freshmen for several years. She is actively involved in community services of offering robotics workshops to middle- and high-school girls. Her research interests are dynamics and system modeling, geometry modeling, project based engineering design, and robotics in manufacturing.Dr. Diane L. Peters, Kettering University Dr. Peters is an Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering at Kettering University.Prof. Stephanie G Wettstein, Montana State University, Montana Engineering Education Research Center Stephanie Wettstein is an Assistant Professor in the Chemical and Biological Engineering department at Montana State University in Bozeman, MT. She has been the faculty advisor of the MSU SWE chapter since 2013.Dr
to expect to find them as faculty members in these colleges. In aneffort to create a pool of Black women who qualified to pursue academic careers in engineeringor computer science, there must be intentional initiatives focused on understanding the authenticexperiences of these women. Strategies, grounded in research, must be developed to enhance therecruitment and retention of Black women across all academic levels. The academic communitymust also gain a better understanding of how to increase the awareness and interests of Blackwomen to pursue careers in the professoriate. Once these most promising practices are unveiled,meaningful avenues must be created to share how they can be effectively implemented.Project OverviewThe Niela Project is
application of their previous coursework. All found the research-nature of theindividual projects to be very rewarding, especially after conducting several in-class projectstogether. Many of these in-class projects served as components for their more ill-definedindividual projects. Some wished they had taken this course prior to their senior year, beforetaking DSP and communications. However, one student praised the ill-defined nature of theindividual projects, while commenting that juniors would struggle more with the less-prescribednature, since they would not yet have taken DSP and communications. One studentrecommended blending this SDR course into the communications-theory course, and splitting thetheoretical/applied combination into two
for several NSF projects. His first research strand concentrates on the relationship between educational policy and STEM education. His second research strand focuses on studying STEM classroom interactions and subsequent effects on student understanding. He is a co- developer of the Reformed Teaching Observation Protocol (RTOP) and his work has been cited more than 2200 times and he has been published in multiple peer-reviewed journals such as Science Education and the Journal of Research in Science Teaching.Prof. Stephen J. Krause, Arizona State University Stephen Krause is professor in the Materials Science Program in the Fulton School of Engineering at Arizona State University. He teaches in the areas of
Programming environment.2) This course requires students to have a background in networking so that when the components of socket programming and connectivity are taught in this course, the course is wholly disseminated in their understanding of the system(s), and their learning is made more complete. The ECET department has offered this course (ECET 499) experimentally during the past few semesters.The impact of the above sequence of courses could be measured by the fact that 75% of thesenior design projects utilize the core knowledge gained. Operating System with EmbeddedSystem Design provides a convenient mechanism to design any customize system, regardless ofend usage. This provides the student the knowledge base for Hardware, Software
Scaffold and Assess Engineering Design Projects,” 2013 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference and Exposition Proceedings, Atlanta, GA, June 22-26, 2013. Paper ID #7298[14] D. Walsh, L. Griffin, and R. Crockett, “COSMM: An Undergraduate Laboratory for Engineering and Manufacturing Complex, Organic Shapes Using Nature as a Template,” 2006 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference and Exposition Proceedings, Chicago, IL, June 18-21, 2006. Session 1530.[15] S. Lai-Yuen, and M. Herrera, “Integrating Real-World Medical Device Projects into Manufacturing Education,” 2009 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference and Exposition Proceedings, Austin, TX, June 14-17 2009
efficient supply chain for urban water projects. Jessica has worked for many successful consumer product companies including Unilever, and Georgia Pacific. Currently, Jessica is completing her Ph.D. in Engineering Education at Purdue University to focus on practical methods of corporate outreach in STEM for minority communities. In her free time, writes children’s books, teaches yoga to children, and enjoys her family.Dr. Mary K. Pilotte, Purdue University, West Lafayette (College of Engineering) Mary Pilotte is Associate Professor of Engineering Practice in the School of Engineering Education at Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana. She is an instructor for Multidisciplinary engineering course- work, and is
serving as a high school engineering/technology teacher and a teaching assistant professor within the College of Engineering & Mineral Resources at West Virginia University. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2018 M-Arch: Building an Arch bridge using Trigonometry Designed by Euisuk Sung, Scott Bartholomew, Greg Strimel, and Seokyoung Kwon Contact information: Euisuk Sung (sunge@purdue.edu) This project aims to integrate STEM content with advanced Lesson Overview mathematical concepts through a hands-on activity. The lesson, titled M-Arch, is designed to teach concepts
, 2018Leveraging the power of Matlab, SPSS, EXCEL and Minitab for Statisticalanalysis and inferenceAbstractFor many undergraduate and graduate engineering technology students, data collectionand data analysis—including methodology, statistical analysis, and data preparation—is the most daunting and frustrating aspect of working on capstone senior projects andmaster’s theses. This paper provides an introduction to a number of statisticalconsiderations, specifically statistical hypotheses, statistical methods, appropriateanalytic techniques, and sample size justifications. Statistical analysis of data utilizingstatistical software packages, including MATLAB, SPSS, Minitab, EXCEL, and R,will be shown for scientific applications, quality assurance, corporate
Paper ID #22500Maintaining Excellence in Undergraduate Education: The Faculty Develop-ment Seminars of the Baylor University School of Engineering & ComputerScience (ECS) Over the Last Six YearsMs. Cynthia C. Fry, Baylor University CYNTHIA C. FRY is currently a Senior Lecturer of Computer Science at Baylor University. She worked at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center as a Senior Project Engineer, a Crew Training Manager, and the Science Operations Director for STS-46. She was an Engineering Duty Officer in the U.S. Navy (IRR), and worked with the Naval Maritime Intelligence Center as a Scientific/Technical Intelligence
assignment concluded with presentations at a local high school andthen completing a reflection assignment based on that experience. This crossover activity incorporates many learning theories and proven pedagogicalteaching and learning strategies including. Interdisciplinary Experiential Collaborative Service-learning (for the nanotechnology students)At its core, the rationale for creating the assignment was to enhance engagement with the coursecontent, create deeper learning, and develop lasting appreciation for the fields.Pedagogical Background Engineering students encounter new technologies in capstone projects, in theircoursework, and in internships. The current technologies
. Of the nine such texts published between 2015 and January 2018, all butone are authored or edited by philosophers. Three of the nine are co-authored/co-edited by ateam of philosophers and engineers.2 Philosophers continue to take up leadership positions inengineering ethics as well, directing centers, founding programs, and serving the EngineeringEthics Division of ASEE.1 Acknowledgements to Dr. Lorraine Kisselburgh (Purdue University) and Dr. Justin Hess (IUPUI) for their help indata analysis and in unpacking what results we can legitimately draw from the data. Data was collected as part of anNSF funded project (2012-2015 #1237868, Professor Andrew Brightman PI).Thanks also to anonymous ASEE reviewers for their thoughtful comments on the
can follow.Research QuestionsThe experience of women in undergraduate engineering programs has not been examinedthrough a critical and qualitative lens; nor has the question of university type played a role in theresearch. The hope is that understanding how women experience undergraduate engineeringprograms at public state universities, the broadest impact on participation can be made. The goalof this project is to look at various stages of a woman’s educational journey in engineering toexamine the following: 1. How do women experience undergraduate engineering programs at public universities? 2. What role does classroom discourse play in shaping women’s experience in “gatekeeper” courses
]. Our study is focused on rewardpoints and leaderboard and evaluating their impact on student learning.Collaborative learning: Collaborative interactions among individuals, has shown positive resultsacross different levels of education, ranging from young children doing their school projects likecraft work in teams to university students working on development projects [17],[ 21]. At thesame time, it is essential to make a distinction between team performance and teameffectiveness. This is because team performance represents the results of group’s activities whilepaying little heed to how the group have accomplished the task. Team effectiveness, however,takes a more holistic point of view in considering not only whether the group
the final project. This section will introduce the topics under each of the fourcategories as well as provide references to the teaching materials.It is possible for our departments to provide hardware to students, but that was not done in thispreliminary case. Thus, the course will require students to purchase their own hardware to build afinal project. To offset this cost, the class will rely on open source teaching materials whenavailable. Consequently, most of the referenced books are available for free and provide thenecessary technical content that is appropriate for our students’ level.Section 1: Background (Weeks 1-3)This section refreshes analytical and programming topics that are needed for EAI.In terms mathematical content, we will
. M. Lord, “Self-regulation and autonomy in problem-and project-based learning environments,” Act. Learn. High. Educ., vol. 14, no. 2, pp. 109–122, 2013.[15] G. Schraw, K. J. Crippen, and K. Hartley, “Promoting self-regulation in science education: Metacognition as part of a broader perspective on learning,” Res. Sci. Educ., vol. 36, no. 1–2, pp. 111–139, 2006.[16] A. Maclean-Blevins and L. Muilenburg, “Using Class Dojo to support student self- regulation,” in EdMedia: World Conference on Educational Media and Technology, 2013, pp. 1684–1689.[17] B. J. Zimmerman, “A Social Cognitive View of Self-Regulated Academic Learning.,” J. Educ. Psychol., vol. 81, no. 3, pp. 329–339, 1989.[18] B. J
RFP Design Vendor Selection Project ManagementCHANGEManagement Full Implementation Proceedings of the 2018 Conference for Industry and Education CollaborationFebruary 8, 2018 Copyright ©2018 American Society for Engineering Education 17 Session CPDD 414 2 IMPACT REPORTPartnerships February 8, 2018 18 Session CPDD 414 3 People DevelopmentSilo-ed
ScienceFoundation (NSF) that might allow Bay College to not only obtain much of the equipment theywould need to create the necessary academic program, but that could also be used to create apartnership between the two schools that would lead to coordinated curriculum and anarticulation agreement between Bay College’s program and that of Michigan Tech University.This proposed endeavor was ultimately successful, and the two institutions have since partneredon additional grants and projects that have shown tremendous early promise towards addressingthe needs of the local manufacturing sector. The remainder of this paper describes thispartnership, the educational opportunities that are now available, the early results of their work,and some lessons learned
prior to attending class. The study concluded that, byhaving the students review the videos before class, more class time was available for instructorinteraction and open-ended problem solving. Likewise, student surveys indicated that theypreferred watching the videos to reading their textbooks. However, the study did not include anyquantifiable measure of how the videos impacted student learning. Looking at projects outsidethe United States, at the American University of Beirut, Itani 6 examined the use of videos as a Proceedings of the 2018 Conference for Industry and Education Collaboration Copyright ©2018, American Society for Engineering Education
http://www.middlesexcanal.org/ https://en.wikipedia.org/ European Engineering Traditions British civil engineers French military engineersLHL LHL British Civil Engineers • Characteristics • Open to all social classes • Empirical approach • Focus on industrial or civilian projects • Apprenticeship system • Examples
CUNY.Prof. Tak Cheung, CUNY Queensborough Community College Tak Cheung, Ph.D., professor of physics, teaches in CUNY Queensborough Community College. He also conducts research and mentors student research projects. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2018 Improving critical thinking through the cognitive loading control of working memory in introductory physics class Vazgen Shekoyan, Sunil Dehipawala, George Tremberger, Raul Armendariz, David Lieberman and Tak Cheung CUNY Queensborough Community College Bayside NY 11364 USAAbstractThe critical thinking process in physics problem solving has been observed to relate to workingmemory
University of Rhode Island with research work done at Rhode Island Hospital. Previously, he was an assistant di- rector at Massachusetts General Hospital (a teaching affiliate of Harvard Medical School) in Boston. He has also held faculty appointments in Illinois, Miami and Singapore. At NTU in Singapore, he was the founding director of the BME Research Center and the founding head of the Bioengineering division. He was the Principal Investigator for several Biomedical Engineering projects. He also worked in R&D at Coulter Electronics in Miami and in hospital design and operations management at Bechtel for healthcare megaprojects. He has served in the National Medical Research Council in Singapore. His research in
Paper ID #242602018 CoNECD - The Collaborative Network for Engineering and ComputingDiversity Conference: Crystal City, Virginia Apr 29First-Year Experience (FYrE@ECST): Pre-Physics Course (WIP)Ni Li, California State University Los AngelesDr. Gustavo B Menezes, California State University, Los Angeles Menezes is an Associate Professor in Civil Engineering Department at CalStateLA. His specialization is in Environmental and Water Resources Engineering. Since becoming part of the faculty in 2009, Menezes has also focused on improving student success and has led a number of engineering education projects. He is currently the PI
various field in engineering for over 30 years. Aimee received her degrees in Mechanical Engineering and Masters in Business Administration from Ohio State. She began her career as a packaging equipment engineer at Procter and Gamble, then moved to Anheuser-Busch where she worked for over 27 years. She worked as project manager, engineering manager, utility manager, maintenance manager, and finally as the Resident Engineer managing all technical areas of the facility. During her tenure, the brewery saw dramatic increases in productivity improvement, increased use of automation systems, and significant cost reductions in all areas including utilities where they received the internal award for having the best utility
inChemistry / Biochemistry, Physics, Mathematics and Engineering. Freshman-level courses inmath and chemistry (Pre-calculus, Calculus I, Calculus II, General Chemistry I, and Chemistryfor Engineers) were targeted for intervention because of their high drop and failure rates. TheEmerging Scholars Program (ESP) model was used to develop courses that were then offered toincoming freshmen beginning in Fall 2010. A second component of the project was thedevelopment of undergraduate research opportunities for students who completed the ESPcourses. Finally, research in STEM education was a third stated goal of the AURAS project.Marked improvements in pass rates and a decrease in the drop rates for the participants in theAURAS classes were noted during the
broaden participation in engineering study andcareers by introducing youth to undergraduate students as engineering role models. However,little research has been done on how students select role models and how to optimize theinteractions between young students and university students to increase role model uptake. Thispaper presents preliminary data and analysis from Role Models in Elementary EngineeringEducation, an NSF-funded research project that is examining the dynamics betweenundergraduate students providing outreach and elementary school student participants. This casestudy of a 5th grade classroom focuses on how dynamics related to sharing personal information,engineering identity, and other interests interact with elementary school
]. Acknowledging and overcoming these fundamental barriers can sometimes bemore easily accomplished through more informal STEM education settings, such as summercamps, than in traditional classroom settings [7].Research has also shown that women and underrepresented minorities respond better to STEMeducation in settings where the task are contextualized, the projects that are socially-relevant,and when activities are multi-media and hands-on [6], [8], [9]. Studies have shown that womenare typically more attracted to projects that seek to improve society and consider this factor whenchoosing their college majors [10]. Several schools with engineering programs devoted toimproving society have large majorities of women enrolled in these programs, which
Akron, in the department in Curricular and Instructional Studies. Her work focuses on STEM curriculum integration and science inquiry practices in middle and high school. She is a co-PI on an NSF funded project to investigate the impact of integrating engineering on middle school students’ interest and engagement in STEM. She has also received funding to conduct teacher professional development in the areas of engineering education, problem based learning and physics inquiry instruction.Dr. Nicholas Garafolo, University of Akron Dr. Nicholas G. Garafolo is a researcher in the broad area of thermo-fluids and aerospace, with an em- phasis in advanced aerospace seals, near-hermetic fluid flows, and turbomachinery modal
project came from the desire to continue to improve the quality of learningthat our students experience in the unit operations laboratory course. With input from the entirechemical engineering faculty, course changes are under consideration. As with most unitoperations laboratory courses, this course lives at the end of the 4-year curriculum and serves asthe culmination of the student's prior coursework. Chemical engineering faculty at Rose-HulmanInstitute of Technology (RHIT) perceive that students appear to lose motivation and excitementfor doing high-quality work in the laboratory course, potentially diminishing student outcomes;these attitudes are motivating the desired change to the curriculum.Before making changes, we first needed to assess
enjoyable enough, the actual content itself hasalso struggled to represent important STEM values to kids in grades K-12. Studies have shownthat the percentage of students taking pure science classes have regressed from over 50 percentto under 21 percent in the last decade [1]. The objective of this project is to get kids in this agerange more involved with areas in the STEM field using a desirable and enjoyable learning style.This project also aims to educate users about using algae as a renewable resource. This is animportant concept to convey because, while algae are a common microorganism known to all, itis rare that people make the connection that algae can play a significant role in impacting thefuture of this world. Focus on algae has risen