University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. Her research focuses on the development of achievement motivation in educational settings and the interplay among motivation, emotions, and learning, especially in STEM fields.Dr. S. Patrick Walton, Michigan State University S. Patrick Walton received his B.ChE. from Georgia Tech, where he began his biomedical research career in the Cardiovascular Fluid Dynamics Laboratory. He then attended MIT where he earned his M.S. and Sc.D. while working jointly with researchers at the Shriners Burns Hospital and Massachusetts General Hospital. While at MIT, he was awarded a Shell Foundation Fellowship and was an NIH biotechnology Predoctoral Trainee. Upon completion of his doctoral studies, he
struggling students. These efforts help build the CEE Department as a place wherepositive change is happening and coupled with the research group’s efforts to disseminateknowledge, will lead the transformation of the College of Engineering.AcknowledgmentsThis material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation underIUSE/PFE:RED Grant No. 1632053. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions orrecommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarilyreflect the views of the National Science Foundation.References 1. C.S. Slater, T.R. Chandrupatla, R.A. Dusseau, J. L. Schmalzel, (1996). “Development of multifunctional laboratories in a new engineering school,” ASEE Annual Conference and
the under-representation of women and minorities in STEMby involving undergraduate students from across the U.S. in automotive-related research projectsfor 10 weeks during the summer [1-3]. Ultimately, the goal is to engage participants in rewardingautomotive research experiences that motivate them to pursue graduate studies and embark oncareers in in industry, government or academia.REU programs are designed around the needs of the undergraduate participants. The researchprojects, seminars, laboratory/industry tours, meetings with mentors, networking events andother activities are all set up to maximize the positive impact of a research experience on thestudents. Numerous studies have shown that active participation in hands-on
theireducation, complete their degrees, and prepare for a career and/or graduate studies; 3) toincrease the retention rate and monitor each supported student’s progress to ensure theircompletion of degree requirements within a reasonable time frame; 4) to encouragestudents to graduate and continue their education in graduate school, or obtainemployment in local industry, such as a nearby national laboratory; and 5) to engagescholarship recipients in college activities and encourage college service career options,such as teaching and research.The indicators measuring the effectiveness of the project are: 1) increasing the degreeprogress rate; this means that scholarship recipients will successfully complete aminimum of 12 credit hours towards the degree
’ professionalism and autonomy.The expected outcomes of this REU program are:1. Students will be able to demonstrate core knowledge in SST related areas (i.e. structural control, structural health monitoring, signal processing, etc.);2. Students will be able to understand and identify the differences between engineering science and engineering practice;3. Students have publications co-authored with academic/industrial mentors.Program ActivitiesThe program will feature: formal training, workshops, and supplemental activities in the conductof research in academia and industry; innovative research experience through engagement inprojects with scientific and practical merits in both academic and industrial environments;experience in conducting laboratory
currently being pilot tested under the Active Learning Modules toSupport Problem-Based Learning: Effects on Engineering Retention and Academic Outcomes ofAt-Risk Students project funded through the National Science Foundation IUSE Program(Award # 1725874) to refine through evidence-based process outcomes.IntroductionAn engineering graphics course is important for the development of visualization abilities,communication in engineering settings, and provides foundational skill needed in subsequentengineering coursework [1], [2]. Like many introductory courses at the collegiate level,engineering graphics may be taught via a lecture-based format of instruction with studentsworking on assigned work outside of the classroom or in a large laboratory
engineering drawing, improve their threedimensional (3D) visualization skills, and to teach the fundamentals of a computer aided design.The students meet with the instructor twice a week in the laboratory during this three-credit-hoursemester-long course with each class lasting two hours long. Each class is scheduled to deliverthe lecture first after which the students are allowed to complete their assigned homework andask questions as needed. The students learn the principles of orthographic projections and applythe principles to multiple view drawings by hand during the first four weeks of a fourteen-weeksemester. A 3D computer aided parametric modeling tool, CATIA, is then introduced after handdrawing, followed by auxiliary and section views
University. Her interests include innovative laboratory experiments for undergraduate instruction, engineering design for first-year students, and encouraging women to study engineering. For the three years prior to teaching at Michigan State University, she taught freshman and sophomore engineering courses at Rowan University. While at Rowan University she was Co-Director of RILED (Rowan Instructional Leadership and Educational De- velopment), the advisor for the student chapter of the Society of Women Engineers (SWE), and given the ASEE Campus Representative Outstanding Achievement Award. Her teaching experience also includes work as a graduate student facilitator and engineering teaching consultant at the University of
Technology. His research focuses on integrating Makerspaces and Design Thinking with higher education to enhance learning through hands on interdisciplinary practices.Dr. Megan K Halpern, Michigan State UniversityDr. Isaac Record, Michigan State University Isaac Record is an Assistant Professor of Practice at Lyman Briggs College, Michigan State University, where he directs the Collaborative Experiential Learning Laboratory and teaches courses in philosophy of science, science and technology studies, and critical making. His research seeks to situate our epistemic and ethical circumstances within a network of values, capabilities, and material and social technologies. Isaac holds a PhD and MA from the Institute for the
the relevance of the skills being taught in the course. To address thisfeedback, the instructor chose to make significant changes to the design of the course. In the firstiteration of the course design, class time was devoted largely to instructor-led demonstrationsand student practice limited to the laboratory sections of the course. Pedagogically, theseparation rested on the assumption that students would need to have these skills modeled by anexpert before they could apply it for themselves in the lab sections. With the availability of videotutorials and other support resources that students could access from increasingly ubiquitousdevices; the instructor chose to collapse the differences between the lecture and lab sections;shifting the
researcher at Sandia National Laboratory. He served as Department Chair from 2011-2019, and currently serves as the Director of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion for his department. American c Society for Engineering Education, 2021 A DEI Task Force within a Mechanical Engineering DepartmentMotivation and BackgroundFaculty and staff can and do influence the climate of a department and achievement of students.Research shows the positive effects of choosing to implement evidence-based teaching practiceslike active learning and inclusive teaching [1], and having a growth mindset in relation to theabilities of students [2]. However, research also shows that the local
leading journals in sustainability and environmental engineering, including the Journal of Cleaner Production, Environmental Engineering Science, Waste Management & Research, Journal of Industrial Ecology, International Journal of Life Cy- cle Assessment, Sustainability, and Resources, Conservation & Recycling. Prior to his position at UWT, he was an Associate Professor in Mechanical Engineering at the University of Michigan-Flint (UM-Flint). During his time at UM-Flint, he was the recipient of the Dr. Lois Matz Rosen Junior Faculty Excellence in Teaching Award (2017). He completed his postdoctoral fellowship at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s National Risk Management Research Laboratory in
do their best in beingattentive and receptive to knowledge in the classroom. They also put in an honest effort into theircoursework and seek practical ways to finish what is needed of them.It seems that life as a student is devoted to attending class, completing assignments, and beingsuccessful in the assignments, tests, laboratories, etc. While these are all necessary to help tracklearning and growth, students’ future/success seem to be determined by how the classes are graded,rather than the material learned. Most classes are viewed as competitive spaces, and students needto perform better than their peers in order to be in the upper percentiles of the classes. Studentsbelieve that their grades and success in the classes have a direct
lifting hooks and then they loaded their lifting hooks until failure. The students comparedthe actual load during failure and the estimated failure load. This hands-on activity proved to bea positive learning experience for students.5. AcknowledgementThis research was supported by Northwest Nazarene University.6. Bibliography1. Lai-Yuen, S. (2008, June), Using Lego To Teach And Learn Micromanufacturing AndIndustrial Automation Paper presented at 2008 Annual Conference & Exposition, Pittsburgh,Pennsylvania. https://peer.asee.org/31242. Ferry, W., & Otieno, A. (2004, June), Development Of A Low Cost Laboratory System For TeachingAutomation System Integration In The Manufacturing Engineering Technology Curriculum Paper presented at2004
and Technology Assistant Professor at South Dakota School of Mines and Technology, Mechanical Engineering Depart- ment. Teaching solid mechanics related courses. Researches Stem Ed and fracture mechanics in novel material systems.Dr. Karim Heinz Muci-Kuchler, South Dakota School of Mines and Technology Karim Muci-K¨uchler is a Professor of Mechanical Engineering and Co-Director of the Experimental and Computational Mechanics Laboratory at South Dakota School of Mines and Technology (SDSM&T). Before joining SDSM&T, he was an Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering at the University of Detroit Mercy. He received his Ph.D. in Engineering Mechanics from Iowa State University in 1992. His main interest
Paper ID #18862ROS-based Control of a Manipulator Arm for Balancing a Ball on a PlateMr. Khasim Ali KhanDr. Ji-Chul Ryu, Northern Illinois University Dr. Ji-Chul Ryu received the B.S. and M.S. degrees in mechanical engineering from Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST) and the Ph.D. degree in mechanical engineering from the University of Delaware in 2009. From 1999 to 2004, he was a Research Engineer with several companies, including Samsung, where he developed various types of automated robotic machines. He worked as a Postdoctoral Fellow with the Neuroscience and Robotics Laboratory, Northwestern
of required software does not tell the whole story for computer engineering. Acomputer engineering degree is not an electrical engineering degree with a minor in computerscience. There are differences in the hardware courses and the courses that mix hardware andsoftware between electrical and computer engineering. Likewise, many programs teachhardware and software to computer engineering students by way of laboratory projects andexperiments. We have made no attempt to distinguish computer engineering courses in this areaand we leave this to future studies.References1. http://www.abet.org/ABET2. "Computer Engineering Curricula 2016" was issued by the Joint Task Group on Computer Engineering Curricula from the Association for Computing
majors, where the students in this case may not have a solid background in coreconcepts related to engineering (e.g. physics) and may even have negative affect towardsengineering or low self-efficacy (i.e., enter with the attitude of ‘I am not sure I can do this’). Forexample, in the first lecture of the course, using online polling, the instructor asks “What do youexpect to be the greatest challenge in this class?”. Partial responses are shown in Figure 1, whereit is seen that “physics” comes up often, as do other anxieties. Although not shown, “math” isanother popular response, as are the laboratory components of the course.Although math and physics does play a role in the class, this is subordinate to learning whatstructural engineers ‘do
. Washington, D.C.: The Education Trust. Jackson, J.F. L., & Moore, J.L., III. (2008). Introduction: The African American male crisis in Education: A popular media infatuation or needed public policy response? American Behavioral Science, 51(7), 847-853. Doi:10.1177/0002764207311992 Levin, H. M., Belfield, C., Muennig, P., & Rouse, C. (2007). The public returns to public educational investments in African American males. Economics of Educational Review, 26, 699-708. doi:10.1016/j.econedurev.2007.09.004 Maltese, A. V., Tai, R. H., & Sadler, P. M. (2010). The effect of high school physics laboratories on performance in introductory college physics. The Physics Teacher, 48(5), 333-337. McLeod, P. L., Lobel, S. A
Environmental Fellowship for leadership in the environmental field. She was awarded the I.W. Smith Award for Outstanding achievement in creative mechanical engineering within 10 years of gradu- ation (2011) and the Ontario Ministry of Research and Innovation Early Researcher Award (2012). She is the Director of the Thermofluids for Energy and Advanced Materials (TEAM) Laboratory working in fuel cells, electrolyzers, and subsurface geology. In 2014 she became a Fellow of the Canadian Soci- ety for Mechanical Engineering and in 2015 was awarded an Alexander von Humboldt Fellowship for Experienced Researchers. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2017 Female vs Male Secondary
brought practical applications from con- sulting design and construction to the classroom that students’ have found invaluable upon graduating. Serving as Experiential Learning Option advisor for multiple students’ portfolios, Dr. Lester has success- fully evaluated proposals from past work experience to grant course credit for distance students. He has served as the Civil-Site design option evaluator for Senior Design projects each semester as part of his normal teaching responsibilities. Dr. Lester has developed new courses in Civil Engineering Technology to better distribute the student load in Fluid Mechanics and the accompanying laboratory. Dr. Lester has also taught the Professional Engineering preparation
high school [15].ENGR 102 HS was modeled after the on-campus ENGR 102: Introduction to Engineeringcourse. The survey course introduces the undergraduate student to various fields of engineeringthrough a main lecture and laboratory sections. The primary project in the university course isthe iterative design, test and build of a solar oven. This framework is foundational to the highschool version of ENGR 102.A core curriculum, including the solar oven project, excel training and design of experiment(DOE) activities are presented to high school students in much the same way as the universitycourse. This core content takes about 12 weeks to deliver in the high school classroom andassures continuity across the two programs. The key difference
founder and director of the Surface Engineering and Nanofluids Laboratory (SENL) with the state-of-the-art nanofluid characterization and testing capabilities in the College of Engineering and Architecture. He has held administrator roles such as the Graduate Program Director in Mechanical Engineering and the Interim Associate Dean for Research and Graduate Education at Howard University.Dr. Claudia Marin-Artieda, Howard University Dr. Marin joined Howard University in 2008. She received her Master’s degree (2002) and her Ph.D. (2007) from the State University of New York (SUNY) at Buffalo. Dr. Marin’s current research focuses on theoretical and experimental studies on the dynamic interaction among structures
program on at-risk youth. Adolescence, 37(148), 717.[10] Campbell, T. A., & Campbell, D. E. (1997). Faculty/student mentor program: Effects onacademic performance and retention. Research in Higher Education, 38(6), 727-742.[11] Santos, S. J., & Reigadas, E. T. (2002). Latinos in higher education: An evaluation of auniversity faculty mentoring program. Journal of Hispanic Higher Education, 1(1), 40-50.[12] Smink, J., & Reimer, M. S. (2005). Fifteen Effective Strategies for Improving StudentAttendance and Truancy Prevention. National Dropout Prevention Center Network.[13] Railsback, J. (2004). Increasing Student Attendance: Strategies From Research and Practice.Northwest Regional Educational Laboratory NWREL.[14] Crisp, G., & Cruz
. He has taught a variety of courses in the ChE department and currently focuses on the Unit Op- erations Laboratory, Mass and Energy Balances, and Separations. He completed the National Effective Teaching Institute course (NETI-1) in June, 2016. Dr. Clay is married to Dr. Kristy Clay, a veterinarian, and has three children, Luke (15), Natalie (15), and Meredith (12). c American Society for Engineering Education, 2017 Integration of Industrially Relevant Examples in ChE Courses Energy Balance on an e-Cigarette DeviceAbstractIdentifying industrially relevant and/or real-world examples is an excellent technique to enhancethe
reworking of the circuit. A preferred method is to simulate the circuit usingsoftware to identify problems and then simulate the corrected circuit until most errors are fixed. Nosimulation is perfect, so testing of the final hardware is still necessary, but simulation can findmany of the errors. (f)-LabVIEW For digital courses LabVIEW [2] could be used. LabVIEW is an acronym name for Laboratory Virtual Instrumentation Engineering Workbench. It is a graphical developments system designed by National Instruments. It is used in many industries. It can be used for data acquisition, machine control, instrument, and a wide variety of other applications. The use of LabVIEW reduces development time for a design. LabVIEW provides engineers with the tools
State University (OSU), before joining the OSU BME Department as an Assistant Professor of Practice in 2014. Her roles include designing and teaching undergraduate BME laboratory courses, and mentoring multidisciplinary senior capstone teams on rehabilitation engineering and medical device design projects. She also leads K-12 engineering outreach events, and is pursuing scholarship in student technical communication skills and preparing BME students for careers in industry. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2019 To What Extent Does Gender and Ethnicity Impact Engineering Students’ Career Outcomes? An exploratory analysis comparing biomedical to three other undergraduate
Research, vol. 74, pp. 59-109[12] J. W. Thomas (2000). A review of research on project-based learning, accessed on Jan. 29.2019, www.bie.org/index.php/site/RE/pbl_research/29[13] B. D. Jones, “Motivating students to engage in learning: The MUSIC model of academicmotivation,” International Journal of Teaching and Learning in Higher Education, vol. 21 (2),272-285, accessed on Jan. 29, 2019, http://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/EJ899315.pdf[14] R. J. Marzano, D. J. Pickering and T. Heflebowen, The highly engaged classroom, MarzanoResearch Laboratory, 2011[15] A. Bandura, “Self-efficacy mechanism in human agency,” American Psychologist, vol. 37(2), pp. 122–147, 1982, doi:10.1037/0003-066X.37.2.122[16] A. Carroll and S. Houghton, “Self-efficacy and
systems including design and development of pilot testing facility, mechanical instrumentation, and industrial applications of aircraft engines. Also, in the past 10 years she gained experience in teaching ME and ET courses in both quality control and quality assurance areas as well as in thermal-fluid, energy conversion and mechanical areas from various levels of instruction and addressed to a broad spectrum of students, from freshmen to seniors, from high school graduates to adult learners. She also has extended experience in curriculum development. Dr Husanu developed laboratory activities for Measurement and Instrumentation course as well as for quality control undergraduate and graduate courses in ET Masters
learning outcomes, and study the impact of social ties gainedfrom classroom activities. In short, the SNA tool will contribute to the development andunderstanding of how classroom activities support and foster student social engagement whichsupports learning gains and an inclusive environment.2 Background2.1 Social EngagementStudent engagement with a college course can come in many forms and occur inside and outsideof the classroom. The classroom experience can range from entirely composed of lectures to thosehaving only interactive activities. Students may additionally attend laboratory, recitation, orcomparable sessions. Students may engage in a multitude of ways with class material outside ofthe classroom to include working in groups