observe their experiences from many perspectives” (p. 30).Similarly, Mezirow theorized that critical reflection of experiences can have a transformationaleffect in learners’ lives [8] [9]. Learning, in this vein, becomes a cyclical process in which newmeanings and perspectives are gained. There have been calls to integrate reflection within theengineering education curriculum, which implicate reflection as an essential skill for helping tocultivate a strong sense of professional identity, increase critical thinking, and deepen learningthroughout the engineering educational experience [10] [11] [12]; however, these calls have notdeveloped rich insights into how to design, embed, and create reflection activities that encouragedifferent perspectives
beyond traditional topics to an examination of customer service,ethics, use of technology, environmental responsibilities, and legal requirements. Theresponsibilities of the public works manager are becoming increasingly diverse. This paperexplores the role of Public Works as an integral part of the society in incorporating entrepreneurskills to graduate students. This paper also details the Graduate Public Works Division at theDepartment of Civil and Coastal Engineering, University of Florida and various courses offeredunder the graduate program.1. IntroductionPublic works engineering, management and infrastructure is a pervasive part of every aspect ofurbanized life, and increasingly impacts the human and nature. The scale of
, “Integrating software engineering process in an undergraduate curriculum”, Proceedings of the 18th Conference on Software Engineering Education and Training (CSEE&T'05), April Page 12.1496.10 2005.22. A. Sillitti, et al, “Collecting, integrating and analyzing software metrics and Personal Software Process data”, Proceedings of the 29th EUROMICRO Conference, IEEE, 2003. Proceedings of the 2007 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition Copyright © 2007, American Society for Engineering Education23. Software Engineering Institute, PSP academic
: Sage.29. Mathis, C. A., Moore, T. J. & Guzey, S. S. (2015). DNA extraction using engineering design: A STEM integration unit (curriculum exchange). In 2015 ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition (pp. 26.556.1– 26.556.2). Retrieved from https://www.asee.org/public/conferences/56/papers/13631/view30. Krippendorf, K. (2013). Content analysis: An introduction to its methodology (3rd ed.). Thousand Oak, CA: Sage.31. Moore, T. J., Glancy, A. W., Tank, K. M., Kersten, J. A., Smith, K. A., & Stohlmann, M. S. (2014). A framework for quality K-12 engineering education: Research and development. Journal of Pre-College Engineering Education Research, 4(1), 1–13. http://doi.org/10.7771/2157-9288.106932. Creswell, J
foundation for the economics of risk, specifically the development of a rigorous theory of risk in economic terms and suitable for engineering applications in public works and infrastructure projects. 3. Lay the conceptual foundation for risk as an engineering discipline that can be integrated into an educational curriculum using the same building block approach found in other engineering subjects such as structures or hydrology. 4. Understand the role of risk engineering in supporting policy makers or critical decisions for infrastructure projects as well as providing regulatory or programmatic inputs that help in shaping that policy development
Paper ID #33743WIP: Halting Attrition in Civil Engineering Programs ThroughLower-Division Engagement Course ImplementationMs. Briceland McLaughlin, Boise State University Briceland McLaughlin is an academic advisor at Boise State University. She graduated with an M.Ed. from the University of Kansas in 2011 and has worked at higher education institutions across the country over the last decade in both student affairs and academic support roles. Briceland is interested in the intersectionality of student development theory and curriculum design.Dr. Nick Hudyma, Boise State University Nick is a professor and chair of Civil
summary of what occurred in 2014 and whatwe plan for 2015.How NSF I-Corps Has Influenced the Engineering Ambassador Network From January through February 2014, three members of the Engineering Ambassadorproject participated as an I-Corps team in the completion of the I-Corps curriculum. Serving asthe entrepreneurial lead was Kathryn Kirsch, a Ph.D. student in mechanical engineering fromPenn State. Dr. Joanna Garner, a faculty member in psychology from Old Dominion University, Page 26.612.2served as the mentor, and Michael Alley, a faculty member in engineering communication from Penn State, served as the principal investigator. The
. Another very promising strategy is the integration ofliteracy with other school subjects. There is a great deal of research to support the efficacy ofintegrated learning for increasing the literacy of students. In particular, innovative strategies thatcombine Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) with literacy have beenfound to provide beneficial gains in reading as well as in STEM subjects.4-13 One example of thisis the Seeds of Science, Roots of Reading (Seeds/Roots) curriculum which integrates literacywith scientific knowledge to provide a fun and authentic context for learning both subjects.5, 6, 14Another example is the Engineering is Elementary Curriculum which has a story book that goeswith each of the STEM activities
specificdeclarative knowledge. The foregrounding of an understanding of engineering as technologicalactivity, founded on (but not limited to) well-established discipline specific knowledge is framedas an ‘ontology-based curriculum’.We conclude the paper with a discussion of some of the prevailing challenges to operationalisingthis conception of engineering education for society.IntroductionOver several decades, there has been an increasing recognition of the difficulties facingengineering education in terms of meeting the needs of a rapidly evolving society. In its broadestsense, this discussion centres on a disparity between society’s need for effective modernengineers, and the knowledge, skills, and attitudes students develop in their engineeringeducation
2006-2640: INCREASING ENGINEERING ENROLLMENT AND RETAININGSTUDENTSKevin McLaughlin, University of Connecticut Page 11.745.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2006Increasing Enrollment and Retaining Students Page 11.745.2The challenge to incorporate engineering into middle and high school curriculums andhave students prepared for the rigors of an engineering program is a persistent problemcolleges and universities face throughout the country. Therefore schools have to becreative in this tight economy to get the ‘biggest bang for the buck.’ The University ofConnecticut, School of Engineering has two initiatives that have
Innovation, is available tostudents through the University’s primary online course content Novel designs require an integration of psychology,site. Designed to help foster innovation in design, the module sociology, biomechanics, emerging health care needs andhelps bring awareness to the processes that engineers typically go functional design to address differences in human capabilitiesthrough to solve a problem. For this investigation, the Integrated and daily needs. Real life examples serve as an introductoryE-learning Module was applied in a senior biomedical guide for designers as they define individual population groupsengineering design course. The course challenged a team of five and
design of mechanisms was mechanical, but in the present mechatronicage, the design is multidisciplinary, i.e., mechanical, electrical, electro-mechanical, hydraulic,and pneumatic. Mechatronics is the synergistic integration of physical systems, electronics,controls, and computers through the design process, and is the best practice for synthesis byengineers driven by the needs of industry and human beings. One of the most common mechanisms in the world is the slider crank. Its most commonapplication is the internal combustion engine, but it is also used in an automatic toothbrush. Amechatronic approach to the design and implementation of any mechanism has been developedand is applied in a case study to the slider crank. The approach
laboratory for each individualcourse is designed to reinforce basic concepts but have no larger purpose in the curriculum suchas logically connecting to the laboratory work completed in earlier or in future courses; thelaboratory exercises are completed by the students in different laboratory courses withoutrealizing that the concepts learned are all contributing to the development of truly integratedsystems, as the ones used in industry. In the integrated laboratory settings the students aredeveloping deeper understanding of the engineering subjects, the interconnections betweenvarious electrical engineering topics or areas, giving them an overall understanding of a systemfunctionalities, features and characteristics. Our development aims to
Training Programs Province Figure 2 entrepreneurial Capability Training System in XJTU3.2.1 A Research -and-Teaching-Integrated Model for Engineering Education InnovationResearch and teaching integration consists of two parts: entrepreneurial curriculum and collaborationwith industrial partners. To begin with, XJTU creates an overall systematic plan for practicaleducation that features a comprehensive entrepreneurial curriculum. With inputs and participationfrom the industry, XJTU’s plan increases the proportion of practical education in students’ credits.This is done in part by creating for-credit entrepreneurial courses. The plan also providesopportunities for industry to play a greater role in cooperative education
? 6. Did you feel constrained with the requirements? 7. Does it matter what the system you are trying to control is? 8. Do you recommend this project and laboratory be done in the future?Overall, students were pleased with the integration of a controls project into the bioengineeringlaboratory. They appreciated being able to apply lessons learned in class to an experimentalsetup outside of their expertise. Many statements were made during a post interview about howmuch they learned during this segment of the curriculum. Ultimately, the students realized theconnection between the mathematical concepts taught in class and how they physically relate to acontrol system.For example, a typical response to the question “What is
learning and integration of research into undergraduate education. Dr. Yao is a member of the American Society of Engineering Education.Loren Limberis, East Carolina University Dr. Limberis joined the Engineering faculty at ECU in August 2006. He earned his B.S. in electrical engineering and Ph.D. in bioengineering from the University of Utah. Dr. Limberis taught for several years as an Assistant Professor at The College of New Jersey and was a research analyst with Southwest Research Institute prior to his academic career. His research interests focus on designing techniques to utilize nature’s highly complex and sophisticated biological systems to develop biohybrid devices for use in biotechnology
the familiarity of humanitarian actsassociated with the STEM disciplines to young women which may foster an increase inthe participation of women in the STEM fields. There are several benefits from studentsreceiving this type of exposure. However, our task was to focus upon two; First, thatservice learning has a positive impact of students’ perception of science and produced acorresponding increase in their interest in pursuing further education and careers in theSTEM fields. Second, that the new curriculum integrates social responsibility, diversityand ethics into the classroom environment. Exposure to these elements in addition to theSTEM topics not only increases female interest but also forms a better student that maybe better prepared
strobe light to determine if their calculations were correct. Page 12.887.2In the mechanical power conversion curriculum, students gain insight into componentssuch as bearings, gears, chain drives, motors, lubrication, and vibration analysis. Thelearning lab provides hands-on problem solving activities in each of these areas. Thepurchase of specialized mechanical power transmission learning modules weresubsidized by local industries who realized the need for engineers and technical managerswith problem solving abilities.The sophomore level fluid power course also makes extensive use of the facility. Thiscourse provides an in-depth investigation into
the new curriculum on student understanding of social justice and students’ perceptionof the relevance of social justice to the profession. Student evaluations and written reflectionswere also examined to gauge how students perceived the integration of social justice into anintroductory engineering course. Survey results indicate that student awareness of the relevanceof social justice to the engineering profession increased over the course of the quarter. Inaddition, findings indicate an increase in understanding of social justice concepts along with anincrease in ability to identify social injustice. As seen through course evaluations and writtenreflections, student response to the course has been positive and most students are receptive
of ASC Member Programs.” International Proceedings of the 44th AnnualConference of Associated Construction Schools.Jones S. A., et al. (2009) The Business Value of BIM: Getting Building Information Modeling tothe Bottom Line.Montoya, M. A., Kelting, S. D., Hauck, A. J. (2008). “Pilot Study of an Integrated ConstructionManagement Curriculum.” International Proceedings of the 44th Annual Conferenc ofAssociated Construction Schools.O’Brien, W., Soibelman, L., and Elvin, G. (2003). “Collaborative Design Processes: An Active-and Reflective-Learning Course in Multidisciplinary Collaboration.” Journal of ConstructionEducation, 8(2), 78-93.Padmanabhan, G., and Katti, D. (2002). “Using Community-Based Projects in Civil EngineeringCapstone Courses
context of what happens in the marketplace. The desire is that more than technical solutions are important, hence the study of integrity. • Describe the qualities of good teamwork. Give students first-hand experience by putting them into project teams and have them work a semester together to develop a product. • Understand the need for lifelong learning. We provide the students with case studies to then describe tools of lifelong-learning that they would use.We measure the effectiveness of the class in several ways. One is through feedback of an alumniadvisory council. A second way is through industry input. A third way is by measuring how wellthe students meet ABET outcomes. The fourth way is by surveying recent graduates
, accomplished, and proficient.2.2 The Alverno College WorkshopDuring the week of June 20-24, 2005, three founding faculty attended “Connecting StudentLearning Outcomes to Teaching, Assessment, Curriculum” at Alverno College in MilwaukeeWisconsin. This workshop profoundly influenced the on-going development of the student out-comes.Alverno College has developed eight abilities which should result from a successful liberal edu-cation; with each ability is a set of developmental levels that describe how students progress tomaturity in the ability.5–7 Alverno describes the abilities and levels as follows: [The abilities] are integrated, developmental, and transferable. They represent an integrated combination of multiple components including
weekly and the solutions to the problems areprovided. Homework assignments are not graded, but must be worked thoroughly with thestudents to prepare for a follow up quiz given to the students in one week upon receiving therelated assignment. This approach of assessing student's knowledge has been tested for severalconsecutive years and proved to be very effective in student’s comprehension of a subject taught.The other assessment tools used in the EM course are the midterm and final examinations, andstudents’ presentations. To make students more well-rounded engineers, the development of thestudent soft skills is becoming an integral part of the curriculum in most universities. In most ofclasses offered in the School of Technology at Michigan
, science, and technical communication classroom. (2008). Proceedings of the IEEE international professional communication conference (pp. 1-7). Montreal, QC: IEEE. 978-1-4244-2085-8 5. ABET accreditation. (2011). Retrieved from http://www.abet.org/DisplayTemplates/NewsAndPubs.aspx?id=57 6. Pappas, E., & Pierrakos, O. (2010). Integrating developmental instruction in sustainability context into an undergraduate engineering design curriculum: level one. Proceedings of the 40th asee/ieee frontiers in education conference (pp. F1c-1-5). Washington, DC: ASEE/IEEE. 7. Prins, R., Kander, R., Moore, T., Pappas, E., & Pierrakos, O. (2008). Special session- engineering for a
student project for an undergraduate controls curriculum. Additionally,through open access to the design files, control systems educators and students have theflexibility to customize the project to their individual needs. Student feedback is also presentedsupporting the efficacy of the system as an active learning tool.1. IntroductionThe inverted pendulum control experiment, in which a pendulum with a center of mass above thepivot point is mounted to a linear actuator and the actuator is moved to attain a balancedcondition (Figure 1), is a common example used in introductory feedback control systemscourses1, particularly in the design of the Proportional Integral Derivative (PID) controlalgorithm2. Since the inverted pendulum is inherently
that theproject is in the context of just one course out of many, and like most courses the project activityis deadline-driven. Yet in the context of a learning process, exclusively performing deadline-driven activities implies the learning process suffers, as compliance drops and contextualizedlearning benefits are limited. This is one of the prime motivations for a platform that performscontinuous assessment, provides timely feedback and identifies compliance issues as soon aspossible.Continuous assessment interpreted from an agile software engineering perspective is closelyrelated to the practice of continuous integration and testing2. This practice is fundamental to agilesoftware engineering in that it supports transparency, visibility
called intellectual economies of scale. Through multiple agreements with othercompanies around the world regarding intellectual property, Boeing gains access toproprietary information and specific areas of expertise in a la carte fashion. This resultsin cost savings regarding development of those technologies, and also shortens the time-to-first-flight of an airplane. Cost savings regarding engineering labor are not theprimary driver in outsourcing at Boeing. However, Boeing has maintained its focus onretaining the higher-level competencies of engineering integration, which place its focusup the engineering skill pyramid. Boeing is especially placed in a competitive crunch incommercial aviation, as their primary competitor is Airbus, which is
encourages theunderstanding of anatomy and aids in the development of clinical thinking2. The rigorous Page 22.1342.3mathematical curriculum is the cornerstone of engineering education. It is challenging forengineering programs to incorporate an in depth study of the systemic interdependence ofmedical courses. To be sure, many biomedical engineering programs require their students toenroll in anatomy and physiology courses7. Often, however, these courses are challenging sincethey are so different than traditional engineering courses. Traditionally many courses in the areaof medical science and medicine have been added to curriculum for the
train studentsin “technical communication” have prioritized writing over speaking. Second, most approachesto communication skill development include an emphasis on either integrating writing and Page 11.625.2speaking into an introductory and/or capstone engineering course or offering a TechnicalCommunication course specifically for engineering students. Third, research in this area oftenhighlights previous attempts to incorporate or develop writing assignments using a writing-in-the-disciplines approach while relying on industry representatives and/or alumni to providediscipline-specific, genre-based knowledge. While these approaches to
accomplish these firstwo years in a local community college and transfer later to engineering schools in the bigcities. After graduation, they will help introduce technology and develop the economy insmall provinces to facilitate social equity. Page 3.596.5 5 The (comprehensive) community college is an American invention introduced inthe beginning of the 20th century. Today, in the United States, articulation betweenuniversities and community colleges is practiced in the form of curriculum and transferagreements. Vietnam has adapted the American community college concept with adifferent approach, that is the