20 20 2. Attendance and class 10 10 participation 30 25 3. Mid-term examination 40 30 4.Final Examination 15 5. Case studies 100 100 Total Page 25.193.13Table 2: Suggested linkage of ethics related topics to various coursesCourse title Ethics related topicsConstruction Planning and Project Public opinion, whistle blowingimplementation
Mills suggested four categories that seemed to identify most students’ learningbehavior. The author has previously worked on a similar project and has presented hisinitial findings in a paper entitled “Assessment of Perceptual Modality Styles” at the2007 ASEE National Conference at Honolulu, Hawaii. In this, follow-up presentationhe presents his latest findings and compares them with the data he had procuredpreviously. Hunter R. Boylan is the Chairperson for American Council ofDevelopmental Education Associations. In his book, What Works: Research-BasedBest Practices in Developmental Education, Dr. Boylan gives tips for accommodatingdiversity through instruction. His tips are to train faculty in alternative forms ofinstruction if they are
. Thomas after having served as the Founding Dean. He holds a Ph.D. in metallurgical engineering and an M.B.A. With a background of more than 20 years in industry, Bennett teaches and publishes on diverse topics including materials engineering, technical innovation, technology transfer, manufacturing, leadership, and engineering education. He is an EAC of ABET Commissioner for SME and leads the SME Center for Education.Dr. Hugh Jack P.Eng., Grand Valley State University Hugh Jack is a professor of product design and manufacturing engineering at Grand Valley State Univer- sity in Grand Rapids, Mich. His specialties include automation, design projects, and internet application development.Steve Wendel, Sinclair Community
designed toexpose high school students and their teachers to both the technical applications and social implicationsof cyber-related activities. This integrated approach to teaching strives to educate new scholars whounderstand not only the science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) but also thepolitical, social, historical, ethical, and legal aspects of this evolving discipline. K12 teachers attendprofessional development workshops throughout the year. The workshops help the teacher prepare forthe week long residential camp during the summer that both the teachers and student attend.Results of the project will be included, as well as activities developed such as: historical/policy essaycompetitions, cryptographic treasure hunt, and
. Initiallythe teaching methods included lectures, discussions, videos, exams, and written projects(Loendorf6, 2004). Over time the teaching methods have been expanded to include recreatedartifacts (Loendorf & Geyer9, 2008), demonstrations (Loendorf & Geyer10, 2009), othercollections of technologies (Loendorf & Geyer11, 2010), and innovative visual content(Loendorf8, 2011).An additional teaching method was incorporated right from the very beginnings of the course butwas so tightly integrated into the course that it was almost overlooked. That method wasstorytelling. Stories with a historical perspective as well as personal experiences abouttechnology are intertwined throughout the entire course. These stories, in many ways, help thestudent
UGTAs to a paidexperience with built-in oversight and deliberate efforts to improve teaching, learning, and skilldevelopment. The program has become increasingly institutionalized within the Ira A. FultonSchools of Engineering, and visibility of the program increases with each semester.UGTAs are sophomore and upper-division undergraduate students in good academic standingwho spend about three to five hours each week working with an engineering class. UGTAs meetwith their faculty instructor to prepare for activities, assist their faculty in facilitating classroomactive learning projects, and may hold office hours or review sessions throughout the semester.Through their presence in the classroom, UGTAs
community are aware of uranium in the ground water, as the area has beenplagued with water quality problems. This legacy cycle will give the students information needto become informed citizens.Summer ResearchWith a summer experience at Texas A&M University-Kingsville’s Research Experience forTeachers (RET) project, the teacher conducted research on baseline water quality prior to in siturecovery (ISR) mining for uranium. This research was instrumental to the understanding ofwater quality in our community, both personally and professionally. The teacher moved to anarea that has been riddled with ground water quality and uranium mining controversy. Prior tothis research, the teacher knew nothing of the importance water quality. The teacher was
by contributing to ongoing faculty research projects or pursuing anindependent research topic. More than 555 participants have completed the USRG program sincethe summer of 2000.The objectives of the program are to: 1) provide immersive research experience(s) forengineering undergraduates; 2) increase participant’s interest in pursuing graduate studies withan emphasis on the Ph.D. program; 3) increase participant’s awareness of the graduate schoolexperience; 4) provide an outlet to enhance participant’s writing and communications skills; 5)increase participant’s understanding of the graduate school application process for admissionsand fellowships; and subsequently, 6) position participants to be more competitive for graduateadmissions and
, educational researchers and college instructors have been exploring newmethods for using technology to enhance the learning process. The level of use varies byinstructor and institution.Georgia Tech began the Classroom 2000 project in the 1990s, with the intention of investigatingdiverse approaches for incorporating technology in the classroom.1 This project continues todayunder the revised name, eClass.2 Classroom 2000/eClass was designed to investigate the ideathat students are able to devote more attention to content when they do not need to focus oncopying notes. Other schools, even high schools, have selected to adopt specific technologies,such as the tablet PCs for widespread instructional use. For example, secondary school districtsin Ontario
AC 2012-3876: THE ”RAISE THE BAR” INITIATIVE: CHARTING THEFUTURE BY UNDERSTANDING THE PATH TO THE PRESENT - MOD-IFYING THE MODEL LAWS AND RULES FOR ENGINEERING LICEN-SUREMr. Jon D. Nelson P.E., Tetra Tech, Inc Jon D. Nelson, P.E. is Senior Vice President of the central region of the Engineering and Architectural Services group of Tetra Tech, Inc. in Tulsa, Okla. He has been a consulting engineer for 34 years, focusing on municipal water and wastewater projects. He has been with Tetra Tech for 27 years. He holds a B.S. degree in civil engineering from Kansas State University and a M.S. degree in environmental engineering from Oklahoma State University. Nelson is licensed as a professional engineer in four states and
technological growth.”Here the ASME paper suggests that we must preserve low standards for entry into the professionto ensure that we have an adequate supply of engineers to ensure our technological growth. Yetthere is compelling evidence that our future global competitiveness demands not more engineers,but better educated engineers.Consider the report produced by a National Science Foundation (NSF)-sponsored project called“The 5XME Workshop: Transforming Mechanical Engineering Education and Research in theUSA.”9 The 5XME project report describes the ongoing global commoditization of engineering Page 25.1361.4* The ASME position paper uses the
also participate in numerous activities (calledanomalies) throughout the competition which are designed to keep them engaged and slightly offbalance just as real IT staffs get engaged in new projects and may overlook intrusions or securityrisks in new implementations. These requests may run counter to the goal of having securesystems or may open holes in their servers. The students must then decide how, or if, toimplement the request on their network, as well as how to implement it securely. It is theseactivities that help keep the students focused on providing a useable network for their end users,as well as a secure one.The group who tests each student team’s network for vulnerabilities and plays the role ofattackers in the competition
teachingpractice, all participants – including me – talked about the topics they teach and/or theirpedagogical approach. Valerie, Nancy and I refer to guided inquiry as our pedagogical approach,while Elizabeth describes her pedagogical approach as constructivist and project based. We donot name topics or activities, which presupposes that any topic we teach is presented throughguided inquiry or within the context of a project. Renee, Ellen and Jill describe specific kits orkit publishers, topics, and strategies such as science notebooking. The kit-based curriculumpublishers these teachers mention make their pedagogical approach explicit in the teacher guidethat accompanies the kit, so these teachers might conflate the kit publisher or topic with
of Personality/Behavior/Motivation Assessment in the Design of a Good Group Project Team o Teaching in Large Classes: Ensuring Student Success and Engagement o What Makes a Good Assessment? o Collaborative learning in the Classroom o Technology in the Classroom: What works and what does not o How and where to Incorporate Active Learning into Courses o Learner-Centered Teaching o Grades and Learning: Expectations, Assessments, and Accountability o Developing Cross-Disciplinary Learning Experiences for Students o Incorporating and Teaching Global Perspectives o Promoting Learning through WritingInnovation and Creativity o Teaching Innovation in Design Courses o Benefits of/Best Practices in Integrating Innovation
, and Ingraffea12 explored the TAM model and socialnetworking in a distance education project for aerospace design. Landry, Griffeth, andHartman13 looked at student perceptions of the Blackboard ™ learning managementsystem.Other research has focused directly on the role of perceptions in online courses. Osborne,Kreise, Tobey, and Johnson14 developed a survey instrument to investigate student andfaculty perceptions of online courses in social science departments. This study found thateffective communication methods are critical for online courses.It is clear that faculty and student perception is a key component in the acceptance andimplementation of new technologies, including online and distance education programs,and it is important to
Professor in the Benerd School of Education within the Ed- ucational and School Psychology Department at the University of the Pacific, where she teaches graduate- level research methodology and applied statistics courses. In addition to serving as a consultant to faculty and students within her unit, Hackett serves as an independent evaluator on several state- and federally funded projects related to education.Miss Alexis Pham, University of the Pacific Alexis Pham is currently a Ph.D. student in educational psychology. She examines how students learn and develop in educational settings. She holds a M.A. in educational and counseling psychology from University of the Pacific
scholarship14. Besides challenges from thesocial environment, the major challenge for doctoral students is scholarly and intellectualdevelopment. Novice researchers usually come to the research field with a broad area of interest.This broad interest serves as an initial direction for exploration. They have to refine and distillthis topic into specific research questions15. This process calls for lots of efforts in understandingthe scope of the whole research field, looking for relevant literature under certain topics, tryingto find a gap in the literature and use their own research project to bridge the gap.Engineering Education incorporates methodological traditions from sociology, educationalpsychology, educational technology, as well as various
reform and engineering education research grant,Departmental Level Reform (DLR), awarded to a group of engineering and education faculty inthe university [4, 5, 6]. The first course in the program, Engineering Exploration (ENGE 1024),is the most affected course by the DLR project. This course primarily focuses on hands-ondesign, problem solving, professional ethics and skills, contemporary issues like sustainability,globalization, nanotechnology, and critical thinking skills [7]. This course is taken byapproximately 1700 freshmen every year. The course delivery format includes one 50-minutelecture followed by one 110-minute hands-on workshop every week.One of the learning objectives of this course is gaining the ability to develop and
costs less, and most of the industrial motors make use of AC power. See Figure 10 for acomparison between AC and DC currents. Figure 10: Graph of AC current (sine wave) vs. DC current (flat line). This activity however, used DC power for several reasons. First, AC power systems mustbe synchronized and achieving this on a small grid would be very difficult. Second, the loads onthe system will be LEDs (light-emitting diodes), which require DC electric current. This activitywas an end-of-the-year project which was conducted over many days. Students were first askedto design/build their own wind turbines out of cardboard. When this process was complete, theybuilt a power grid using wires and LEDs, which was setup to utilize DC
aretransferable to another context. 31Dependability was shown with detailed documentation of the “research design and itsimplementation, … operational detail of data gathering, … [and] reflective appraisal of theproject”. 32 Throughout the project design, data collection and examination, and dataexplication, the first author’s dispositions and biases were documented in a notebook and weretested in her debriefing sessions with her advisor and mentor, and in conversations with hergraduate student peers, establishing confirmability. 33Interview procedureIn phenomenological studies, in-depth interviews are used to collect rich, thick data. 34Exploratory qualitative interviews 24 were used to capture the participants’ experiences ofchoosing to study
Oenardi Lawanto is an Assistant Professor of the Department of Engineering Education at Utah State University. Lawanto holds B.S. and M.S. degrees in electrical engineering and a Ph.D. in human resource education. His research interests include areas in cognition, learning, instructions, engineering design, and e-learning. Currently, he is working on two research projects that investigate students’ cognitive and metacognitive activities while learning engineering. Both projects are funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF).Dr. Gary A. Stewardson, Utah State University Gary Stewardson is an Associate Professor in technology and engineering education at Utah State Uni- versity. His curriculum and research interests
institution - Demonstrations or presentations (individual or collective) - Portfolios - Homework Page 25.375.4 - Student scores - Projects at “capstone” courses - Use of rubrics - Evaluation by employers - Tests and oral presentations - Essays and papersSome indirect methods of collection include: - Surveys on attitudes and/or perceptions of students, employers and teachers. - Dropout and failing rates - Focus groups - Interviews with different members of the communityFor Georgia State University learning outcomes assessment is a systematic process of continuousimprovement based on
Nagy, Z., 2009, “Applying Kolb’s experiential learning cycle for laboratory education,” Journal of Engineering Education, 98, pp. 283–294. [4] Wieman, C. and Perkins, K., November 2005, “Transforming physics education,” Physics Today, pp. 36–41. [5] Fraser, D., Pillay, R., Tjatindi, L., and Case, J., 2007, “Enhancing the learning of fluid mechanics using computer simulations,” Journal of Engineering Education, No.4, pp. 381–388. [6] Goeser, P., Johnson, W. M., Hamza-Lup, F. G., and Schaefer, D., 2011, “VIEW - a virtual interactive web-based learning environment for engineers,” Advances in Engineering Education. [7] Terpenny, J. and Goff, R., 2006, “Utilizing assistive technology design projects and interdisplinary teams to
lend support toneoliberal trends in academia.It may be premature to begin a conversation about alternatives before the critiques of OBE inengineering education have been fully articulated. Tentatively, then, I will point to somestrategies that may address the concerns I have raised here about OBE and EC 2000.We have learned from critical pedagogy that our apparatuses of university administration andaccreditation will reproduce structures of power that we ultimately seek to dismantle, resist, orchange. We cannot retain the same decision-making structures – neither in our universities nor inour accreditation system, and expect to see different results. Thus, a project as simple aschanging ABET outcomes - for example to include diversity as a new
, our goal was to prepare students for success intheir first mathematics course, whether that placement was pre-calculus or calculus. Toaccomplish this goal, we designed a summer course to engage students in challengingmathematics through hands-on modeling projects using collaborative group learning. Thefollowing section of this paper describes the design of the course and its implementation. Thenext section describes results of the students’ performance both within the course and in theirsubsequent courses in mathematics. We then conclude with comments on lessons learned fromthe first implementation of the course, the continuing re-design of the course andrecommendations for future efforts.Course DesignThe overarching objective of this course
minorities and women to UWM’s College of Engineering and Applied Sciences. Jablonski is focusing her dissertation on sustainable oxidation of textile wastewater and is working to create small-scale wastewater treatment units for cottage textile industries. She trained at the National Environmental Engineering Research Institute (NEERI) in Nagpur, India where she worked on biodegra- dation of azo dye intermediates. Jablonski served as Co-chair of UWM’s student chapter of Engineers Without Borders for two years since its inception in 2007 and continues to help design and implement water distribution projects in Guatemala. Jablonski was a 2008 recipient of the NSF Graduate Fellow- ship Honorable Mention, the 2008 Wisconsin
HSIs in preparing atechnically-talented STEM workforce.IntroductionThe powering of today’s New Economy requires individuals to posses the 21st Centuryknowledge, skills and competencies that are needed to fully participate in the STEM Enterprise.At the core of this New Economy is technology, an artifact that must increasingly be leveragedto maximize earning potential and learning experiences. According to the U.S. Department ofCommerce (Langdon, McKittrick, Beede, Knah, & Doms, 2011)1, in 2010, 7.6 million people or1 in 18 workers held STEM jobs. Over the past 10 years, STEM jobs grew three times fasterthen non-STEM jobs. Between 2008 and 2018, STEM jobs are projected to grow by 17 percentcompared to 9.8 percent growth for non-STEM jobs
proposal and technical report. The technical report includes a component of each of theprevious assignments – graphics, a definition and a description are all required – and so studentscan learn how these individual pieces of technical writing can function together to form adifferent whole. In the 13th week of class, the content focuses on oral presentations, and studentspresent a five minute oral report on the topic of their technical report. The final week of class isspent reviewing material for the final project, which is a portfolio of the student‘s correctedwork. Throughout the semester, students receive their assignment back with fairly extensivefeedback from the instructor. For the final project, students have to make corrections to
AC 2012-3118: THE IMPACT OF COGNITIVE STYLE ON CONCEPTMAPPING: VISUALIZING VARIATIONS IN THE STRUCTURE OF IDEASDr. Joanna F. DeFranco, Pennsylvania State University, Great Valley Joanna DeFranco earned her Ph.D. in computer and information science from New Jersey Institute of Technology, M.S. in computer engineering from Villanova University, and B.S. in electrical engineering from Penn State, University Park. She teaches graduate courses, including Problem Solving, Project Man- agement, Software Systems Design, Computer Forensics, Ethics and Values in Science and Technology, Advanced Software Engineering Studio, and an Information Technology seminar. Previous to entering academia, DeFranco held a number of
Disadvantages Research contracts render Inappropriate theses if not properly opportunities to render valuable supervised public service, particularly in Certain types of sponsored research problems of national defense may be more suitable for industrial Contracts for basic research are organizations with which the desirable as means of building up educational institution should not [the] research atmosphere of the compete institute Steer project in direction of funding Research contracts… make it agency interest