has over 30 years of combined academic and industrial management experience. He received his BSME and MSME degrees from Michigan Technological University.Dr. S. Patrick Walton, Michigan State University S. Patrick Walton received his B.ChE. from Georgia Tech, where he began his biomedical research career in the Cardiovascular Fluid Dynamics Laboratory. He then attended MIT where he earned his M.S. and Sc.D. while working jointly with researchers at the Shriners Burns Hospital and Massachusetts General Hospital. While at MIT, he was awarded a Shell Foundation Fellowship and was an NIH biotechnology Predoctoral Trainee. Upon completion of his doctoral studies, he joined the Stanford University Genome Technology
. Herbert is also a recently looking at problems regarding sustainability data and mobile applications. This work with Dr. Emily Hill, Dr. Jerry Fails and Dr. Jennifer Bragger, has been funded by the PSEG Institute for Sustainability Sci- ences. This work has been published in IEEE Big Data and ACM CSCW. Dr. Herbert is also the Principle Investigator for the National Science Foundation funded S-STEM Networking and Engaging in Computer Science and Information Technology (NECST) Program here at Montclair State University (NSF award 1259758). The NECST Program funds students, regardless of background, who are interested in pursuing a graduate degree in computer science. Students from computing related fields as well as
Geotechnics. Prior to joining the doctoral program, Medha was teaching Computer Science and Information Science classes at an engineering institute in Bangalore, India. Her research interests include hybrid/blended learning for engineering education; pedagogy of technology integration and cognitive and motivational processes of learning.Dr. Jean S Larson, Arizona State University Jean Larson has a Ph.D. in Educational Technology, postgraduate training in Computer Systems Engineer- ing, and many years of experience teaching and developing curriculum in various learning environments. She has taught technology integration and teacher training to undergraduate and graduate students at Ari- zona State University, students at
area of expertise is in applying the knowledge base of human factors en- gineering to the design and operation of human-computer systems that involve rich interactions among people and technology. His research covers the entire spectrum of system design: from identifying the user needs to designing and developing systems that inform and motivate user behavior and empirically evaluating the efficacy of these interventions. He draws on qualitative and quantitative methodologies including ethnography, contextual inquiry, surveys and controlled behavioral experiments to understand how humans perceive, make sense of, and interact with complex human-machine systems.Mr. Jeff BertrandDr. Rebecca S. Hartley, Clemson University
Manufacturing & Mechanical Engineering Technology department at RIT. She serves as the Faculty Associate to the Provost for Women Faculty and is co-PI for RIT’s NSF ADVANCE project. Her research interests include: characterization of biodegradable plastics and environmental consideration in materials selection for production design, the impact of technology paired with active learning pedagogies on student learning, and effective strategies for increasing gender diversity in STEM disciplines.Prof. Maureen S. Valentine, Rochester Institute of Technology (CAST) Maureen Valentine, P.E., has been a faculty member at RIT for more than 23 years. She held the position of Department Chair for the Department of Civil Engineering
Courtney is a Lecturer and Research Assistant Professor in the College of Engineering Honors Program at the University of Tennessee. She completed her Ph.D. in Engineering & Science Education at Clemson University. Prior to her Ph.D. work, she received her B.S. in Bioengineering at Clemson University and her M.S. in Biomedical Engineering at Cornell University. Courtney’s research interests include epistemic cognition in the context of problem solving, and researcher identity.Dr. Marian S. Kennedy, Clemson University Marian Kennedy is an Associate Professor within the Department of Materials Science & Engineering at Clemson University. Her research group focused on the mechanical and tribological characterization
Paper ID #18162Engineering Undergraduates Concurrently Seeking K-12 STEM Teacher Li-censure: Fuels the Soul or Too Many Barriers?Dr. Malinda S. Zarske, University of Colorado, Boulder Malinda Zarske is a faculty member with the Engineering Plus program at the University of Colorado Boulder. A former high school and middle school science and math teacher, she has advanced degrees in teaching secondary science from the Johns Hopkins University and in civil engineering from CU-Boulder. Dr. Zarske teaches undergraduate product design courses through Engineering Plus as well as STEM education courses for pre-service teachers
has worked with graduate recruitment and admissions for more than 10 years. One of her key roles is to support students as they learn about and apply for graduate study. She has traveled internationally and presented to students on three continents on preparing for graduate school.Dr. Phillip S. Dunston, Purdue University, West Lafayette (College of Engineering) Phillip S. Dunston is a Professor in the Lyles School of Civil Engineering at Purdue University in West Lafayette, Indiana, where he also holds a joint appointment in the Division of Construction Engineering and Management. He obtained his doctorate from North Carolina State University and served on the Civil and Environmental Engineering faculty at the
Paper ID #17652Establishment of Innovative Shared Departments to Advance InterdisciplinaryEducationDr. Ronald S. Harichandran, University of New Haven Ron Harichandran is Dean of the Tagliatela College of Engineering and recently served as PI on two grants related to the development of technical communication skills and entrepreneurial thinking in engineering students. He led the establishment of the shared Department of Engineering and Applied Science Educa- tion in the College of Engineering and partnered with the Dean of the College of Business to establish the university-wide shared Department of Entrepreneurship and
Paper ID #18887Forget Diversity, Our Project is DueMr. Hector Enrique Rodriguez-Simmonds, Purdue University - Engineering Education Raised in South Florida, born in Mexico. Half Colombian and half Mexican; proud MexiColombian. H´ector earned his MS in Computer Engineering and is currently pursuing a PhD in Engineering Education, both from Purdue University. His research interests are in investigating the experiences of LGBTQ+ students in engineering, tapping into critical methodologies and methods for conducting and analyzing research, and exploring embodied cognition.Mr. Nelson S. Pearson, University of Nevada, Reno
research assistant.Justin Lee Clough, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Justin Clough received his Bachelors of Science in Mechanical Engineering with minors in mathematics and applied physics from the Milwaukee School of Engineering. As an undergraduate, he has worked on research projects with the National Science Foundation, Argonne National Laboratory, and the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center. He is working on his doctorate in Mechanical Engineering at Rensselaer Poly- technic Institute specializing in computational materials and volunteers with Engineering Ambassadors.Ms. Elizabeth S. Herkenham, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Ms. Herkenham is the K-13 Education Outreach Director of the School of Engineering (SoE) at
manufacturing and pipe fabrication industry for five years. She holds B.S. in Computer Engineering, M.S. in Industrial Engineering. She received her Ph.D. in Industrial and Systems Engineering from Binghamton University (SUNY). Her background and research interests are in quality and productivity improvement using statistical tools, lean methods and use of information technology in operations management. Her work is primarily in manufacturing and healthcare delivery operations.Dr. Ronald S. Harichandran, University of New Haven Ron Harichandran is Dean of the Tagliatela College of Engineering at the University of New Haven and is the PI of the grant entitled Developing Entrepreneurial Thinking in Engineering Students by
was responsible for developing curriculum and assessment tools and overseeing the research efforts within EPICS. Her academic and research interests include the profes- sional formation of engineers, diversity and inclusion in engineering, human-centered design, engineering ethics, leadership, service-learning, and accessibility and assistive-technology.Debra S. Fuentes, Brigham Young University Debra S. Fuentes is a doctoral student at Brigham Young University in Educational Inquiry, Measurement, and Evaluation specializing in Mathematics Education. She received a Master’s degree in Curriculum and Instruction emphasizing English as a Second Language, and a Bachelor’s degree in elementary education, minoring in
, and four degrees from Columbia University: an M.S in Anthropology, an M.S. in Computer Science, a B.A. in Mathematics, and a B.S. in Applied Mathematics. Prior to joining the TAMU CSE faculty Dr. Hammond taught for five years at Columbia University and was a telecom analyst for four years at Gold- man Sachs. Dr Hammond is the 2011-2012 recipient of the Charles H. Barclay, Jr. ’45 Faculty Fellow Award. The Barclay Award is given to professors and associate professors who have been nominated for their overall contributions to the Engineering Program through classroom instruction, scholarly activities, and professional service.Dr. Julie S Linsey, Georgia Institute of Technology Dr. Julie S. Linsey is an Assistant
Paper ID #20016Culturally-Relevant Engineering Design Curriculum for the Navajo NationDr. Shawn S Jordan, Arizona State University, Polytechnic campus SHAWN JORDAN, Ph.D. is an Assistant Professor of engineering in the Ira A. Fulton Schools of En- gineering at Arizona State University. He teaches context-centered electrical engineering and embedded systems design courses, and studies the use of context in both K-12 and undergraduate engineering design education. He received his Ph.D. in Engineering Education (2010) and M.S./B.S. in Electrical and Com- puter Engineering from Purdue University. Dr. Jordan is PI on
together on shared problems that involve plant biology, data sciences, and engineering. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2017 Paper ID #20006Patrick S. Schnable, Iowa State UniversityDr. Jill Wittrock, University of Northern Iowa Jill Wittrock is the Assistant Director at the Center for Social and Behavioral Research and an Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of Northern Iowa.Mary E. Losch, University of Northern Iowa Mary Losch is Professor of Psychology and Director of the Center for Social and Behavioral Research at the University of Northern
related to Thermodynamics, engineering and public policy, engineering education, and gender in engineering and science. She is the co-author on an engineering textbook, Fundamentals of Engineering Thermodynamics, which is used worldwide in over 250 institutions. Dr. Bailey is the Principal Investi- gator (PI) for the RIT NSF ADVANCE Institutional Transformation grant. The goal of this large-scale ($3.4M), multi-year university-level organizational transformation effort is to increase the representation and advancement of women STEM faculty. At the university level, she serves as Senior Faculty Associate to the Provost for ADVANCE and co-chairs the President’s Commission on Women.Prof. Maureen S. Valentine, Rochester
is in biomedical signal and image processing.Ms. Sumra Bari, Purdue University, School of Electrical and Computer Engineering Sumra Bari received the Bachelor’s degree in Electrical Engineering in 2011 from the University of Engi- neering and Technology, Lahore, Pakistan and the Master’s degree in 2015 from Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN where she is currently working towards the Ph.D. degree in School of Electrical and Com- puter Engineering. Her research interests include functional neuroimaging, statistical biomedical imaging and signal processing and model based image processing.Prof. Samuel S. Wagstaff Jr, Purdue University Sam Wagstaff is a computer science professor at Purdue University. He works in
Paper ID #19103Complete Research Paper: Implementation of an Introductory Module onBiogeotechnics in a Freshman Engineering CourseDr. Jean S. Larson, Arizona State University Jean Larson has a Ph.D. in Educational Technology, postgraduate training in Computer Systems Engineer- ing, and many years of experience teaching and developing curriculum in various learning environments. She has taught technology integration and teacher training to undergraduate and graduate students at Ari- zona State University, students at the K-12 level locally and abroad, and various workshops and modules in business and industry. Dr. Larson
://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Function-Behaviour-Structure_ontology) was developed todistinguish what the design was from, how it worked and from what its intended purpose was.The FBS ontology (Gero, 1990; Gero & Kannengiesser, 2014) models designing in terms ofthree classes of ontological variables: function, behavior, and structure. The goal of designing isto transform a set of functions, driven by the client requirements (R), into a set of designdescriptions (D). The function (F) of a designed object is defined as its intended purpose orteleology; the behavior (B) of that object is either derived (Bs) or expected (Be) from thestructure, where structure (S) represents the components of an object and their relationships. Therequirements (R) and the
holds a PhD in Mechanical and Aeronautical Engineering from UC Davis and is a UC Davis Graduate School of Management Business Development Fellow as well as an NSF IGERT fellow. His dissertation focused on the effect of hydrogen enrichment on landfill gas-fired IC engines. In 2016 Kornbluth received the University of California President’s Office Faculty Climate Champion award for his novel project–based courses and applied research focusing on Zero-Net-Energy and Cli- mate Neutrality. Kornbluth specializes in novel environmentally sustainable technology in the energy and agriculture sectors applicable in the developed and developing world.Dr. Michael S. Isaacson, University of California, Santa Cruz Michael Isaacson
education organizations and is co-founder and chairperson of the Mid-Atlantic YouthALIVE! Regional Network. She has co-authored two publications focused on family learning. Ms. Wenger is deeply commitment to diversity issues and broadening access to science for underserved audiences. She is also passionate about professional development of youth and staff working in science centers and museums.Miss Patricia Lynn Hurley, Rowan UniversityMs. Roisin Breen, Rowan UniversityDr. DeMond S Miller, Department of Sociology and Anthropology DeMond S. Miller is a Professor of Sociology and Director of The Program in Disaster Preparedness and Emergency Management.Dr. Kara Ieva Ieva, Rowan University c
scholarship. She is also involved in efforts to include the Grand Challenges of Engineering into the general engineering curricula at Clemson University.Dina Verd´ın, Purdue Dina Verd´ın is an Engineering Education and Industrial Engineering graduate student at Purdue Univer- sity. She completed her undergraduate degree in Industrial and Systems Engineering at San Jos´e State Uni- versity. Dina’s research interest focuses on first-generation college students, specifically around changing the deficit base perspective to an asset base approach.Dr. Monique S Ross, Florida International University Monique Ross holds a doctoral degree in Engineering Education from Purdue University. She has a Bachelor’s degree in Computer
Paper ID #18465Action on Diversity: A Content Analysis of ASEE Conference Papers, 2015–2016Ms. Mayra S Artiles , Virginia Tech Department of Engineering Education Mayra S. Artiles is a Ph.D. student in Engineering Education at Virginia Tech. She has a B.S. in Mechan- ical Engineering from the University of Puerto Rico at Mayaguez and an M.S. in Mechanical Engineering from Purdue University with a focus on nanotechnology. Prior to her current position, she worked at Ford Motor Company as an Electrified Vehicles Thermal Engineer. Her research interests are broadening participation in engineering higher education, higher
Education at Purdue University.Mr. Harsh Wardhan Aggarwal, Purdue University Graduate Research Assistant, Purdue UniversityMr. Sayan Biswas, School of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Purdue University Sayan Biswas is a PhD student in the department of Aeronautics and Astronautics Engineering, Purdue University. His research interest is rocket propulsion and computational fluid dynamics of reacting flows. He is also interested in different educational methods in aerospace engineering. Sayan teaches rocket propulsion, air breathing propulsion, and fluid mechanics. Other than teaching, Sayan like launching model rockets and flying airplane.Mr. Brandon S Coventry, Weldon School of Biomedical Engineering, Purdue University
, and digital signal processing.Ms. Jocelyn B. S. Cullers, Boise State University Jocelyn B. S. Cullers is a Data Analyst at the Institute for STEM & Diversity Initiatives at Boise State University.Dr. Sonya M. Dennis, Morehouse CollegeDr. Yingfei Dong, University of Hawai’i at Mnoa Dr. Yingfei Dong received his B.S. degree and M.S. degree in computer science at Harbin Institute of Technology, P.R. China, in 1989 and 1992, his Doctor degree in engineering at Tsinghua University in 1996, and his Ph.D. degree in computer and information science at the University of Minnesota in 2003. He is an Associated Professor at the Department of Electrical Engineering at the University of Hawaii at Manoa, and an IEEE Senior
s Armature Current Ia [ A ] 8.25 Stall Torque Tstall [ Nm ] 97.2 No-load angular velocity noload [ rad ] 150 s 2 Load Inertia J L [ kgm ] 5 Load Damping Coefficient DL [ Nms ] 30 rad
effective. In Table 6, the frequentassessments help reinforce the concepts in the lecture per one student comment. Students likethe rewind feature to view the video when they do not understand the topic. The flippedclassroom approach appears to come close to the face-to-face instruction per second studentcomment. The frequent knowledge assessment questions are consistent with past studies5-7.1. The teaching methods in this course are effective:The eva l ua ti ons through the vi deo rea l l y hel p to rei nforce concepts covered i n the l ecture.I l i ked the wa y tha t the l ectures focus ed on jus t one or two poi nts a nd thoroughl y expl a i ned them. I a l s ol i ked tha t i f there wa s a topi c tha t I di d not unders ta nd i mmedi a tel y I
discussednext.Question 1: The teaching methods in this course are effective. In Table 6, the frequentassessments help reinforce the concepts in the lecture per one student comment. Students likethe rewind feature to view the video when they do not understand the topic. The flipped1. The teaching methods in this course are effective:The eva l ua ti ons through the vi deo rea l l y hel p to rei nforce concepts covered i n the l ecture.I l i ked the wa y tha t the l ectures focus ed on jus t one or two poi nts a nd thoroughl y expl a i ned them. I a l s ol i ked tha t i f there wa s a topi c tha t I di d not unders ta nd i mmedi a tel y I coul d rewi nd the vi deo a nd vi ew thema teri a l a ga i n.The tea chi ng methods were a s effecti ve a s they coul d be wi
usingPowerPoint help reinforce the concepts in video mini-lectures and is consistent with paststudies7,8,9.1. The teaching methods in this course are effective:The eva l ua ti ons through the vi deo rea l l y hel p to rei nforce concepts covered i n the l ecture.I l i ked the wa y tha t the l ectures focus ed on jus t one or two poi nts a nd thoroughl y expl a i ned them. I a l s ol i ked tha t i f there wa s a topi c tha t I di d not unders ta nd i mmedi a tel y I coul d rewi nd the vi deo a nd vi ew thema teri a l a ga i n.The tea chi ng methods were a s effecti ve a s they coul d be wi th out a fa ce to fa ce.I enjoy the qui z s tyl e for the extra credi t a s wel l2. Interactive video with embedded knowledge checks enhance engagement for the student