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Displaying results 12121 - 12150 of 40835 in total
Conference Session
Student Perceptions of Self-efficacy, Success, and Identity
Collection
2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Louis Nadelson, University of Central Arkansas; Idalis Villanueva, Utah State University; Jana Bouwma-Gearhart, Oregon State University; Estefany Soto, University of Central Arkansas ; Cindy Ann Lenhart, Oregon State University; Kate Youmans, Utah State University; Yoon Ha Choi, Oregon State University
Tagged Divisions
Educational Research and Methods
on projects and activities inmakerspaces.Growth MindsetGrowth mindset has been defined as, the extent to which learners keep an open mind to considertheir ability to learn or perform [27], [28]. People who consider their current limitations predictstheir limitations in the future (e.g., “I am bad at math”), hold a fixed mindset. In contrast, peoplewho consider their current limitations can be overcome with effort or opportunity, hold a growthmindset. We posit that work in makerspaces increases the potential for students to develop agrowth mindset due to the ability to experiment with solutions and engagement in multipleattempts with no real single and correct solution. In addition, the ability to modify and createnew prototypes is relatively
Conference Session
Alternatives to Traditional Assessment
Collection
2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Lauren Singelmann, North Dakota State University; Enrique Alvarez Vazquez, North Dakota State University; Ellen M. Swartz, North Dakota State University; Mary Pearson, North Dakota State University; Ryan Striker P.E., North Dakota State University
Tagged Divisions
Educational Research and Methods
course and the students that are working within the boundaries of thecourse [4]. Therefore, work is being done to design assessment that allows for student freedomwith strategies like project-based learning and learning portfolios [5]. These forms of assessmentderive from work on open-ended learning environments and self-regulated learning. Open-endedlearning is a pedagogical approach that harnesses students’ intrinsic motivation to learn [6], andself-regulated learning is when students make goals and evaluate their learning in order topractice metacognition [7]. Many researchers have found benefits when implementing moreopportunities for student-directed learning both in higher education [8–11] and the K-12system [12]. Giving students ownership
Conference Session
Technology Literacy for Non-Engineers
Collection
2007 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
AnnMarie Thomas, University of Saint Thomas; Mark Breitenberg, Art Center College of Design
Tagged Divisions
Technological Literacy Constituent Committee
Literature from the University of California, San Diego. As the Chair of Liberal Arts & Sciences at Art Center (2000-2004), he created a new curriculum uniquely designed to lead and support the studio programs based on the transdisciplinary fusion of liberal arts and sciences and studio practices. He is a member of the Executive Board of the International Council of Societies of Industrial Design (ICSID). As Chair of Education, he has led the creation of ICSID’s new Global Education Network, which allows design schools around the world to share ideas, projects, design competitions and teaching methods, as well as providing links to employment opportunities with design companies
Conference Session
Multidisciplinary Teams
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Samantha Jacques; Deepti Suri, Milwaukee School of Engineering
Tagged Divisions
Multidisciplinary Engineering
thestudents are expected to know and accomplish at the time of graduation. Of particular interestand pertinent to the current discussion are criterions 3(d): an ability to function on multi-disciplinary teams, 3(f): an understanding of professional and ethical responsibility, and 3(g): anability to communicate effectively.In most engineering programs, capstone design courses tend to be the courses where these ABETcriteria are typically addressed. Capstone courses have evolved over the years from professordefined designs to industry-sponsored projects where “real” problems are given4,5. Asconstructivist theories of learning became popular, and the academic community recognized thatthat learning is a social activity6, these capstone project-based
Conference Session
Emerging Trends in Engineering Education Poster Session
Collection
2007 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Stacee Harmon, Oklahoma State University; Wendy James, Oklahoma State University; Richard Bryant, Oklahoma State University
sometimes extrinsic to adesign course. Conversely, in design, the intrinsic objectives are usually teamwork skillsand development of technical proficiencies. Recently there has been a move towardbringing laboratory-based activities into content area classrooms to enrich learning. Thepurpose of this paper is to investigate course design in view of student goal orientationand the attributional theory of motivation. In social cognition theory, an individual’s goal orientation is seen to greatlyinfluence his willingness to accept a challenge and to persist when faced with difficulties.The types of team activities employed in a classroom foster either a performance-goaloriented or learning-goal oriented learning environment. In a group project
Conference Session
Environmental Engineering Curricula
Collection
2006 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Bruce Berdanier, Ohio Northern University
Tagged Divisions
Environmental Engineering
2006-2646: WATER RESOURCES EVALUATION FOLLOWING NATURALDISASTER IN HAITIBruce Berdanier, Ohio Northern University Dr. Bruce Berdanier is currently an Associate Professor of Civil Engineering in the TJ Smull College of Engineering at Ohio Northern University. In this position, Dr. Berdanier is responsible for teaching all of the courses in Environmental Science, Water and Wastewater Treatment, Solid and Hazardous Waste, Surface Water Quality and Project Management that are included in the Civil Engineering curriculum. Additionally, Dr. Berdanier directs all teaching and research activities in the Environmental Engineering laboratory. Dr. Berdanier also conducts research in surface
Conference Session
FPD8 -- Systems, Nanotechnology & Programming
Collection
2006 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
S. Scott Moor, Indiana University Purdue University-Fort Wayne (ET)
Tagged Divisions
First-Year Programs
cooperative learning. Page 11.945.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2006 Music in MATLAB: A series of programming challenges for an introductory course.AbstractStudents often find their first course that includes programming a difficult new world. First-yearstudents may not be inspired by programs that input numbers, perform a calculation and thenoutput a number. To help motivate students there are many examples of courses using roboticsor graphics projects and problems to provide a more concrete result for programming exercises.MATLAB’s ability to output a time series to the sound card of a
Conference Session
Improving ME Education: Trends in Mechanical Engineering II
Collection
2007 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Amir Jokar, Washington State University-Vancouver; Hakan Gurocak, Washington State University-Vancouver; Dave Kim, Washington State University-Vancouver; Xiaolin Chen, Washington State University-Vancouver; Hamid Rad, Washington State University-Vancouver
Tagged Divisions
Mechanical Engineering
engineering, control, automation, and robotics, materials and manufacturing, computer-aided engineering, and machine design. • Engineering software skills; an introductory software called Working Model 2D, was taught and practiced in class in order to be used for solving real-world engineering problems, and to be used in individual or group design projects later in the semester. • Design project competition; a design project, entitled “Water-Powered Vehicle”, with a competition at the end was used as a motivation tool to instill critical thinking and creativeness. The twenty one enrolled students were divided into seven teams and each team was given a one-liter bottle of drinking water to use it as the only source of
Conference Session
Learning styles affect on students in graphic and design courses
Collection
2013 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Alice Y. Scales, North Carolina State University; Terri E Varnado, North Carolina State University; Jennifer Buelin-Biesecker, North Carolina State University
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Design Graphics
 ongoing  study  were  selected  from  analyses  of  best  practices  identified  in  the  research  literature  on  both  active  learning  and  virtual  learning.    This  paper  is  a  continuation  of  a  previous  exploratory  study  and  paper  that  discussed  preliminary  results.  This  paper  discusses  the  refinements  made  to  these  activities  following  initial  attempts  to  use  them  with  students  in  both  face-­‐to-­‐face  and  online  settings  as  well  as  findings  based  on  a  variety  of  feedback  data.  Data  sources  used  to  refine  instructional  design  included  student  surveys;  discussion  forum  posts;  project  rubric  analyses;  peer,  self,  and  instructor  assessment  data;  and  instructor
Conference Session
International Division Poster Session
Collection
2012 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Asaad Mohamed, Auburn University; Emily Reynolds, Auburn University; Chetan S. Sankar, Auburn University; P.K. Raju, Auburn University; Nanda Kumar B.S.
Tagged Divisions
International
won awards for research and teaching excellence from the Society for Information Management, NEEDS, Decision Sciences Institute, American Society for Engineering Education, Amer- ican Society for Mechanical Engineering, International Network for Engineering Education & Research, Computer World, Campus Technology, and the Project Management Institute. He is the Editor-in-Chief of the Decision Sciences Journal of Innovative Education and the Managing Editor of the Journal of STEM Education: Innovations and Research.Dr. P.K. Raju, Laboratory for Innovative Technology & Engineering Education (LITEE)Mr. Nanda Kumar B.S. Nanda Kumar B.S. is Assistant Construction Manager, Center of Excellence & Futuristic
Conference Session
Design in Engineering Education Poster Session
Collection
2012 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Brenda A. Haven, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, Prescott; Michael Kenneth Fabian, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University; Alexander James Herring, General Electric - Aviation; Marissa Pinnola, Purdue University; Devan DUPLICATE Berg, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education
the Air Force after 25 years and worked on advanced rocket engines, jet engines, and directed energy weapons. He was Program Manager for the first Lamilloy turbine, Branch Chief for world’s first cryogenic full-flow rocket cycle, Deputy Director for Propulsion Directorate developing next generation jet engines with three flow paths instead of turbofan’s two paths, and Faculty Advisor for ERAU Jet Dragster Project, Formula Research Club (March race car chassis), University Space Launch Initiative Club. He has a Ph.D. in aerospace engineering, University of Notre Dame, 1995, M.S. in aeronautics and sstronautics, University of Washington, 1989, (Oates Fellow), and a B.S. in aeronautical engineering, U.S. Air Force
Conference Session
Energy Education and Industry Needs
Collection
2010 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Jai Agrawal, Purdue University, Calumet; Omer Farook, Purdue University, Calumet; Chandra Sekhar, Purdue University, Calumet
Tagged Divisions
Energy Conversion and Conservation
/manager/professional who hold baccalaureate in other technology fields. Thecertificate courses introduce the concepts and technology of harvesting energy from sun, windand other alternative sources, thermoelectric, electrochemical, bio-photosynthetic and hydrogenbased energy systems. The certificate consists of 12 credit hours, equivalent of four courses: 1)Solar Engineering Systems, 2) Wind and Alternative Energy Technology, 3) Energy Networkingand 4) Energy Neutral Living.Courses in the certificate can be delivered in traditional classroom/distance learning formats.Each course comprises of three components: a) content, b) critical review of current researchpapers and c) project. The course content consists of study of sources of energy and
Conference Session
Frontiers in Engineering Economy
Collection
2010 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Ted Eschenbach, TGE Consulting
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Economy
learning from each other. This paper is written from the perspective of an engineeringeconomist with over 30 years of teaching and textbook writing experience, who has recently hadhis world-view shifted by multiple forays into finance classrooms.IntroductionThe time value of money is the foundation of two fields—engineering economy and finance. Yethow those two fields are presented in their introductory course have a surprisingly smallintersection. The basic reason is that engineering economy focuses at the project level, whileintroductory corporate finance focuses at the firm level. But both courses include the firm andproject levels and both include applications of the time value of money to the personal lives ofstudents. This creates the
Conference Session
DEED Poster Session
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
John Farris
classes followthe same schedule, and participate in the same experiential learning component but havedifferent curriculum, texts, and faculty. The classes meet together or separately in order tofacilitate a learning community surrounding the product innovation process. Faculty membersevaluate students in their own disciplines. The objective of the project is to design a new to theworld product and create a market entry plan. The engineering and marketing students worktogether to research and develop a product that the customers want and that can be produced fora price the customers are willing to pay.The complex collaboration between marketing and engineering students is facilitated using amodified product innovation process. The model provides a
Conference Session
Outstanding Contributions to Student Learning through Laboratory Experiences
Collection
2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Harry Courtney Powell, University of Virginia; Joanne Bechta Dugan, University of Virginia
Tagged Divisions
Division Experimentation & Lab-Oriented Studies
Page 24.470.2overlap with each other. Furthermore we have designed low cost hardware based on industry-standard components that enables students to own virtually all of the required course material.This encourages experimentation outside of the traditional laboratory environment, especiallysince students have 24/7 access to the laboratory space and equipment. Figure 1. Students working and learning in the labThe class is structured with a weekly assignment which consists of 2 components: an in-labexperiment and a larger project. The Monday lecture reviews last week’s experiment and project,typically beginning with a brief on-line quiz aimed at a summary assessment of the previousweek's activities. This provides us
Conference Session
FPD 8: Teaching Design in the First Year
Collection
2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Ann Saterbak, Rice University; Tracy Volz, Rice University
Tagged Divisions
First-Year Programs
Paper ID #9120Assessing Knowledge and Application of the Design ProcessDr. Ann Saterbak, Rice UniversityDr. Tracy Volz, Rice University Tracy Volz, PhD, is the Director of Rice University’s Program in Writing and Communication. Prior to this role, she spent fourteen years teaching technical communication in the Rice Center for Engineering Leadership and in the Cain Project in Engineering and Professional Communication at Rice. In addition to working with Rice faculty and students, Dr. Volz has conducted communication seminars for professional engineering societies and corporations. Her scholarly interests focus on oral
Conference Session
NSF Grantees’ Poster Session
Collection
2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Jennifer E. LeBeau, Washington State University; Denny C. Davis, Washington State University; Noah L. Schroeder, Washington State University; Brian F. French, Washington State University ; Shane A. Brown P.E., Washington State University; Howard P. Davis, Washington State University
Tagged Topics
NSF Grantees Poster Session
Tagged Divisions
Division Experimentation & Lab-Oriented Studies
Paper ID #8885Building Assessment and Evaluation Capacity of Engineering Educators ThroughASSESSDr. Jennifer E LeBeau, Washington State University Jennifer LeBeau conducts program and project evaluation through the Learning and Performance Re- search Center and teaches in the Department of Educational Leadership, Sport Science, and Educa- tional/Counseling Psychology. Dr. LeBeau’s primary interests lie in evaluation of projects related to STEM education and student success.Dr. Denny C. Davis P.E., Washington State University Dr, Denny Davis is Emeritus Professor at Washington State University, after over 25 years of
Conference Session
NSF Grantees Poster Session
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
Kathleen Zimmerman-Oster; Mohan Krishnan; Shuvra Das; Sandra Yost
teams. Because engineers are traditionally trained in fields such as either“Proceedings of the 2005 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & ExpositionCopyright ASEE 2005, American Society for Engineering Education”Mechanical or Electrical engineering, many of today’s engineering graduates are not wellprepared to function competently in environments that require them to work on products whereelectrical and mechanical knowledge areas are intertwined.An NSF-funded project addresses these competency gaps through the development of two team-oriented, project-based courses as a follow-up to a previously developed “Introduction toMechatronics” course [1-5]. For this project, we have identified the following goals: (a
Conference Session
Experiential Learning
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
Sumedha Ariely; Barbara Masi; David Wallace; Amy Banzaert
, a representative group in terms of research focus, gender, and tenure level,indicating that 80% of faculty are open to the use of service learning. However, 52% expressedconcerns about time constraints and 56% needed support finding suitable projects for technicalclasses. If this type of support, including methods to mitigate time constraints, were available,faculty were interested in the practice. Surveyed faculty considered service learning mostappropriate for design classes, but were open to the practice in other classes if suitable projectswere available.IntroductionService learning is a teaching method that integrates academically-appropriate communityservice projects into the curriculum of a class. Service learning research shows that
Conference Session
Manufacturing Program Innovation
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
Lenea Howe; Jr., Elijah Kannatey-Asibu
problems. By contrast, the design of RMS is composed of many individualprojects, all driven by a systems perspective. It provides an excellent example todemonstrate how a system-level perspective drives the individual research projects, and,in turn, how projects are integrated to form a system. This is an integrative approach thatcombines the depth in a particular discipline with breadth due to interaction with studentsand researchers from other disciplines.A driver of a different type for our education plan was the lack of valuable skills thatwould allow young engineering professionals to function more effectively in industry.Engineers in industry must be effective participants and leaders of teams, yet thetraditional university environment was
Conference Session
Multidisciplinary Engineering by Design II
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
Jeffrey LaCombe; James Detweiler; Daniel Loranz; Eric Wang
skill, knowledge, and experience. Missions of growing complexity provide opportunities to acquire baseline skills and then to build on them. We call this strategy "crawl", "walk", "run" and "fly!"This craw, walk, run, and fly euphemism forms the core of the NevadaSat Program. Our roster ofactivities begins with BalloonSats (Figure 1, left), where students build payloads out of kits withdata logging equipment, a timer, a camera, and material to build an enclosure. The payloads areattached to a lanyard, parachute and a weather balloon. The weather balloon provides lift for thestudents’ project and sends them up to a predetermined height. The data logging equipmentrecords data such as radiation, temperature, and pressure.CanSats
Conference Session
Industrial Collaborations
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
William Ziegler
, engineering, math, and science have dropped offsignificantly and continue to decline. Student scores in math and science in the United States(US) are significantly lower than other developed countries. To alleviate these declines, schoolsare attempting to interest students from kindergarten to grade 12 (k-12) in technology,engineering, math, and science disciplines. Schools across the US have implemented a variety offormal programs such as Project Lead-the-Way in attempts to promote student interest in thesefields. Additionally, technology and engineering have been introduced to middle and secondaryschool curriculums using a variety of less formal methods. For example, students can participatein structural load competitions, mousetrap powered vehicle
Conference Session
The Best of Interdisciplinary Programs
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
William Marshall; Steven Budd; Michael Fountain; Paul Givens
and society.The historical paradigm often has inherent difficulties when attempting to integrate highlyspecialized professionals into functional, efficient, and effective teams focused on technologycommercialization and product development. Due to the training and specialization of thedifferent professions (scientists, physicians, engineers, business individuals), there tends to be a“silo effect” where each professional has an immense amount of knowledge and expertise withinhis/her own area, but has difficulty crossing disciplines to understand and function successfullywithin a team format.Entrepreneurship results in the creation of economic value by utilization of research andtechnical information and knowledge in inter-disciplinary projects
Conference Session
Innovation in Design Education
Collection
2003 Annual Conference
Authors
Jesse Pappas; Eric Pappas
experience.Successful programs, projects, and research at premier engineering schools around thecountry are equipping students with the advanced creative and cognitive abilities requiredto succeed as contemporary professionals. This paper is a review of the innovative, multi-disciplinary, educational methodology that is manifest in several types of new efforts,including: 1) Engineering design in a studio atmosphere; 2) Engineering courses forcreative problem-solving; 3) Encouraging creativity and insight through journal writing; 4)The agenda for creativity at the UK Centre for Materials Education; and 5) A focus on thepersonal creative process. Research for this review inspired The Creativity, Innovation,and Design Report, a new national publication dedicated
Conference Session
Unique Laboratory Experiments & Programs
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Alex See
Session number 2756 Hands-on learning and implementing using LabVIEWTM for undergraduates in 13 weeks Alex See, PhD Monash University Malaysia, School of Engineering and Science, No. 2 Jalan Kolej, Bandar Sunway, 46150, PJ, Selangor Darul Ehsan, Malaysia email: alex.see@engsci.monash.edu.myAbstractSecond year Mechatronics undergraduates, in the year 2003 at Monash UniversityMalaysia (MUM) were taking a subject module known as Project and Practice. Studentswere exposed to National Instrument’s LabVIEWTM software and hardware for the firsttime. They were required to
Conference Session
Web Systems and Web Services
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Ralph Buchal
Session 1658 Web-based shared workspaces for collaborative learning Ralph O. Buchal Department of Mechanical and Materials Engineering, The University of Western Ontario, London, ON, Canada, N6A 5B9 rbuchal@eng.uwo.caAbstractThere is growing agreement that group-based, collaborative learning approaches are moreeffective than traditional lecture-based instruction. Collaborative work is also an important trendin engineering practice. Team-based student design projects are very effective from a pedagogicalstandpoint, as well as developing skills in the
Collection
2001 Annual Conference
Authors
Ronald E. Musiak; Richard A. Grabiec; Eric W. Haffner; Steve Schreiner; Alan K. Karplus; Mary Vollaro
selected by using the results of Belbin's personalitytype questionnaire (administered before classes started during summer registration andorientation) [4]. Each team had a balanced mix of personality types (idea sources, detailers,finishers, etc.).V. Course ContentThe following outlines the content of the various activity areas used in the course.1. Design Activity: 1.1. Summer orientation class in engineering responsibilities and ethics 1.2. Presentation of the engineering design method, tasking a project, design-team behaviors and responsibilities (including team contracts), engineering reports (oral and written) 1.3. Design competition problem 1 - Design a scale model of a material mover that can move the most
Collection
2001 Annual Conference
Authors
Kathryn Jablokow
course. Specific classroomactivities and delivery techniques will be discussed, along with typical homework assignmentsand the semester-long individual course project. Student outcomes and feedback will be reportedas well. While the present audience for this course is composed of working adults, it is highlysuitable as a junior or senior level design elective and may be easily integrated into anundergraduate curriculum.1.0 IntroductionWhat do the processes of invention, engineering design, and creative problem solving have incommon? This paper describes a course that answers this question by examining invention andcreative design from the perspective of the practicing engineer. The primary objective of thiscourse is to help students
Conference Session
Innovations in Design within BME Curricula
Collection
2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Richard Goldberg, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; Kevin Caves, Duke University; Julie A. Reynolds, Duke University
Tagged Divisions
Biomedical
students devote considerable effort to the design and developmentof their projects, but that they are not as motivated to devote time and effort to writing. As aresult, their final reports often have significant problems with organization, clarity, andeffectiveness. Therefore, we recently adopted several new strategies to improve the quality ofstudent writing. Our goals were to 1) encourage students to work on their writing earlier andthroughout the semester; 2) engage every student in each team in the writing process; 3) usewriting as a tool to improve students’ understanding of the clinical problem that they areaddressing and how their design addresses their client’s needs; and 4) improve the quality of thefinal reports.To achieve these goals
Conference Session
Mechanics Classroom Demonstrations
Collection
2012 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Josué Njock-Libii, Indiana University-Purdue University, Fort Wayne
Tagged Divisions
Mechanics
c American Society for Engineering Education, 2012Applying Dynamics to the bouncing of game balls: experimental investigation of the relationship between the duration of a linear impulse and the energy dissipated during impact.AbstractThis paper discusses experiments done as a class assignment in a Dynamics course in order toinvestigate the relation between the duration of a linear impulse and the energy dissipated duringimpact. After analysis had been presented in lecture on the relation between work and energy andon the connection between linear impulse and linear momentum, a series of distinct but relatedprojects was assigned as hands-on applications of the results of analysis.In project one, it was shown that