. Page 15.140.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2010An Appropriate Technology Project: A Solar Powered Vaccine RefrigeratorIntroductionNearly half of the vaccines in developing countries go to waste every year due totemperature spoilage, according to the World Health Organization. Currenttransportation and storage methods in remote regions rely on ice packs that lastjust a few days. In order to maintain the optimal temperature range of 2 to 8° Cfor vaccine preservation, these regions need reliable long-term refrigeration whereelectricity is not available.To address this problem, a capstone design team developed an affordable, robustrefrigerator that operates with energy from the sun. The vaccine refrigerator wasdesigned with
Duration of activities Season (5 months) Course (10 weeks) Motivation Team achievement Team achievement Adversary Other team Client Domain Court Company/division Goals League champion Exceptional performance Level of competition High LowThe PBL Course and ProjectsFor more than ten years the students in a senior capstone IE course at Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo onFacility Design has work on projects for local companies. The local company is the customer and isdealt with as a client in a consulting
AC 2010-1101: RESEARCH EXPERIENCE FOR TEACHERS SITE: APROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT PROJECT FOR TEACHERSVikram Kapila, Polytechnic University VIKRAM KAPILA is an Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering at Polytechnic Institute of NYU, Brooklyn, NY, where he directs an NSF funded Web-Enabled Mechatronics and Process Control Remote Laboratory, an NSF funded Research Experience for Teachers Site in Mechatronics, and an NSF funded GK-12 Fellows project. He has held visiting positions with the Air Force Research Laboratories in Dayton, OH. His research interests are in cooperative control; distributed spacecraft formation control; linear/nonlinear control with applications to robust control
Senior Design ProjectsAbstractIn the past, teams from the University of North Carolina at Charlotte College of Engineering twosemester capstone senior design class first presented their project design at the end of the firstsemester. Their design consisted of a report and a poster presentation submitted to the facultymentors, course instructors and company sponsors.At the poster presentation (and in their report) we found that 35% of the teams did not includeenough design detail and 25% had virtually no design details, which indicated they had not spentmuch time on the design effort. This caused project teams to start their second semester effortsbehind schedule. By the end of the second semester, about 28% of all
capstone engineering course chose the water project as their semester-long senior projectand used the data collected in Honduras to evaluate alternative technologies that could addressthe e. coli contamination. The students concluded that a slow sand filter would be the mostappropriate technology given the nature of the contamination and community resources.Funding for the project was obtained through a non-profit contacted by CDAE faculty.One of the first challenges was to select which village to use for the pilot test of the slow sandfilter. A team comprised of a senior engineering student who had worked on the sand filterdesign, a CDAE graduate student who had done socio-economic surveying in the area, andCDAE faculty selected the village of
interaction. He received his PhD from Rutgers University in 2001.Jennifer Dawson, York College of Pennsylvania Dr. Jennifer Bower Dawson is an Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering at York College of Pennsylvania where she teaches courses in Machine Design, Controls, and Capstone Design. She earned her MS and Ph.D. in Mechanical Engineering at Stanford University where she worked on the design and testing of spacecraft hardware for Satellite Test of the Equivalence Principle. Her academic interests include robotics, sensor design, precision engineering, and service learning in engineering education.Barry McFarland, York College of Pennsylvania Barry McFarland received his BS
AC 2010-2201: EFFECTS OF STUDENT-CUSTOMER INTERACTION IN ACORNERSTONE DESIGN PROJECTChristopher Williams, Virginia Tech Christopher B. Williams is an Assistant Professor at the Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University, where he directs the Design, Research, and Education for Additive Manufacturing Systems (DREAMS) Laboratory. His joint appointment in the Mechanical Engineering and Engineering Education departments reflects his diverse research interests which include layered manufacturing, design methodology, and design education. As a member of an instructional team that orchestrated a service-learning design project for the first-year engineering program, Professor
the University into an autonomous university, competition forstudents, and Washington Accord regulations.PURPOSE (HYPOTHESIS)This paper describes experience in implementing design as the means to the eventual goal of anengineering program – to empower the students to flourish to be capable engineers – via acapstone design course.DESIGN/METHODThe course administrative committee redesigned the course to provide the design experience asthe integrative, capstone event of an engineering program. The design experience that isexpected to deliver the desired outcomes is discussed and concluded into three main features forthis framework. Then, the required ingredients for such design experience are discussed,including types of design projects
feel strongly about, regardless of their team’s official position.Each team receives a team grade, based upon a combination of: a) the written position statement,b) the instructor’s judgment of the team’s approach to their presentation and the strength of their Page 15.62.6arguments, and c) the audience’s opinion of each team’s effort (a debate evaluation is filled outby the class to provide critical feedback to each team). Team Widget Deconstruction ProjectStudents also engage in a collaborative capstone research experience in which 5-person teams dotheir own widget deconstructions and present those findings to
paper is todetail investments and benefits of this type of collaborative experience for the student as well asthe requirements for implementation, assessment and success of the work.Assessment of the student’s progress throughout the project and the student’s scholasticimprovement overall were tracked by both MET and F&PA faculty. The results of theexperiment have provided enough confidence to conduct further experiments which are beingplanned for the Spring semester of 2010.I. IntroductionThe United States has long prided itself on the innovative capabilities of its industrial base.Henry Ford’s assembly line concept not only put the Ford Motor Company ahead of itscompetition when it was introduced, it also helped the United States out
education that coupled engineering and architectural design (B.S. in Architectural Engineering at California Polytechnic State University at San Luis Obispo), project management with multi-disciplinary engineering teams, and extensive experience working with practicing architects. Examples of his work experience include The Pavilion of the Future at EXPO '92 (with Peter Rice's group), The Sony Center Roof in Berlin, the Lerner Student Center at Columbia University, and the Mondavi Center at UC Davis. His teaching experience includes the Bedford Visiting Professor at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Hard Tech Faculty at Southern California Institute of Architecture, Visiting Lecturer at the
AC 2010-31: WESTERN WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY'S HYBRID BUS - AMULTIDISCIPLINARY APPROACH TO PROJECT BASED EDUCATIONSteven Fleishman, Western Washington University STEVEN FLEISHMAN is currently an Assistant Professor in the Engineering Technology Department at Western Washington University. He joined the Vehicle Research Institute at WWU in 2006 after spending twenty years in automotive drivetrain R&D. Steven.fleishman@wwu.edu Page 15.1362.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2010Western Washington University’s Hybrid Bus – A Multidisciplinary Approach to Project-BasedEducationAbstract Western
AC 2010-228: THE CHALLENGE OF TEACHING SUSTAINABLEDEVELOPMENT USING A MULTIDISCIPLINARY PROJECT WITHINTEGRATED PROCESS DESIGNAnouk Desjardins, École Polytechnique de Montréal Anouk Desjardins has worked on the evolution and the teaching of the course Sustainable Development Capstone Project. After graduating in civil engineering from Ecole Polytechnique de Montreal she obtained a Master’s of Applied Science in 1999. Then she worked in industry as a process engineer. Since 2008 she joined Ecole Polytechnique as a research assistant for sustainable development projects and as a lecturer.Louise Millette, École Polytechnique de Montréal Louise Millette is, since 2002, the first (and only) woman to
success in first-year engineering and engineering in K-12. Page 15.431.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2010 Draw Bridge Design: An Interdisciplinary, Project-Based Capstone Course for Freshman Engineering StudentsAbstractEngineering schools have long dealt with issues in recruitment and retention in engineering programs.Retention past the first year of study in engineering is often less than 50%. Efforts to address lowretention often include a redesign of the first year of study, with the intent to of introducing engineeringdesign early in the curriculum.Toward this end, Ohio Northern
from across the U.S. Starting 2007 he is affiliated with Central Connecticut State University (CCSU) Department of Engineering. His research areas are: Rocket and Aircraft Propulsion; Aerothermodynamics; Chemical Kinetics; Combustion Analyses; Thermo-chemical Non-equilibrium Flows; Internal Combustion Engines; Thermal/Fluid Systems; Numerical Simulation of Combustion and Flow; Microgravity Fluid Flow and Phase Change Heat Transfer. He is teaching the following disciplines: Propulsion; Advanced Propulsion; Combustion; Aeronautics; Heat Transfer; Applied Fluid Mechanics; Instrumentation; Thermodynamics; Senior Capstone Design Projects. Dr. Naoumov initiated a Moonbuggy project at the CCSU
Instructor in the Department of Materials Science and Engineering at Virginia Tech. She also is the faculty advisor for the Material Advantage Student Professional Organization and of the Journal of Undergraduate Materials Research (JUMR). In addition to teaching the materials processing laboratories, she mentors at least one team each year in their senior capstone project. Her research is primarily in the area of microwave processing of materials. Page 15.99.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2010 A Summer Transitional Program for an Undergraduate Interdisciplinary
AC 2010-957: BRINGING OUT THE BEST FROM THE ENGINEERINGTECHNOLOGY STUDENTS THROUGH A SENIOR PROJECT COURSEStephen Frempong, State University of New York Page 15.242.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2010 Bringing out the best from Engineering Technology students through a capstone (project) course at SUNY CantonAbstract:The capstone (project) course in the Electrical EngineeringTechnology program was developed four years ago at the StateUniversity of New York at Canton is making a big difference inour senior students. This paper will discuss a more hands-onsenior capstone course that gives the student an opportunity tothink, research, design, construct
Industry Participation in the Interdisciplinary Team Design Project Course of a Master of Architectural Engineering Program Lauren M. Ronsse, Lily M. Wang, Clarence E. Waters Architectural Engineering Program University of Nebraska – LincolnAbstractThis is a case study of extensive industry participation in the capstone design course of theMaster of Architectural Engineering program at the University of Nebraska – Lincoln. Thiscourse, entitled Interdisciplinary Team Design Project, pairs teams of professional engineers andstudents to provide mentoring, assessment, and feedback, as the students work oninterdisciplinary teams to design the
sponsored by industry, and two projects were service-learning projectswith external customers. Each industry project sponsor provided a donation to the college andalso provided funding for all of the necessary materials for the project. The donations were usedto help fund the course, which included student travel to the sponsor site and funding for theservice-based projects.Students were provided a dedicated laboratory space in which they could work on and store theirprojects. Figure 1 shows students working on two of the projects, the robotic mower and thespin bike power meter. All sponsors of the projects were very satisfied with the final products.Two of the projects are being continued on as projects for capstone design courses, and two
specificallyaddress the problem of students’ declining interest in electromagnetics (EM), while applicationsof EM continue to permeate many areas of electrical engineering both in the industry andacademia. The new approach to teaching introductory course of EM aims to spark students’interest to the subject via offering them several real-world problems. The project has its majoremphasis on increasing students’ motivation for studying electromagnetics by re-developing thecourse flow. The educational concept being explored is based on breaking down the course into4-5 lecture/lab mini-projects, each focused on a particular theme of interest to engineers andresearchers nowadays. As part of this project, a senior capstone research on Wireless ElectricityTransfer
discussions after each alternating 12 week co-op term with their corporatesponsor.One of the most reoccurring challenges that our students often face in their co-op jobs, seniorthesis projects, and other capstone course projects is how to design stronger and lighter products.The driver behind this persistent question, obviously, is the never-ending demand of higher fuelefficiency in transportation industries, and more mass and cost reduction in all engineering fields.Often our students are asked by their industrial sponsors to investigate the use of alternativematerials in current or emerging designs. Even though there is no straightforward answer to sucha question, composite materials do offer unique solutions in developing stronger and
AC 2010-581: INTEGRATING GRADUATE STUDENT RESEARCH INTO K-12CLASSROOMS: A GK-12 FELLOWS PROJECTVikram Kapila, Polytechnic University VIKRAM KAPILA is an Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering at Polytechnic Institute of NYU, Brooklyn, NY, where he directs an NSF funded Web-Enabled Mechatronics and Process Control Remote Laboratory, an NSF funded Research Experience for Teachers Site in Mechatronics, and an NSF funded GK-12 Fellows project. He has held visiting positions with the Air Force Research Laboratories in Dayton, OH. His research interests are in cooperative control; distributed spacecraft formation control; linear/nonlinear control with applications to robust control
angiogenesis and microvascular remodeling, as well as undergraduate engineering pedagogical approaches. Upon completion of her Ph.D. degree, Ms. Taylor will join the Department of Bioengineering at the University of Washington, where she will coordinate undergraduate teaching labs and the Bioengineering Capstone Design sequence.Katelyn Mason, University of Virginia Katelyn E. Mason is a third year undergraduate student in the Department of Biomedical Engineering at the University of Virginia. Since January 2009, Ms. Mason has been collaborating on research projects in Shayn M. Peirce’s lab in the Department of Biomedical Engineering at the University of Virginia. Her research is focused
different specifications, featuresand material. Despite the initial teasing endured by the senior group about the type of productbeing designed, at the end, the sponsor and the students considered the experience worthwhile ofan interdisciplinary capstone design project.IntroductionThe engineering design process has different meanings to different people, which sometimesmakes it difficult to have adequate design projects for Senior Design capstone activities. Butwhen a project has the potential to involve more than the standard technical activities thatengineering students usually understand as being what “design” is all about, the project lendsitself to be a great opportunity to illustrate the actual meaning of the complete engineering design
of R&D in machine tool controls and gauging at GTE-Valenite Corp., started and managed the clinical engineering department at William Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak, and was a research associate in radiology, nuclear medicine, and bio-mechanics at Wayne State University. Ken has taught at Lawrence Tech evening programs as an adjunct instructor since 1965. His senior projects class, where students generate project ideas, research, design, manufacture, and assess the market for inventive products is the capstone course. Cook also has enjoyed a long side career in magic finding his hobby very useful in teaching. A highlight for his students each year is the two-hour magic performance he offers
sustainability characteristics 8) Effectively document and present the process used during this design projectAs can be seen from the problem statement and project objectives of this PBSL design project,this is not only a real-world problem with a “real” customer, but certainly one that is open-endedand fairly ill-defined. In fact, it is a project that some would find in a capstone designexperience. Our motivation in integrating such an authentic and complex problem in asophomore design sequence was to expose students to not only real-world problem solving butalso a project that enabled students to help a member of our university community. In assessingstudents’ learning outcomes during this PBSL design project, we were guided by the followingresearch
the educational laboratories that can significantly contribute to thedevelopment of technologically literate students and workforce that could be in great demand notonly in the tri-state area but also nationwide. The establishment of the state-of-the-artlaboratories allows Drexel and its community college partners to develop training options forengineers and technologists located in the region’s key industries. Development of Web-basedtechnology laboratories for capstone courses by NSF CCLI Phase I (2004) and Phase II (2006)projects is described in this paper. With global competitiveness as the motivation, academia mustdevelop advanced technology aligned with industry to eliminate competency gaps in thecapabilities of engineering technology
projects was a topic of a Harvey Mudd Design Workshop5. Gorman6 alsoprovide examples of capstone projects from the University of Virginia in a paper that focuses onCriterion 3 of the ABET criteria on Program Outcomes7. The projects Gorman highlights in the Page 15.293.3paper demonstrate how to incorporate the four types of knowledge the engineering studentneeds: information, skills, judgment, and wisdom. The third Harvey Mudd workshop alsoinvestigated the social dimension of engineering students’ collaborative projects, and highlightedthe value of social-scientific and pedagogical scholarship for instructors creating such projects8.Simply assigning a
assist the undergraduate engineering community inidentifying and developing the types of projects that provide students with the best opportunitiesto achieve their learning outcomes. Another long-term goal is to use such a PBL classification tocharacterize other highly promoted projects in engineering education such as capstone designprojects which by nature are more complex and ill-structured.LimitationsFuture studies should also address the limitations within the current study. The indicators ofcomplexity and structuredness were developed while the reverse engineering project was inprogress. This did not allow us to develop a priori classification ratings for each of theindicators prior to students beginning their project. An a priori
put forth recommendations for improvementsto the design. Other research confirms the idea that having students analyze the buildingcomponents provides similar benefits to engaging in research. Page 15.1314.4Students that have not faced open-ended design problems will find that their education isinsufficient when they enter the workforce. There has been a great response to this needincluding accreditation requirements requiring students to work in a collaborative, team-oriented,capstone design project. Another avenue to expose students to this type of work isundergraduate research. But using an existing building as a laboratory lends itself