Asee peer logo
Displaying results 12361 - 12390 of 38471 in total
Conference Session
Innovative Course Structures and Learning Environments
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Neda Melanie Bassir Kazeruni, Columbia University; Henry Hess, Columbia University
Tagged Divisions
Biomedical Engineering
most interesting research direction to followknowing the material that was taught in the previous lecture. The next question consisted ininvestigating the feasibility or the implementation of the research ideas the groups came up with;and the next question would go in a more in-depth analysis of the economical or societal pay-offof that research. For instance, the questions that were asked during the “Reproducing macroscalebonds at the nanoscale” were: 1. What are the different mechanisms that are used at the macroscale to create a bond? Name and describe as many of them as you can. 2. What are some nanoscale bonding mechanisms? To what macroscale mechanism(s) are they similar? 3. If you had to reproduce a macroscale
Conference Session
Entrepreneurship & Engineering Innovation Division Technical Session 2
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Renee M. Desing, Ohio State University; Krista M. Kecskemety, Ohio State University; Rachel Louis Kajfez, Ohio State University; Deborah M. Grzybowski, Ohio State University; Monica Farmer Cox, Ohio State University
Tagged Divisions
Entrepreneurship & Engineering Innovation
enhancements to come in our engineeringcurriculum.References[1] A. J. Dutson, R. H. Todd, S. P. Magleby, and C. D. Sorensen, “A review of literature on teaching engineering design through project-oriented capstone courses,” J. Eng. Educ., vol. 86, no. 1, pp. 17–28, 1997.[2] C. L. Dym, A. M. Agogino, O. Eris, D. D. Frey, and L. J. Leifer, “Engineering design thinking, teaching, and learning,” J. Eng. Educ., no. January, pp. 103–120, 2005.[3] C. Charyton and J. A. Merrill, “Assessing general creativity and creative engineering design in first year engineering students,” J. Eng. Educ., vol. 98, no. 2, pp. 145–156, 2009.[4] S. P. Nichols and N. E. Armstrong, “Engineering entrepreneurship: Does entrepreneurship have a role
Conference Session
Construction Engineering Division Technical Session 2
Collection
2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Piyush Pradhananga, Florida International University; Mohamed ElZomor, Florida International University; Gabriella Santi; Arif Mohaimin Sadri, Florida International University
Tagged Divisions
Architectural Engineering, Construction Engineering
significant positive impact on their professionaldevelopment. Therefore, this study validates the positive impact of the integrative learningapproach on minority student performance. Future research should collect more comprehensivedata and capture the performance of minority construction managers in the industry to quantifythe level of influence in construction learning in a versatile environment beyond the semester.References[1] Wei, M., Patadia, S., Kammen, D. M., "Putting renewables and energy efficiency to work: How many jobs can the clean energy industry generate in the US?," Energy Policy, vol. 38, no. 2, pp. 919-931, 2010.[2] H. Duan, Miller, Travis R., Liu, Gang, Tam, Vivian W.Y., "Construction debris becomes growing concern of
Conference Session
First-year Programs: Research and Spatial Skills
Collection
2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Cassondra Wallwey, Ohio State University; Tara Gupte Wilson, Ohio State University; Alexander James Egyed, Ohio State University; Olivia Vick, Ohio State University; Michael Parke, Ohio State University
Tagged Divisions
First-Year Programs
pageshows the assignments and deliverables with draft deadlines, as well as when they areincorporated into the course structure throughout the semester. Table 2: Nanotechnology project assignment and deliverable semester schedule. Week of Class Assignment(s) Assigned Assignment(s) Due Semester Day 3 F Journal Club M Project Website, Journal Article - Final, W 4 Grant Proposal - Final CNTOTD #1, CNTOTD #2, Grant Journal Club F Proposal Annotated Bibliography 5 Journal Article Design Stage 1, Grant M Proposal Design Stage 1
Conference Session
NSF Grantees: REU 1
Collection
2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Mathew Kuttolamadom, Texas A&M University; Jyhwen Wang, Texas A&M University
Tagged Topics
Diversity, NSF Grantees Poster Session
has been deemed successful so far with the prior participants on track in theirrespective advanced STEM degrees or careers. The students who are currently progressingthrough their degrees are being tracked to ascertain their final education/career choices.AcknowledgementsThis material is based on work supported by the National Science Foundation (NSF) grant EEC-1659856. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this materialare those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the NSF.References1. Kuttolamadom, M.A., Liu, M., Wang, J., Tai, B., Noynaert, S., Sagapuram, S., Kennedy, M. Interdisciplinary Research Experiences for Undergraduates in Metrology & Non-Destructive
Conference Session
Programmatic Integration of Liberal Education
Collection
2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Rebecca Balakrishnan, University of Manitoba; Jillian Seniuk Cicek, University of Manitoba; Priya Subra Mani
Tagged Divisions
Liberal Education/Engineering & Society
. Jillian Seniuk Cicek, University of Manitoba Dr. Jillian Seniuk Cicek is an Assistant Professor in the Centre for Engineering Professional Practice and Engineering Education at the University of Manitoba, in Winnipeg, Canada. She teaches professional communication, engineering education research, and career design courses. Her areas of investigation include Indigenous methodologies and approaches to research and education; student culture, diversity, perspectives, identity, and learning; program evaluation; outcomes-based teaching and assessment; engi- neering competencies; instructor pedagogical practices and belief-systems; and epistemologies.Prof. Priya Subra Mani Dr. Priya S. Mani is an Associate Professor in the
Conference Session
Information Literacy in First-year Courses and Co-curricular Experiences
Collection
2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Joanne Dera, New Jersey Institute of Technology; Ashish D. Borgaonkar, New Jersey Institute of Technology; Davida Scharf, New Jersey Institute of Technology; Jaskirat Sodhi, New Jersey Institute of Technology
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Libraries
-1670, 2008.[6] Learn how to ask better questions with the question formulation technique. Available: https://docs.asee.org/public/Webinars/QFT_WebinarSlides.pdf.[7] D. Rothstein and L. Santana, Make just one change: Teach students to ask their own questions. Harvard Education Press, 2011.[8] "Right Question Institute." https://rightquestion.org/ (accessed.[9] S. Palmer and B. Tucker, "Planning, delivery and evaluation of information literacy training for engineering and technology students," Australian academic & research libraries, vol. 35, no. 1, pp. 16-34, 2004.[10] P. R. Dempsey and H. Jagman, "" I Felt Like Such a Freshman": First-Year Students Crossing the Library Threshold," portal
Conference Session
Understanding Student Behavior and Experiences
Collection
2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Nancy Nelson, University of Calgary; Robert William Brennan, University of Calgary
Tagged Divisions
Educational Research and Methods
to be successful. A set of forced-choice questions was used to rank strategies related to class time, completing assigned work,note taking, studying, and overall work ethic. Responses were validated using a set of relatedLikert scale questions, and a set of open ended questions allowed students to identify strategiesthey believe contribute to, or impede their success. Correlational analysis and predictiveclassification were used to determine the key behaviour indicator(s) of student success, and thespecific behavioural factors associated with different levels of academic success.Findings indicate that the key behavioural indicator of student success is actually doing theassigned work. This is also the most important predictor of students who
Collection
2019 ASEE Zone I Conference & Workshop
Authors
Jiayue Shen; Weiru Chen
adapted versionof PRS, a web-based PRS namely Poll Everywhere (www.pollev.com) is introduced in this paperand allows students to use their cell phone, tablet or computer as clickers. Poll Everywhere hasbeen invented initially for public presentation purpose but rarely discussed by some researchersfor educational purpose [9, 15-19]. Dr. Grasman’s team [17] initiated the study of using Polleverywhere in the classroom. And Dr. W. Kappers’ s team [15] extended Dr. Grasman’s study touse PollEverywhere in the large-lecture classroom settings. Both studies found the studentengagement is enhanced after using Poll Everywhere. But the impact of using Poll everywhere inthe classroom may varies by different disciplines. As such, a case-based study of using
Collection
2017 Gulf Southwest Section Conference
Authors
Patricia Polastri; Mojeed Awonuga
that can set pressure on the government to create environmental regulations forcurrent and future oil extraction operations in the country. The NSE emphasizes the need to“enforce the maintenance of discipline and strict standards of ethics in the practice of theengineering profession in Nigeria”33, however ethic courses do not seem to be part of theengineering curriculum at Nigerian universities. As long as ethics is not part of the academiccurriculum, Nigeria will continue to suffer from corruption and remain classified as a developingcountry despite its richness in natural resources.References 1. Brundtland, G., Khalid, M., Agnelli, S., Al-Athel, S., Chidzero, B., Fadika, L., ... & Singh, M. (1987). Our common future
Collection
2017 Gulf Southwest Section Conference
Authors
Amir Karimi; Randall D. Manteufel
Copyright © 2017, American Society for Engineering Education 2017 ASEE Gulf-Southwest Section Annual Conferenceby neglecting kinetic and potential energies in the equations associated with the equations for thefirst law of thermodynamics, yet struggle to explain why these assumptions are justified. Likewise,they will assume steady-state behavior, but have difficulty to explain the reason. Students learnhow to approximate the evaluation of thermodynamics fluid properties, but cannot providereasonable justifications for the approximations. For example why the specific volume v (T, P),internal energy u (T, P), or entropy s (T, P) in the compressed liquid region can be simply beapproximated by saturation properties, vf (T), uf (T
Collection
2020 Mid-Atlantic Spring Conference
Authors
Oludayo Samuel Alamu, Morgan State University; Marc J Louise Orque Caballes; Guangming Chen, Morgan State University; Xuejun Qian, Morgan State Univeristy; Jingwen Xue, Morgan State University; Yulai Yang, Morgan State University; Margaret Ajuwon; Seong Lee, Morgan State University; raghulkumar chandrasekaran, Morgan State University
://loyolamars.com/Marymount (2016) Base 11 ChallengesUniversityMissouri Missouri S&T Spaceport America https://rocket.mst.edu/University of Rocket Design Cup (Design a solidScience and Team (2015) rocket to go 10,000Technology ft)Oregon state OSU AIAA Base 11 Challenges https://osuaiaa.com/university (2012) (High Altitude Liquid Engine (HALE), research and development of liquid rocket engine)As previously mentioned, MSU is the first HBCU University that will have its very own RocketryProgram. However, since it is a "pilot
Conference Session
Mechanical Engineering Technical Session: Assessment and Accreditation: Making the Grade!
Collection
2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
J. Asuncion Zarate-Garcia, Tecnologico de Monterrey; Ariadna Serrano-Reyes, Tecnologico de Monterrey; Miguel X. Rodriguez-Paz, Tecnologico de Monterrey; Israel Zamora-Hernandez
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Mechanical Engineering
Tecnologico de Monterrey. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2020 A CONTINUOUS IMPROVEMENT MODEL TO ENHANCE ACADEMIC QUALITY IN ENGINEERING PROGRAMSAbstractOne of the main challenges in all areas of education is to ensure that the academic quality of theteaching – learning process is enhanced continuously. In this work, we present a continuousimprovement process based on Deming´s Plan-Do-Check-Act (also known as PDCA) continuousquality improvement model which was implemented in the School of Engineering and Sciencesat Tecnologico de Monterrey campus Puebla. This model encompasses a one-year cycle, it startsin August and ends in July. Faculty of the Academic Departments participate in the
Conference Session
Implementing the Civil Engineering Body of Knowledge into Courses and Curricula
Collection
2007 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Matthew Roberts, University of Wisconsin-Platteville; Christina Curras, University of Wisconsin-Platteville; Philip Parker, University of Wisconsin-Platteville; Michael Penn, University of Wisconsin-Platteville; Max Anderson, University of Wisconsin-Platteville
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
requirements be modified sothat students would use their general education classes to pursue a “theme.” For example,students could graduate with a theme in government by taking several general educationcourses on government and public policy. Other suggested themes were: Ethics Business Management Geography International Studies Engineering HistoryThe goal of the theme requirement would be to help students develop an area of competencyuseful to them in their future careers as citizen engineers. This theme requirement was in-spired by the curriculum ThreadsTM requirements employed by the College of Computing atthe Georgia Institute of Technology.9New Infrastructure Course(s)One goal of the revised curriculum is to create a
Conference Session
Multidisciplinary and Liberal Education
Collection
2007 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
April Kedrowicz, University of Utah; Bob Nelson, University of Utah
Tagged Divisions
Multidisciplinary Engineering
teami For an exception, see Seat, E. and Lord, S. M., “Enabling Effective Engineering Teams: A Program for Teaching Page 12.564.2Interaction Skills,” Journal of Engineering Education, Oct. 1999, pp. 385-390.pedagogy) is that students find themselves in patterns of unproductive team communication thatcan lead to conflicts. What is more, they may be ill-equipped to manage or resolve thoseresulting conflicts, and thus find themselves inadequately prepared to handle team issues in theworkplace.1-2The Department of Mechanical Engineering at a large Western University recently adopted aformalized, integrated communication and engineering
Conference Session
Multidisciplinary Capstone Design Projects
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Zachary Gutierrez, University of Wyoming; Charles Dolan, University of Wyoming
Tagged Divisions
Multidisciplinary Engineering
skills of engineering students. Since itscreation in the 1950’s, Bloom’s Taxonomy has been widely studied and accepted as the standardevaluation tool. By using Bloom’s Taxonomy, people not associated with engineering educationcan identify with this multi-disciplinary project and its objectives. Bloom’s Taxonomy forms thebasis for the development of assessment rubrics used as evaluation tools. The assessment evaluation is independent of problem grading. The class grade is basedon the instructor’s objectives, while the cognitive assessment is based on rubrics independent ofthe numerical solution. It was never Bloom’s idea to have his taxonomy used to provide coursegrades. A participating student may demonstrate a high level of critical
Conference Session
Learning Needs and Educational Success
Collection
2007 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
James Northern, Prairie View A&M University; John Fuller, Prairie View A&M University
Tagged Divisions
Minorities in Engineering
given sensor) the higher the value they return.2. Bumper sensors: Renee has four of these, one on the front, left, right and back. They return a "0" if Renee has bumped into something in that direction, and a "1" if she has not. Page 12.1193.93. Wheels: Renee's wheels can go forward and backwards as well as stopping. She can now do the following actions: Action Left Wheel Right Wheel Forward F F Left S F Right F S
Conference Session
Emerging Trends in Engineering Education Poster Session
Collection
2007 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Stephen Thompson, University of South Carolina; Jed Lyons, University of South Carolina
.: National Academy Press.[7]The National Commission on Mathematics and Science. (2000). Before it's too late: Areport to the nation from the national commission on mathematics and science teachingfor the 21st century (EE0449P). Washington: U.S. Department of Education.[8] Mitchell, J., Levine, R., Gonzalez, R., Bitter, C., Webb, N. and White, P. (2003).Evaluation of the national science foundation graduate teaching fellows in K-12education (GK-12) program. Paper presented at the American Education ResearchAssociation, Chicago, IL, April, 2003.[9] Buck. G.A., Leslie-Pelecky, D. L., Lu, Y.(2006). Self-Definition of WomenExperiencing a Nontraditional Graduate Fellowship Program. Journal of Research inScience Teaching. 43(8) 852-73.\[10] Thompson, S
Conference Session
Technical Issues in Architectural Engineering II
Collection
2006 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Christopher Jarrett, Georgia Institute of Technology
Tagged Divisions
Architectural
concerns inpractice, in the context of three green housing proposals located at Hulsey Yards, a 35-acre in-town, industrial urban site south of downtown Atlanta that is strategically placed along the BeltLine Atlanta Project, a 22-mile inner-city light rail loop and greenway currently the focus of amulti-million dollar study by the Georgia Department of Transportation [3].PART ONE:Identifying ConcernsOil-Centered DevelopmentThe U.S. faces an epochal predicament: global oil production will peak within the next couple ofyears, if in fact it hasn’t already peaked. According Kenneth S. Deffeyes, oil production peakedexactly on December 16, 2005, when cumulative production exceeded 1.0065 trillion barrels ofoil [4]. Regardless of when oil production
Conference Session
Assessment and Evaluation in Engineering Education I
Collection
2007 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Mysore Narayanan, Miami University
Tagged Divisions
Educational Research and Methods
and Mills’ ideas.A comparison between Dr. Boylan’s research and 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 12.289.10APPENDIX B (Rubrics courtesy of W S U, Pullman, WA) 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
Conference Session
Graduate Education and Undergraduate Research in ET
Collection
2006 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Saeed Foroudastan, Middle Tennessee State University; michael anderton, Middle Tennessee State University
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Technology
must have excellent power management, Page 11.1359.2an efficient hull design, and the appropriate drive train and propeller. These criteria must be metto have a successful craft. The power management consists of the proper batteries, motor(s), andelectrical system. Also an extremely efficient solar array is necessary to prolong the craftsendurance. All engineering and design aspects will be tested to their limits. The sprint will testthe boat’s overall hull design. The idea of the sprint is very similar to that of a drag race in thatyou exert as much power as possible over a short distance. Hull weight, displacement of water,and aerodynamics
Conference Session
Rethinking Aerospace Curricula and Learning
Collection
2006 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Narayanan Komerath, Georgia Institute of Technology
Tagged Divisions
Aerospace
the paucity of computing resources in the undergraduatecurriculum, we emphasized derivation of simplified analytical solutions, and extensive problem-solving using paper and pencil to assimilate analysis methods. Space studies were spread acrossdepartments of engineering science, mechanics, thermal sciences and physics. This fit well withthe demands of graduate curricula and research programs.Table 1 shows the compression in the fluid dynamics/ aerodynamics portion of the curriculumsince the mid 1980s. The second column indicates the number of hours allotted to this subjectarea, with Q denoting Quarter and S Semester. Column 3 compares the number of equivalentsemester hours. The last column is subjective, indicating the breadth of the content
Conference Session
Contemporary Instrumentation
Collection
2006 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Seyed Allameh, Northern Kentucky University; Morteza Sadat-Hossieny, Northern Kentucky University; Paul Cooper, Northern Kentucky University
Tagged Divisions
Instrumentation
. Mater. Res. 16, 2475- Page 11.775.12 2484 (2001).2. Halverson, D. C., Pyzik, A. J. and Aksay, I. A. ( U.S. Patent #4,605,440, August 12, 1986. Licensed to Dow Chemical from University of California., 1986).3. Aksay, I. A., Yasrebi, M., Milius, D. L., Kim, G.-H. and Sarikaya, M. (U.S. Patent #5,308,422., 1994).4. Pyzik, A. & Aksay, I. A. (U.S. Patent #4,702,770, October 27, 1987., 1987).5. NAZARENKO, S. et al., "Creating Layers of Concentrated Inorganic Particles by Interdiffusion of Polyethylenes in Microlayers," Journal of Applied Polymer Science 73, 2877-2885 (1999).6. Kim, G. H., Sarikaya, M
Conference Session
Capstone Design Projects in Mechanical Engineering
Collection
2006 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Edwin Odom, University of Idaho; Russ Porter, University of Idaho; Steven Beyerlein, University of Idaho; Adrian Gomez, University of Idaho; Lloyd Gallup, University of Idaho
Tagged Divisions
Mechanical Engineering
., Mayadas, F., 2005. “Online Engineering Education: Learning Anywhere, Anytime,” Journal of Engineering Education, Vol. 94, No. 1. 5. Novak, G.M., Patterson, E.T., Garvin, A.D., and Christian, W., 1999. Just-In-Time Teaching: Blending Active Learning with Web Technology, Upper Saddle River, N.J.: Prentice Hall. 6. Todd, R., Magleby, S., Sorensen, C., Swan, B., and Anthony, D. 1995. A Survey of Capstone Engineering Courses in North America. Engineering Education: 165-174. 7. McKenzie, L., Trevisan, M., Davis, D., and Beyerlein, S. 2004. Capstone Design Courses and Assessment: A National Study. Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the American Society for Engineering Education, Salt Lake City. 8. Ulmann, D. 1992
Conference Session
TC2K Methods and Models
Collection
2006 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
David Cottrell, University of North Carolina-Charlotte; Bruce Gehrig, University of North Carolina-Charlotte; Anthony Brizendine, University of North Carolina-Charlotte
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Technology
2006-1999: TC2K: A SUCCESSFUL WORKING MODEL FOR CONTINUOUSIMPROVEMENTDavid Cottrell, University of North Carolina-Charlotte DR. DAVID S. COTTRELL is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Engineering Technology, University of North Carolina at Charlotte. He graduated from the United States Military Academy in 1978 and retired in 2000 after more than 22 years of service with the US Army Corps of Engineers. Studies at Texas A&M University resulted in an MS Degree in Civil Engineering in 1987 and a PhD in 1995. He is a registered Professional Engineer and has taught courses in statics, dynamics, mechanics of materials, graphic communications, engineering economy, and construction
Conference Session
Faculty Reward System Reform
Collection
2007 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Roger Olson, Rolls-Royce Corporation; David Quick, Rolls-Royce Corporation; Samuel Truesdale, Rolls-Royce Corporation; Dennis Depew, Purdue University; Gary Bertoline, Purdue University; Mark Schuver, Purdue University; Duane Dunlap, Western Carolina University; Donald Keating, University of South Carolina; Thomas Stanford, University of South Carolina
Tagged Divisions
Graduate Studies
of a national science policy forscientific research. 5The United States has not had a coherent policy during the last several decades for the graduatedevelopment of its domestic engineering graduates in the U.S. engineering workforce. These areengineers whose professional careers are not centered on academic scientific research, but ratherare centered on creating, developing, and innovating new, improved, and breakthroughtechnology in industry for competitiveness and the nation’s defense. (See Appendix G)Whereas the nation invested heavily during the 1960’s, 70’s, 80’s, and 90’s in the graduateeducation of the U.S. scientific workforce for basic academic research, we have not as a nationplaced a balanced emphasis in the further professional
Conference Session
Teaching Design in Manufacturing Curriculum I
Collection
2007 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Priya Manohar, Robert Morris University; Cathleen Jones, Robert Morris University; Jon Radermacher, Robert Morris University
Tagged Divisions
Manufacturing
andsubsequently manufacture a look-alike or work-alike prototype of it. Students areexpected to keep a systematic record or logbook of all the activities. A tool can be akitchen, gardening, wood or metal working tool. A consumer product may be a tablelamp, broom, trashcan, a musical instrument, a toy etc. A detailed project report is to bewritten and a presentation is to be made based on the project work at the end of the term.Background: The course is delivered with an interdisciplinary approach. Engineeringstudents will form groups with students enrolled in Media Art (ARTM 3307 course) andMarketing (MARK 3700 course) departments. A typical group will consist of 2 - 3engineering students, 1 - 2 art student(s) and 5 – 7 marketing students, for total 8
Conference Session
Robots and K-12 Computer Applications
Collection
2013 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Cheryl D. Seals, Auburn University; Earl B. Smith, Georgia Southern University
Tagged Divisions
Computers in Education
the influx and progression of K-12students through graduate school in programs that lead to computing careers. This material isbased in part upon work supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant NumberCNS-0540492. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in thismaterial are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the NationalScience Foundation.Bibliography1. Fiegerman, S. (2010). The Dumbest States in America. Jan 21, 2010. Retrieved from http://www.mainstreet.com/slideshow/lifestyle/smartest-dumbest-states.2. Shahami, M. (2008). Overview of the New Undergraduate Computer Science Curriculum. Stanford Research Institute, http://www.stanford.edu/class/cs298
Conference Session
NSF Grantees' Poster Session
Collection
2013 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Cynthia J. Finelli, University of Michigan; Kenyon M Richardson; Shanna R. Daly, University of Michigan
Tagged Topics
NSF Grantees Poster Session
 Curriculum    Curriculum flexibility. The extent to which faculty have control of the content and structure of  the course(s) they teach  E  17  Physical classroom layout. The structure of the physical classroom space  E  8  Class size. The number of students in the classroom  E  3 Personal Disposition    Passion for teaching. The level of interest faculty have for
Conference Session
Issues in Advising and Mentoring
Collection
2013 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Gillian M. Nicholls, University of Alabama in Huntsville
Tagged Divisions
Educational Research and Methods
hour completionpercentage, number of courses with D or F grades as of Fall midterm, and credit hours attemptedin the spring term. The predictive results showing at-risk students are used to make interventionattempts. Raimondo22 described analysis at the University of Michigan to assess within classperformance by students and offer guidance via a digital resource called “E2Coach”s to assistthem in improving their performance trajectory. McKay23 has used E2Coach to interact withphysics students predicted to be at risk of not succeeding and provide tailored feedback to allenrolled students that they can use to adjust their strategy in the course.Universities have constrained resources including enrollment capacity, faculty, staff, lab space,etc