests in pursuing science and engineering as their fields of study and careers, and to enhance the research experiences for the in-service high school teachers in science and technology areas so they can bring the knowledge and experiences back into their classrooms. Keywords: Project-based learning, K-16, Education Methods, Innovative Classroom Practice. 1. MOTIVATION Our outreach effort addresses the inadequacy of high school students in math and science literacy in the United States. According to [3], U.S. high school seniors ranked below their counterparts in 17 other countries in math and science literacy. In physics, U.S. high school seniors scored last among 16
AC 2009-1879: THE BIG PICTURE: USING THE UNFORESEEN TO TEACHCRITICAL THINKINGChristy Moore, University of Texas, Austin CHRISTY MOORE is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Mechanical Engineering at the University of Texas at Austin where she teaches engineering communication courses and a signature course on “Society, Technology, and the Environment.” Her pedagological and research interests include service-learning projects, engineering ethics and professional responsibility, research ethics, and strategies for advancing students' analytical and rhetorical skills. She is co-PI on an NSF project, The Foundations of Research Ethics for Engineers (FREE) and collaborated on the
students tospace-related problems and careers as they work toward solving a NASA mission-relevantdesign objective. Participating students work as part of an engineering design team under theguidance of a faculty advisor and alongside a dedicated workplace mentor to solve a “real-world” problem identified and provided by NASA. Over the course of one or two semesters,each team simultaneously secures funding for their individual project and satisfies course creditrequired for graduation.The opportunity to engage in substantive student research is the hallmark of the program’s effortto encourage and prolong student interest in STEM (science, technology, engineering and math)related academic studies and careers. A measure of success is assured for all
. Page 14.398.11 Figure 8: Active debugging illustrationTo further buttress our philosophy of doing by learning, we have created webpages (seeFigure 9) informing students about other online resources available for referenceincluding search engines, sample programs, beginner books and templates. Figure 9: Availability of other online toolsDespite all the advances and incorporation of technology, we also rely on old fashionedemail to inform students of any important updates with regards to software patches, andupdates to be installed apart from course related information. The teaching staff alsorecognizes the fact that some face time is mandated for counseling students who arefalling behind or dealing
through the creation of low-cost, durable “XO” computers with programmingspecifically designed for collaborative learning. The development and support of the XOcomputer involve many professional skills and fields; including engineering and education.Currently 1.2 million XOs have been deployed globally, including approximately 15,000 in USschools. The completion of this mission is often difficult both in securing funding and attainingaccess to skilled professionals, because the vast majority of the XO deployments are located indeveloping countries with few resources. Another aspect of technology deployments indeveloping countries rarely discussed is that many of the financial donors, both government andforeign, are more willing to
Structured Organic Particulate Systems: Project OverviewAbstractRowan University chemical engineering students and faculty are working in collaboration withthe National Science Foundation (NSF) funded Engineering Research Center for StructuredOrganic Particulate Systems (C-SOPS) to create educational materials based on research beingconducted on advanced pharmaceutical processing. The Center is hosted by Rutgers Universityand also involves Purdue University; the New Jersey Institute of Technology; and the Universityof Puerto Rico, Mayagüez. The goal of the Center is to become a national focal point fordeveloping structured organic particulate systems used in pharmaceuticals and theirmanufacturing processes. Rowan University has partnered as an
AC 2009-1106: AN INTEGRATED VIRTUAL-LEARNING SYSTEM FOR APROGRAMMABLE LOGIC CONTROLLER (VIRTUAL PLC): CURRENTPROGRESS AND FUTURE DIRECTIONSSheng-Jen Hsieh, Texas A&M University Dr. Sheng-Jen (“Tony”) Hsieh is an Associate Professor in the Dwight Look College of Engineering at Texas A&M University. He holds a joint appointment with the Department of Engineering Technology and the Department of Mechanical Engineering. His research interests include engineering education, cognitive task analysis, automation, robotics and control, intelligent manufacturing system design, and micro/nano manufacturing. He is also the Director of the Rockwell Automation laboratory at Texas A&M University
., & Prevot, P. (2004). Remote Laboratories: New Technology and Standard Based Architecture.5. Del Alamo, J.A., Chang, V., Hardison, J., Zych, D., and Hui, L.(2003): An Online Microelectronics Device Characterization Laboratory with a Circuit-like User Interface, Proceedings of the International Conference on Engineering Education, Valencia, Spain.6. Nedic,Z., Machotka, J., and Nafalski, A(2004): Remote Laboratories Versus Virtual And Real Laboratories, 33rd ASEE/IEEE Frontiers In Education Conference, Boulder, Colorado.7. Harward, J., Del-Alamo, J., Choudhary, V., DeLong, K., Hardison, J., Lerman, S., et al. (2004). iLab: A Scalable Architecture for Sharing Online Experiments. International Conference on Engineering
AC 2009-1123: COMPUTER FORENSICS: SEIZING AND SECURING DIGITALEVIDENCESaleh Sbenaty, Middle Tennessee State University Dr. Saleh M. Sbenaty is a professor of Computer Engineering Technology, earned his Ph.D. and MS degrees in electrical engineering from Tennessee Technological University and his BS degree in electrical engineering from Damascus University. Dr. Sbenaty joined MTSU in 1993 and has been teaching graduate and undergraduate courses in electronics and computer harware. He is actively engaged in curriculum development and assessments for technological education. He has authored and co-authored several industry-based case studies and participated in three major NSF-funded
engineering, we have to ask is thisa good thing? If it isn’t, we have to ask “why isn’t somebody doing something about it?”It may be that these students, bombarded by a world of technology, may need directed help instaying focused. We might also work at sharing with them more on how to learn and how tostudy. They often enter higher education with unrealistic expectations about what it takes to be asuccessful college student and while there are efforts underway at many universities, individualinstructors, may need to spend more time on teaching thinking skills. The classroom is apowerful forum for modeling how to be and think like an engineer and we will need to makeconcerted efforts to show our students what they can and should do
474Six years ago the Aircraft Detail Design course underwent a curricular update to better prepareAE students for professional life. The results from annual internal reviews were documented inpreparation for a program review by the Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology(ABET) in addition to the results from alumni surveys. These results indicated that AEgraduates required more intensive and timely preparation in two primary areas: application andcommunication.The impetus for a more application-based curriculum came from a change in faculty at the DetailDesign level. The new design faculty had many years of industrial and managerial experienceprior to joining the ERAU staff and understood that typical undergraduate training does
AC 2009-792: A PROJECT-BASED POWER ELECTRONICS COURSE WITH ANINCREASED CONTENT OF RENEWABLE-ENERGY APPLICATIONSRadian Belu, Drexel University Page 14.91.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2009A Project-based Power Electronics Course with an Increased Content of Renewable Energy ApplicationsAbstractThis paper will described a project- and problem-based learning approach in teachingpower electronics for upper-level undergraduate students enrolled in the appliedengineering technology program at our university. This course will have an increasedcontent of applications of power electronics in renewable energy conversion systems.Power electronics, still
AC 2009-2152: MOSIS FABRICATED CMOS OPERATIONAL AMPLIFIERS FORCLASS PROJECTS IN AN ANALOG I.C. DESIGN COURSEMustafa Guvench, University of Southern Maine Dr. Mustafa G. Guvench received M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in Electrical Engineering and Applied Physics from Case Western Reserve University. He is currently a full professor of Electrical Engineering at the University of Southern Maine. Prior to joining U.S.M. he served on the faculties of the University of Pittsburgh and M.E.T.U., Ankara, Turkey. His research interests and publications span the field of microelectronics including I.C. design, MEMS and semiconductor technology and its application in sensor development, finite element and analytical
AC 2009-2191: DESIGN AND FABRICATION OF IMPACT (ACCELERATION)SENSORS AS CLASS PROJECTS IN A MEMS COURSEMustafa Guvench, University of Southern Maine Dr. Mustafa G. Guvench received M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in Electrical Engineering and Applied Physics from Case Western Reserve University. He is currently a full professor of Electrical Engineering at the University of Southern Maine. Prior to joining U.S.M. he served on the faculties of the University of Pittsburgh and M.E.T.U., Ankara, Turkey. His research interests and publications span the field of microelectronics including I.C. design, MEMS and semiconductor technology and its application in sensor development, finite element and analytical
Rochester Institute of TechnologyManufacturing & Mechanical Engineering Technology & Packaging Science American Society of Engineering Educators Mid-Atlantic Section Static Fixturing and Testing of Torsional Shafts in Combined Loading By: Robert AldiAdvised by: Professors Carl Lundgren and Hany Ghoneim Date: April 10, 2009 Table of Contents 1.0 ABSTRACT...............................................................................................................................................3 2.0 INTRODUCTION AND PURPOSE
AC 2009-996: TEACHING MICROCONTROLLER APPLICATIONS USINGLAPTOP COMPUTERSJohn Gumaer, Central Washington University John A. Gumaer is an associate professor of Electronics Engineering Technology at Central Washington University. He was also an assistant professor of Engineering Technology at Northern Michigan University. Before joining academia, he worked for more than ten years in hardware and software engineering and development. He earned a MSEE from the University of Texas at Austin and is a registered professional engineer. Page 14.1145.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2009
AC 2009-293: INTRODUCING HIGH-VOLTAGE DIRECT-CURRENTTRANSMISSION INTO AN UNDERGRADUATE POWER-SYSTEMS COURSEKala Meah, York College of Pennsylvania Kala Meah received his B.Sc. from Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology in 1998, M.Sc. from South Dakota State University in 2003, and Ph.D. from the University of Wyoming in 2007, all in Electrical Engineering. Between 1998 and 2000 he worked for several power industries in Bangladesh. Dr. Meah is with the Electrical and Computer Engineering, Department of Physical Science at York College of Pennsylvania where he is currently an Assistant Professor. His research interest includes electrical power, HVDC transmission, renewable energy
. Page 14.46.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2009 A Manufacturing Processes Laboratory: What Book-Making and Sheet-Metalworking have in CommonAbstractBook publishing is a multi-billion dollar industry that usually does not have an adequaterepresentation in manufacturing courses or textbooks. With technological advances in printingand copying, the process of making books became affordable even at a small scale. Thus, abook-making laboratory exercise is developed and implemented as a part of the Engineering ofManufacturing Processes course offered in industrial engineering and mechatronics engineeringprograms at Colorado State University - Pueblo. In one of the lab exercises, each studentproduces a softbound
386 TOWARDS A JOINT DEGREE PROGRAM IN AMBIENT COMPUTING1 Yusuf Ozturk*, Emrah Orhun**, Chris Bowerman*** Electrical and Computer Engineering, San Diego State University* Computer Science Department, Troy University** Department of Computing and Technology, University of Sunderland***Abstract ⎯ Funded by the US-EU Atlantis Program, International Cooperation in Ambient ComputingEducation (ICACE) Project is establishing an international knowledge-building community for
AC 2009-198: EXPORTING AMERICAN HIGHER EDUCATIONRussel Jones, World Expertise LLC Russel Jones is Advisor to the Khalifa University of Science, Technology and Research in Abu Dhabi, UAE. He previously served as founding president of the Masdar Institute of Science and Technology in the UAE. His career in higher education in the United States included faculty member at MIT, department chair at Ohio State University, dean of engineering at University of Massachusetts-Amherst, academic vice president at Boston University, and President at University of Delaware. Page 14.616.1© American
u(x) ub p, force/length x F F a b a b x Figure 1. Material Law Formulas for a uniform bar with end centric axial and centric uniform distributed loads plus temperature change. Proceedings of the 2009 Midwest Section Conference of the American Society for Engineering Education
AC 2009-2496: INTERNATIONALIZING TOMORROW’S RESEARCHERS –STRATEGIES AND EXPERIENCES FROM THE PARTNERSHIP FOREDUCATION AND RESEARCH IN MEMBRANE NANOTECHNOLOGIESThomas Voice, Michigan State University Thomas C. Voice is Professor and Director of the Environmental Engineering Program at Michigan State University, and Co-Director of the PERMEANT project described in this presentation. He teaches undergraduate and graduate courses in environmental chemistry and environmental systems and processes. His research interests focus on the fate and transport of contaminants in environmental systems, environmental health, and physical-chemical processes and technologies. Much of this work has a significant
AC 2009-2411: A STUDENT RESEARCH PROJECT: MYTH AND FACTS ONINRUSH POWER CONSUMPTION AND MERCURY CONTENT OFINCANDESCENT VERSUS COMPACT FLUORESCENT LIGHTSMike Hay, University of Northern Iowa Mr. Mike Hay holds a BT in Industrial Technology/Mechanical Design from the University of Northern Iowa and an MA in Industrial Technology from the University of Northern Iowa. Mr. Hay has over 30 years of professional work experience in various Engineering positions and is listed on seven US patents. His graduate research was in planning optimum small-scale wind-electric systems. He has worked on several renewable energy and electric vehicle projects as well.Recayi "Reg" Pecen, University of Northern Iowa
systems that utilize conventional multi- and single-crystalline technology.AnalysisA large part of engineering entails the analysis and comparison of previously collected data, inorder to give a greater understanding of improvements or changes that need to be made in thefuture. Without the scientific process of trying to understand the operation of any given system,significant advances in technology would not be made. Hence, it is an intricate part of thecurriculum at the CoE and must be included in the clinic program for students to becomeproficient in all aspects of engineering. That is exactly what students have done in this part of theproject, and on which this paper will focus.Amorphous PVThe manufacturer claims that amorphous silicon cells
AC 2009-251: A LABORATORY EXERCISE TO TEACH THE HYDROSTATICPRINCIPLE AS A CORE CONCEPT IN FLUID MECHANICSRobert Edwards, Pennsylvania State University, Erie Robert Edwards is currently a Lecturer in Engineering at The Penn State Erie, The Behrend College where he teaches Statics, Dynamics, and Fluid and Thermal Science courses. He earned a BS degree in Mechanical Engineering from Rochester Institute of Technology and an MS degree in Mechanical Engineering from Gannon University.Gerald Recktenwald, Portland State University Gerald Recktenwald is an Associate Professor in the Mechanical and Materials Engineering Department at Portland State University. He is a member of ASEE, ASME, IEEE and SIAM. His
pre-knowledge of MRI technologies and then drew asecond one after exposure to the material. Students were evaluated on the structural changes inthe hierarchy of organizing concepts, their use of expert terms, and then through a blind-evaluation of the pre- and post-mapping exercises. Of the 78 concepts detailed by instructors, Proceedings of the 2009 American Society for Engineering Education Pacific Southwest Regional Conference 116only 28 showed up on any of the student maps, and at that, only half of the module sections wererepresented. It was noted that preknowledge of the material or prior experiences were a verystrong
AC 2009-1330: NUMERIC AND SYMBOLIC REASONING ASSESSMENT INFRESHMAN MATHEMATICS COURSESRodolfo Yzasmendi Arellano, Universidad de las Americas, Puebla G. Rodolfo Yzasmendi Arellano is Science, Engineering, and Technology Education Ph.D. Student at Universidad de las Americas Puebla in Mexico. He teaches mathematics related courses. His research interests include outcomes assessment, and creating effective learning environments.Enrique Palou, Universidad de las Americas, Puebla Enrique Palou is Director, Center for Science, Engineering, and Technology Education, and Professor, Department of Chemical and Food Engineering at Universidad de las Americas Puebla in Mexico. He teaches
Integrating Asynchronous Paradigms into a VLSI Design Course Waleed K. Al-Assadi Scott Smith Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering Department of Electrical Engineering Missouri University of science and Technology University of Arkansas Roll, MO 65409 Fayetteville, AR 72701 Abstract As demand rises for circuits with higher performance, higher complexity, and decreased feature size, asynchronous (clockless) paradigms will become more widely used in the semiconductor industry, as evidenced by the International Technology Roadmap for