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Displaying results 12211 - 12240 of 38471 in total
Conference Session
Anything New in the Mechanics of Materials?
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Arturo Fuentes, University of Texas-Pan American; Stephen Crown, University of Texas-Pan American; Bob Freeman, University of Texas-Pan American
Tagged Divisions
Mechanics
demonstrate to students that their education is the process of buildingan integrated knowledge base that will ultimately prepare them for applying that knowledge intheir career.Bibliography1. Bransford, J. D., Brown, A. L., & Cocking, R. R. (Eds.). How people learn: Brain, mind, experience,andschool. Washington, DC: National Academy Press (1999)..2. Schwartz, D. L., Brophy, S., Lin, X., & Bransford, J. D. Software for managing complex learning: Examplesfrom an educational psychology course. Educational Technology Research and Development,47(2): 39-59,1999.Every reference must be listed and numbered.3. Watai, L. L., Brodersen, A. J., & Brophy, S. Challenge-based Lab Instruction Improves Interaction in PhysicalElectronic Circuit Labs, 2005
Collection
2021 Fall ASEE Middle Atlantic Section Meeting
Authors
Donna M. Schaeffer, Marymount University; Jillian Drake, Marymount University
. Merriam-Webster. Retrieved October 2, 2021, from https://www.merriam- webster.com/dictionary/unethical#:~:text=%3A%20not%20conforming%20to%20a%20h igh,practices%20immoral%20and%20unethical%20behavior.[21] Nadikattu, R. R. (2020). New Ways of Implementing Cyber Security to Help in Protecting America. Journal of Xidian University, 14(5), 6004-6015.[22] National Society of Professional Engineers. (2021). NSPE Code of Ethics for Engineers. Code of Ethics | National Society of Professional Engineers. Retrieved October 4, 2021, from https://www.nspe.org/resources/ethics/code-ethics.[23] NIST (n.d.). privacy - Glossary | CSRC. Csrc.nist.gov. Retrieved October 6, 2021, from https://csrc.nist.gov/glossary/term/privacy[24] Qadir, S
Collection
2008 GSW
Authors
Scott T. Lovald; Tariq Khraishi; Jon Wagner; Bret Baack
the stress and strain measures leading to patient complications isrealized if normal patient functioning is delayed until after two weeks of healing hasoccurred.AcknowledgementsThe authors acknowledge the support of Stryker-Leibinger Corp. for a GraduateFellowship.References1. An YH (2000) Mechanical properties of bone. Mechanical Testing of Bone and the Bone-Implant Interface:41-59 CRC Press LLC.2. Bhatt V, Langford RJ (2003) Removal of miniplates in maxillofacial surgery: University Hospital Birmingham experience. J Oral Maxillofac Surg 61:553-556.3. Bolourian R, Lazow S, Berger J (2002) Transoral 2.0 mm miniplate fixation of mandibular fractures plus 2 weeks’ maxillomandibular fixation: a prospective study. J Oral Maxillofac Surg
Conference Session
Assessment
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Michael Collura, University of New Haven; Samuel Daniels, University of New Haven
Tagged Divisions
Educational Research and Methods
) s = standard deviationEffect size is generally used in studies which employ a well-defined control group forcomparison with the experimental group. In such cases, the standard deviation of the controlgroup is used. Boud’s recommendation for studies which compare student to instructorassessment is to use the standard deviation of the instructors assessment.This statistic is useful in determining how well the students’ self-assessment reflects theperformance of the class as a whole. A value of zero indicates perfect agreement, while apositive value indicates that the students overestimate their proficiency. Boud suggests thatvalues of 0.2 are considered small, values of 0.8 are considered large.A correlation coefficient can be used to
Conference Session
Focus on IE Course Design and Assessment
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Paul Kauffmann, East Carolina University; Cathy Hall, East Carolina University; Gene Dixon, East Carolina University; John Garner, East Carolina University
Tagged Divisions
Industrial Engineering
. Journal of College Student Development, 43(5), 2002, pp. 7Ι2-7'393. Zheng, J. L., Saunders, K. P., Shelley II, M. C., & Whalen, D. F. (2002). Predictors of academic success for freshmen residence hall students. Journal of College Student Development, 43(2), 267-283.4. Takahira, S., Goodings, D., and Byrnes, B., “Retention and Performance of Male and Female Engineering Students: An Examination of Academic and Environmental Variables,” Journal of Engineering Education, Vol. 88, 1998, pp. 297-304.5. Ohland, Matthew W., Sharon A.Frillaman, Guili Zhang, Catherine E. Brawner, and Thomas K. Miller. “The Effect of an Entrepreneurship Program on GPA and Retention.” Journal of Engineering Education, Oct. 2004, pp. 293-301.6. French, B
Conference Session
Engineering Professional Development for K12 Teachers
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Michael Pelletier, Northern Essex Community College; Lori Heymans, Northern Essex Community College; Paul Chanley, Northern Essex Community College
Tagged Divisions
K-12 & Pre-College Engineering
of Massachusetts designed to increasestudent interest and teacher preparation in STEM subjects. Those STEM Fellows whowished to receive 3 graduate credits (45 hours) were required to attend 2 additional daysin the summer and were required to design and field-test a written lesson plan and thenshare the experience using the lesson with the other STEM Fellows.Objectives of Content InstitutesTeacher-participants would be able to • explain the science, technology, engineering and/or mathematical topics listed in the Topical Syllabus included in the Appendix; • demonstrate the application of the topics to Alternative energy systems; • specify which standard(s) of the Massachusetts Curriculum Frameworks for Science and Technology
Conference Session
Projects and Problems in First-Year Courses
Collection
2009 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Vinod Lohani, Virginia Tech; Ganesh Balasubramanian, Virginia Tech; Ishwar Puri, Virginia Tech; Scott Case, Virginia Tech; Roop Mahajan, Virginia Tech
Tagged Divisions
First-Year Programs
-nanotechnology, space elevators and microchips. While most considered nanotechnology tobe a huge area for scientific research and predicted development in medical sciences, some alsoraised critical opinions about ethical negative aspects of such powerful technologies, withimaginations drawn from “nano-babies” using DNA interactions to producing “nano-weapons”using novel high energy physics applications. Table 2: Students’ example responses during in-class Q/A session List two eng in eering  Su ppos e yo u are inv ited to you r  ap plica tion s o f nano tech nolog y  high sc hoo l to  g iv e a sh ort t alk
Conference Session
Critical issues in IT and IET: Focus Group
Collection
2009 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Susan Scachitti, Purdue University, Calumet; Juan Salinas, Purdue University, Calumet; Deepthi Karanam, Purdue University, Calumet
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Technology
”, Proceedings of the 40th Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences – 2007, pp.131b. 5. Yvonne Lejtman, Ebrhim Shayan, Romesh Nagarajah, “Design of a suitable production management system for a manufacturing company”, Computers & Industrial Engineering, 42(2002), pp.169-174. 6. Andrew Potter, Biao Yang, Chandra Lalwani, “A simulation study of dispatch bay performance in the steel processing industry”, European Journal of Operational Research, Vol 179, Issue 2, pp.567-578. 7. Simone Appelt, Rajan Batta, Li Lin, Colin Drury, “Simulation of passenger check-in at a medium-sized US Airport”, Proceedings of the 2007 Winter Simulation Conference, S. G. Henderson, B. Biller, M.-H. Hsieh, J. Shortle, J. D. Tew
Conference Session
Innovations in ECE Education II
Collection
2009 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Radian Belu, Drexel University
Tagged Divisions
Electrical and Computer
Page 14.91.7converters’ and inverters’ experiments designed by the MNPRE center of the Universityof Minnesota (see Figure 3), and a rectifier module, developed at our electronicsworkshop. Beside these functional modules, reconfigurable test-beds are used by thestudents to construct, test and design their own converters or power electronics circuitsused during the project phase of the course. The cost of these functional modules is rathermodest and the equipment and instrumentation employed is the usual one.The power stage of a typical power electronics converter consists of only passivecomponents (such as inductor(s), capacitor(s)) and power devices (such as switch (es)and diode(s)), as one can see in Figure 2. The use of such prefabricated
Conference Session
Tricks of the Trade I
Collection
2009 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Agnieszka Miguel, Seattle University
Tagged Divisions
New Engineering Educators
AcknowledgementsThe author would like to thank Elizabeth J. Mills and Lisa Berman for their editorial review of thisarticle.References [1] R. Boice, “Classroom incivilities,” Research in Higher Education, vol. 37, pp. 453–486, August 1996. [2] L. B. Nilson, Teaching at Its Best. Bolton, MA: Anker Publishing Company, Inc., 2 ed., 2003. [3] J. M. Braxton and A. E. Bayer, eds., Addressing Faculty and Student Classroom Impropri- eties, vol. 99 of New Directions for Teaching and Learning. San Francisco, CA: Wiley Peri- odicals, Inc., Fall 2004. [4] S. Brown, “Civility in the classroom,” http://www.tc3.edu/instruct/sbrown/ fac/civilbib.htm, 2004. [5] P. J. Morrissette, “Reducing incivility in the university/college classroom,” International
Conference Session
Engineering Ethics V
Collection
2009 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
John Ochs, Lehigh University; Lisa Getzler-Linn, Lehigh University; Margaret Huyck, Illinois Institute of Technology; Scott Schaffer, Purdue University; Mary Raber, Michigan Technology University
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Ethics
. Mission Statement Development Identify Establish Generate Select Test Set Plan Plan Customer Target Product Product Product Final Downstream Needs Specifications Concepts Concept(s) Concept(s) Specifications Development Perform Economic Analysis Benchmark Competitive Products Build and Test Models and
Conference Session
Innovation in Construction Engineering Education II
Collection
2009 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Lingguang Song, University of Houston; Sang-Hoon Lee, University of Houston; Junshan Liu, Auburn University
Tagged Divisions
Construction
transform these images into an interactive 3-D model. This model provides students with a360-degree view of a construction site and the capability to navigate and investigate constructiondetails. Future research effort will focus on enhancing the usage of the proposed technologies aswell as identifying new data acquisition technologies to serve classroom learning needs. Page 14.727.15 Matched Digital Photos in Photosynth Feature Points in a 3-D Point Cloud Figure 4. Matched photos and 3-D point cloud in Photosynth.Bibliography1. AbouRizk, S. M. (1992). “A
Conference Session
Integrating Design into the BME Curriculum
Collection
2009 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Mary Besterfield-Sacre, University of Pittsburgh; Larry Shuman, University of Pittsburgh; Chris Yoder, University of Pittsburgh; Phil Weilerstein, National Collegiate Inventors and Innovators Alliance; Angela Shartrand, National Collegiate Inventors and Innovators Alliance
Tagged Divisions
Biomedical
development, testing and preproduction, introduction and productionand life cycle management. Elements that were not specific to any one stage were then groupedinto a sixth “on-going” stage.The model is delineated as follows:≠ Stage one involves conceptualization of the product/technology, the identification of a potential target market, and competitor benchmarking. The project scope is then defined, resources are allocated, and technical feasibility and financial evaluations are conducted.≠ Stage two involves the design and physical development of the technology. A critical activity is an assessment of customers’ needs and specifications. Finally, a detailed design is created and a prototype(s) is developed.≠ The third stage ensured
Conference Session
Innovative Methods to Teach Engineering to URMs
Collection
2009 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Beverley Pickering-Reyna, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee
Tagged Divisions
Minorities in Engineering
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee(UWM) College of Engineering & Applied Science (CEAS) assumed that significant principlesof the Information Technology Life Skills Career Development9 (IT-LSCD) model for youngadults could transfer to educational aspects of another technical discipline. IT-LSCD, as themodel operated from 1998 – 2003 in the UWM School of Information Studies, primarily servedthe learning needs of urban minority high school students. The intent was to help these learnersmake sense of emerging fields and learn how to overcome obstacles between them and society’stechnical fabric. Model fundamentals comprised education, training, mentoring, counseling,subsidy, tutoring, evaluation, recommendations for revision(s) as necessary, and
Conference Session
Measuring Success of Graduate Program Components
Collection
2009 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Mysore Narayanan, Miami University
Tagged Divisions
Graduate Studies
author’s data is shown in Appendix G.[Copyright for VARK version is held by Neil D. Fleming, Christchurch, New Zealand andCharles C. Bonwell, Green Mountain, Colorado, USA]. Page 14.253.10APPENDIX B (Rubrics courtesy of W S U, Pullman, WA) (Narayanan, 2007). Rubrics based on Likert Scale5 Has demonstrated excellence. Has analyzed important data precisely. Has provided documentation. Has answered key questions correctly. Evidence of critical thinking ability. Has addressed problems effectively. Very good performance Has evaluated material with proper insight
Collection
1996 Annual Conference
Authors
M. Hailey; G. Garrison; E. Parkinson
Session 2242 Strategic Management Issues with Engineering Management Distance Learning E. Parkinson, M. Hailey, G. Garrison The University of Tennessee Space Institute Abstract This paper identifies and discusses real-world strategic issues in making distance learning a“Win-Win-Win” for the primary customer(s), the general public, and the educational insthution. TheUnivershy of Tennessee’s Graduate Engineering Management Program is used as a case study. Concepts andissues are discussed generically to promote
Conference Session
Knowing Our Students, Faculty, and Profession
Collection
2009 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Ashlyn Munson, Colorado School of Mines; Barbara Moskal, Colorado School of Mines; Alka Harriger, Purdue University
Tagged Divisions
Educational Research and Methods
significant accomplishments,the students still wanted younger speakers. This may be accomplished by including collegestudents who are majoring in IT as part of the summer workshop, linking high school and college Page 14.1104.10with a career in IT. A similar approach is likely to be appropriate to other high schoolinterventions which share similar goals. Even without these changes, the SPIRIT workshopsappear to be accomplishing their goals with respect to the participating student groups.Bibliography1. Patterson, D. A. (2005). “Restoring the popularity of computer science”. Communication of the ACM, Vol. 48(9),pp. 25-28.2. Reges, S. (2006). “Back to
Conference Session
Goal Specific First-Year Courses
Collection
2009 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Lesley Strawderman, Mississippi State University; Bill Elmore, Mississippi State University; Arash Salehi, Mississippi State University
Tagged Divisions
First-Year Programs
-semester course adjustments need to be detailed.Bibliography 1. Darling-Hammond, L. and J. Bransford (eds.), Preparing Teachers for a Changing World, Jossey-Bass Education Series, Wiley & Sons, 2005, ISBN 978-0-7879-7464-0. 2. Rising Above the Gathering Storm, Committee on Prospering in the Global Economy of the 21 st Century: An Agenda for American Science and Technology, The National Academies Press, 2007, ISBN 978-0-309- 10039-7. 3. Donovan, M. S. and J. D. Bransford (eds.), How Students Learn: History, Mathematics and Science in the Page 14.615.12 Classroom, The National Academies Press
Conference Session
“And Other Duties as Assigned”
Collection
2009 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Megan Sapp Nelson, Purdue University
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Libraries
. 68, pp. 92-95.8. Conley, K. and Tucker, T. 2005. Matching media to audience equals marketing success. College &Undergraduate Libraries, Vol. 12:1/2, pp. 47-64.9. Campbell, J. and Gibson, S. 2005. Implementing an action plan: strategies for marketing library services.College and Undergraduate Libraries, Vol. 12:1/2, pp. 153-164.10. Duke, L. M. and Tucker, T. 2007. How to develop a marketing plan for an academic library. TechnicalServices Quarterly, Vol. 25:1, pp. 51-68. Page 14.862.1011. Shamel, C. 2002. Building a brand: Got Librarian? Searcher, Vol. 10:7http://www.infotoday.com/searcher/jul02/shamel.htm.12. Alire, C. A
Conference Session
Outreach and Recruitment
Collection
2006 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Sheree Watson, Montana State University; Heidi Sherick, Montana State University; Carolyn Plumb, Montana State University
Tagged Divisions
Minorities in Engineering
Male Female2. Did someone from MSU come to your high school to talk about engineering? Yes No I can’t remember3. Which of the following people influenced your decision to enroll in engineering at MSU? Check as many as apply. My parent(s) or legal guardian(s) My brother(s) and/or sister(s) Other relatives Past math/science teacher(s) Past other teachers My high school counselor(s) Other non-relatives (friends, co-workers) Recruiters from MSU Other, please describe:4. Have you ever attended the Minority Apprentice Program (MAP) at MSU? Yes No5. Which of the following
Conference Session
Design Projects
Collection
2006 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Todd Taylor, U.S. Coast Guard Academy; Kurt Colella, U.S. Coast Guard Academy; William Simpson, U.S. Coast Guard Academy
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education
in Naval Architecture and Marine Engineering form Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and a Bachelor of Science form the U. S. Coast Guard Academy. He is a registered Professional Engineer in the State of Connecticut. He previously taught at the Coast Guard Academy from 1974 to 1978 while serving on active duty in the Coast Guard. He retired form the Coast Guard in 1992 at the rank of Captain having had assignments in Marine Safety, Naval Engineering, Acquisition, and Research and Development. His last assignment on active duty was as Commanding Officer of the Coast Guard Research and Development Center in Groton, CT. After retirement from active duty, prior to coming to the
Conference Session
Simulation and Virtual Instrumentation in ET
Collection
2006 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Daniel Dangelo, Intel Corp.; Rajeswari Sundararajan, Arizona State University; Narciso Macia, Arizona State University
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Technology
drivers. The RocketPort interface turned out to be easy once MSCommserial communications had been developed. Note MSComm only supports COM ports one to Page 11.89.5sixteen, which makes RocketPort COM ports seventeen to twenty invalid for VB.MC03 was found not to have the ability to receive serial data late in the development cycle. Thislimitation was a surprise for the project and GE Fanuc factory technical representatives. This isunderstandable due to the large quantity of PLC models GE Fanuc sells. A solution wasdesigned by directly wiring MC04’s outputs six to fourteen to MC03’s inputs eight to sixteen.Then, the transmitted serial data planned for
Conference Session
Emerging Trends in Engineering Education Poster Session
Collection
2006 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
John Carpinelli, New Jersey Institute of Technology; Raymond Calluori, New Jersey Institute of Technology; Vladimir Briller, New Jersey Institute of Technology; Eugene Deess, New Jersey Institute of Technology; Kamal Joshi, New Jersey Institute of Technology
delivery formats; and thegreater student satisfaction at NJIT for courses that use WebCT as their asynchronous learningnetwork platform.1. IntroductionSince offering its first distance learning courses in the 1970’s, the New Jersey Institute ofTechnology, NJIT, has been a leader in distance learning education. From its inception, NJIT hasemphasized the use of computer-mediated communication systems, or asynchronous learningnetworks (ALNs), as a means to keep distance learning students engaged in their coursework, topromote a sense of community among classmates, and to improve student learning. The firstALN used at NJIT was the Electronic Information Exchange System, EIES1. This system wasexpanded and modified to make it web-accessible, and became
Conference Session
Faculty Development: Tenure & Promotion
Collection
2006 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Garrick Louis, University of Virginia
Tagged Divisions
New Engineering Educators
overviewyour idea, rationale, major activities, expected results, and achievement of the NSF meritreview criteria of intellectual merit, and broader impacts. Thus, at minimum, the projectsummary should state the issue or problem you propose to study, establish its relevanceand importance to your field of study, state your research hypothesis, and define the longterm goal(s), short term objectives, and associated activities. This is a good point todefine your proposed activities in the areas of research, education, and service oroutreach if appropriate. It is mandatory to state the intellectual merit and broaderimpacts of your proposed work in the project summary, as these address NSF’s meritreview criteria that are required of all proposals submitted
Conference Session
Energy Curriculum Advancements
Collection
2006 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Glenn Ellis, Smith College; Sarah Wodin-Schwartz, Smith College; Israel Koren, University of Massachusetts-Amherst; Baaba Andam, Smith College; C. Mani Krishna, University of Massachusetts-Amherst; C. Andras Moritz, University of Massachusetts-Amherst
Tagged Divisions
Energy Conversion and Conservation
created that consider architectural, operating systems, compiler, andhardware issues in power-aware systems. Associated with each module, are (a) backgroundinformation at the appropriate level, (b) list of references for further study, (c) description of theproblem(s) to be studied, and (d) relevant software.There are six topics over which these modules range: architecture, voltage scaling, operatingsystems and middleware, compilers, VLSI, and wireless networks. A brief description of somerepresentative module is provided below.Architecture • Static and Dynamic Power: This module explains the two types of power consumption in Complementary Metal Oxide Semiconductor (CMOS) circuits. Techniques to mitigate the two are covered
Conference Session
Integrating Teaching Assistants, Tenure-track, and Non-tenure-track Faculty into a Cohesive Department
Collection
2017 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Brad Wambeke, United States Military Academy; Brock E. Barry, U.S. Military Academy; Jakob C Bruhl P.E., U.S. Military Academy
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
Dictionary. www.merriam-webster.com. Accessed 28 January 2017.8. Dictionary.com. www.dictionary.com/ Accessed 28 January 2017.9. Knowles, M. S. (1980). The Modern Practice of Adult Education: From Pedagogy to Andragogy (Revised and Updated). Cambridge, New York, NY.10. Taylor, B., and Kroth, M. (2009). Andragogy’s transition into the future: Meta-analysis of andragogy and its search for a measurable instrument. Journal of Adult Education, 38(1), 22– 42.11. Entwistle, N. J., and Peterson, E. R. (2004). Conceptions of learning and knowledge in higher education: Relationships with study behaviour and influences of learning environments. International Journal of Educational Research, 41(6), 407–428.12. Struyven, K., Dochy, F., Janssens, S
Conference Session
Military and Veterans Constituent Committee Division Technical Session 3
Collection
2017 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Douglas Moore Schutz, Tokyo University of Science; Dante Dionne, Korean Air; Yong-Young Kim P.E., Konkuk University
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Military and Veterans
a greater impact to graduationrates online or off-line.References[1] I. F. Liu, Chen, M. C., Sun, Y. S., Wible, D., & Kuo, C. H. , "Extending the TAM Model to Explore the Factors that Affect Intention to Use an Online Learning Community," Computers & Education, vol. 54, pp. 600-610, 2010.[2] M. Chmura, "Babson Study: Distance Education Enrollment Growth Continues," ed. Wellesley, MA: Babson University, 2016.[3] P. Blau, Inequality and Heterogeneity. New York, NY: Free Press, 1977.[4] S. B. Eom, Wen, H. J., & Ashill, N. , "The Determinants of Students' Perceived Learning Outcomes and Satisfaction in University Online Education: An Empirical Investigation.," Decision Sciences Journal of
Conference Session
Entrepreneurship and Innovation: Beyond the University
Collection
2017 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Jidong Huang, California State University, Fullerton; John B Jackson, California State University, Fullerton; Pradeep Nair, California State University, Fullerton; Amy Cox-Petersen, California State University, Fullerton
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Entrepreneurship & Engineering Innovation
(2011, January). Afterschool innovations in brief: Focusing on middle school age youth. Report, Afterschool Alliance. 2. American Association of University Women (AAUW) (1992). How Schools Shortchange Girls. Emeryville, CA: Marlowe and Co. 3. Blank, S. (2013). Why the lean start-up changes everything. Harvard Business Review, May 2013, 3-9.4. Britner, S. L., & Pajares, F. (2006). Sources of science self‐efficacy beliefs of middle school students. Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 43(5), 485-499.5. Kerr, B. S. (1997). Smart Girls: A New Psychology of Girls, Women and Giftedness. Scottsdale, AZ: Gifted Psychology.6. Langdon, D.; McKittrick, G.; Beede, D.; Khan, B.; & Doms, M. (July 2011). STEM: Good jobs
Conference Session
Division Experimentation and Lab-Oriented Studies - Pedagogy of Lab Courses
Collection
2017 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Tania Celli Machet, The University Of Sydney; David Lowe, The University of Sydney
Tagged Divisions
Division Experimentation & Lab-Oriented Studies
(6):527-540.5. Jona K, Adsit J. Goals, guidelines, and standards for student scientific investigations. North American Council for Online Learning. 2008. http://www.inacol.org/.6. Lindsay E, Good MC. Effects of laboratory access modes upon learning outcomes. Education, IEEE Transactions on. 2005;48(4):619–631.7. Kable S. Advancing Science by Enhancing Learning in the Laboratory (ASELL) Final Report 2012. Sydney; 2012. http://www.olt.gov.au/system/files/resources/CG9_1049__Kable_ Report_2012.pdf.8. Nedic Z, Machotka J. Remote Laboratory NetLab for Effective Teaching of 1 st Year Engineering Students. International Journal of Online Engineering (iJOE). 2007;3(3).9. Lowe DB, Murray S, Weber L, et al
Conference Session
Program-Level Assessments for Multidisciplinary Areas
Collection
2017 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Pearl Elizabeth Ortega, Texas A&M University; Magdalini Z Lagoudas, Texas A&M University; Jeffrey E. Froyd, Texas A&M University
Tagged Divisions
Multidisciplinary Engineering
element),  Multidisciplinary Perspectives (interdisciplinary element), and  Interdisciplinary Integration (interdisciplinary element).Under each category, there is a set of questions for a total of 55 criteria. Each criterion was ratedon a scale of 1 (lowest) to 7 (highest) with interpretations provided to guide the ratings. There arepositive and negative elements under each criterion and users of the rubric are encouraged toreference a section(s) of the student’s work that exemplified the element when giving a score.Drawing on Disciplinary Sources as a category evaluated familiarity with the disciplines beingpresented in the research. Critical Argumentation evaluated understanding of the topic beingpresented and its importance