., “Enabling a Comprehensive Teaching Strategy: Video Lectures,” The Journal of Information Technology Education, 2008, 7, 71-86. 5. Carpi, A., Mikhailova, Y. “The Visionlearning Project: Evaluating the Design and Effectiveness of Interdisciplinary Science Web Content”, Journal of College Science Teaching, 2003, 33, 12-15. 6. Nichols, J. Shaffer, B., Shockey, K. “Changing the Face of Instruction: Is Online or In-class More Effective” College & Research Libraries, 2003, 378-388. 7. Lents, N.H., Cifuentes, O.E., “Web-Based Learning Enhancements: Video Lectures Through Voice-Over PowerPoint in a Majors-Level Biology Course”, Journal of College Science Teaching, 2009, 39, 38-46. 8. Dutton, J., Dutton, M
to wake up capture data, perform calculations, take actions, communicate and then go to sleep; this concept goes against what the textbooks traditionally cover. Some of the new millennium jobs characteristic is that innovative systems and devices that will be designed and implemented should be energy aware, self sustainable and efficient. This posses an interesting question: “In a university environment: how can we transfer to the millennials all the concepts of classical microprocessor and microcontrollers systems using the latest in multimedia technologies, get the students to perform concurrent tasks while collaborating in teams, offer immediate feedback on their performance while making them responsible for the projects that
Design of a Simplified Hemodialysis Simulation Onesmo Ogore, Kushal Sherpa, Caleb Baron, Mansour Zenouzi, Ph.D., P.E., and Shankar Krishnan, Ph.D. Electronics and Mechanical Department Wentworth Institute of Technology Boston, MA 02115Session 6: Teaching project based courses and design courses, including senior design courseABSTRACTThe objective of the present study is to create a representation of a hollow fiberdialyzer which is a critical component of any hemodialysis system. This is done tofacilitate the understanding of the mass transport and fluid dynamics processesthat occur within the dialyzer, which affect the
in a specified time. Data collected from theexperiment is presented in Table 1. For each trial run, the experiment was conducted three timesand the average airspeed was recorded in the table. Table 2 presents the raw data for theexperiments and was used for the Analysis of Variance – ANOVA [8] and Tukey’s test [9].The objective of this project is to perform the following statistical analysis on the data points anddetermine the validity of the results: Analysis of Variance [8], Tukey’s Test [9], Analysis ofResiduals [10], and Multiple Regression Model [11, 12]. The Two-Factor Analysis of Varianceperformed on the data allows testing the hypothesis that there is no significant effect for each ofthe factors, fan speed and channel height, and the
consumption in real vehicles,popularly termed “hypermiling,” has spawned enthusiast web sites [2], [3] and competitions inwhich contestants often top 100 mpg [4]. This framework was used to engage students’ attentionas they strive to improve their own driving performance and compete with each other, and togive them an incentive to consider subtleties of vehicle power requirements, engine efficiencymaps, and their interactions. In this paper, we describe the technical development of thesimulator, the activities developed making use of it, and the class in which we used it.Technical Development of the Simulator We were very fortunate to be able to start this project with a highly developed open-source driving simulator, TORCS version 1.3.1 [1
). 2. identify and develop their personal leadership philosophy and approach using written self-reflection and peer assessment. 3. be able to work in teams and use creative problem-solving to develop a project for the purpose of creating positive and sustainable change. 4. be introduced to the concepts of leadership beyond their academic studies (whether professional or personal), including entrepreneurship and intrapreneurship.The primary course topics include: ≠ History of leadership theories ≠ Currently practiced leadership models (e.g., relational, shared, situational, etc.) ≠ Individual responsibility and ethics ≠ Diversity and globalization ≠ Team building, working in groups, and inclusive practices
education, design and selection of materials, general materials engineering, polymer science, and characterization of materials. His research interests are in innovative education in engineering and K-12 engineering outreach. He worked on Project Pathways, an NSF supported Math Science Partnership, in developing modules for Physics and Chemistry and also a course on Engineering Capstone Design. He has also co-developed a Page 15.1149.1 Materials Concept Inventory for assessing fundamental knowledge of students in introductory materials engineering classes. He is currently working on NSF projects
design projects. She earned a M. Ed from The University of Texas at Austin in Special Education. V-mail: 512-963-9609; E-mail: ckw.columbia@gmail.com.Jiancheng Liu, University of the Pacific Jiancheng Liu has been an assistant professor of the Department of Mechanical Engineering at the University of the Pacific since 2006. Prior to joining at the University of the Pacific, he has worked in industries for many years. His research focuses on CNC machine design and analysis, computer aided manufacturing and manufacturing system automation. He has published more than 70 peer reviewed technical journal and conference papers. Dr. Liu was also awarded 4 patents. He has invented many
Engineering courses taught through the author‟sprogram, the College of Engineering has an Engineering Internship course that facilitates coursecredit for real world, off-campus experience with employers. Although rarely an avenue forpure/basic research, it does support applied research and development activities of undergraduatesunder the supervision of engineering personnel at regional industries.Research can also be tied to the Honors Program at the author‟s institution through HonorsSenior Thesis courses in which students, directed by an advisor and a committee which alsoincludes the Director of the Honors Program, define and conduct a high-level research, scholarly,or creative/artistic project, and complete and defend a comprehensive thesis over
safety, speed, and productivity, (3) to ensure uniformity, reliability, and excellence of product quality, (4) to achieve overall efficiency and economy. Page 15.1088.3Subramanyan states that the topic covers a “variety of documents including standards,specifications, codes of practice, recommendations, guidelines, nomenclature and terminology,and so on.” A document may also be a “composite” of these.Linda Musser (1990)4 wrote a straight forward overview of “Standards Collections for AcademicLibraries” including why a library should collect standards and described ways to build thecollection while Taylor (1999) does a similar project but
on the demographic being approximately equal to one another. The controlgroup consisted of five instructors and each instructor developed a new quiz based on theirprofessional experience. The experimental group consisted of four instructors (actually five, butone instructor declined to participate later) and each instructor developed a new quiz using themultiple-choice quiz development/revision process as shown in Figure 1. The lead instructorwas a member of the experimental group.The lead instructor, Josh Coffman, and Dan Jensen met with the ten instructors from the controland experimental groups to discuss the project. In this meeting the instructors were asked todevelop a new quiz with five to ten multiple-choice questions that were based
59,000 unemployed engineers.11Nazi-affiliated businesses and industries offered an outlet for those experiencing the―professional drought.‖ Although some were drawn to the völkisch ideology, others saw Nazismas ―the bulwark against communism.‖11 A more important reason, however, lay with the renewedemphasis on innovative technology: ―The new Nazi regime was enthusiastically promotingtechnology and dazzled the profession with promises of recognition and substantial projects . . .such as the Autobahn and Volkswagen.‖11More compelling reasons lie in the psychological make-up of engineers, who, as ethicist MikeMartin suggests, tend as a whole to be more ―object-centered,‖ regarding ―people as mere thingsto be used or controlled.‖ An object
is a particular difficulty when assessing engineering.This paper addresses content questions; the issue of assessing skills and process knowledge isleft for future research.IntroductionEngineering is Elementary (EiE) is a research-based curriculum development project focused oncreating curriculum units that cover topics in engineering and technology as a supplement to corescience instruction. Each EiE curriculum unit is designed to build on and reinforce one sciencetopic through the exploration and development of a related technology. EiE has been committedfrom the project’s inception in 2003 to assessing students’ knowledge about engineering andtechnology, and measuring the impact of EiE on student knowledge and attitudes. EiE is
instruction or other remedialefforts to improve student learning, and to have a measure for demonstrating the effectiveness oftheir remedial/re-instruction efforts.While the content and skills trajectory research seeks to address curricular level efforts inassessment, in addition to mapping content and skill trajectories on a more detailed level, thisresearch also seeks to identify and categorize the methods of content and skills failure within thetrajectory structure. Unlike other efforts to evaluate student learning this project will look at Page 15.878.4failure of learning points rather than success. This analysis will be used to identify
and co-directed the Human-Computer Interaction graduate program. Dr. Cruz's work in VR started with her Ph.D. dissertation, the design of the CAVE™ Virtual Reality Environment, and the CAVE™ Library software specifications and implementation. Since then, her research has been driven by providing applicability and simplicity to VR technology. She spearheaded the open-source VR API movement with the development of VR Juggler. She currently serves as the main investigators on research projects from the National Science Foundation and the Army Research Lab.Yuxin Ma, University of Louisiana at Lafayette Dr. Yuxin Ma is a Researcher at the Center for Innovative Learning Assessment
activities as the high school participants,however they were more engaged when they were with their age group. The 2008 conferencewas the first conference with two separates dates one for middle school participants and the otherfor high school participants. In previous years, the conference had been held during one daywith both middle and high school participants yet offered two separate “conference tracks”. The2008 separation of the conference allowed for two one-day conferences each focused on onelevel: one day for middle school and one day for high school students. Year Middle School High School 2006 Balloon Flinker project Barbie Bungee Polymer Silly Slim
solving exercise problems and designing projects like identity logo, flyer, calendar, and postcard. Program: In Design 19 17 Design single and multiple- page (8 females; (6 females; 11 documents for business, advertising 11males) males) such as identities, flyers, brochures,CG02 forms, catalogs, newsletters and booklets. Program: In Design 65 45Total Table 1We
suggested system by incorporating other programming languages suchas C++ and MS Visual Basic.AcknowledgementThis work is funded by the National Science Council in Taiwan, under the “Science Education”Program, Project No. NSC 97-2511-S-218-005-MY2.Bibliography1. Allen Tucker. (2003). A Model Curriculum for K-12 Computer Science. Final Report of the ACM K-12 Education Task Force Curriculum Committee. ACM.2. Bransford, J.D., Brown, A.L., and Cocking, R.R.(2000). How People Learn: Brain, Mind, Experience, and School. Washington, D.C.:National Academy Press.3. Resnick, M. (1995). New paradigms for computing, new paradigms for thinking. In A. diSessa, Hoyles, C., & Noss, R. (Eds.), Computers and Exploratory Learning (pp. 31-43). New York
Baptist College in Gaylord, MI. He enjoys hiking, camping, fishing, and the occasional random research project. Page 15.914.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2010 New directions in engineering education: The development of a virtual lab course in electronic circuits.Abstract – The development of virtual education satisfying the needs of engineeringeducation is getting increased attention in the current era of Web and virtual technologies.In this paper, we present the rationale, implementation and formative evaluation of avirtual lab environment for an electronic circuits course. The system, which is
of K-12 education. In the spring of 2010, over 50students were enrolled in the undergraduate education courses.Strand 3: Mentoring ExperiencesCareer counselors regularly recommend that college students interview professionals in theirprospective fields in order to learn about a career. Therefore one initiative implemented as partof Tech to Teaching is a Summer Undergraduate Research Experience (Teaching-SURE)program that places Pre-Teaching students and experienced high school STEM teachers together Page 15.1019.6into research labs to engage in summer research projects. The goal of this pairing is to allow thePage 15.1019.7the 1,245 students
AC 2010-8: USING LIBGUIDES AS A WEB 2.0 CONTENT MANAGEMENTSYSTEM AND A COLLABORATION TOOL FOR ENGINEERING LIBRARIANSRichard Bernier, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology Richard Bernier is the Reference and Electronic Services Librarian at Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology where he manages subscriptions and access to all electronic resources; conducts reference service and library instruction, and manages the digital archives project. He is currently transitioning his library toward a Library 2.0 environment. Page 15.1330.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2010 Using
AC 2010-90: INVESTIGATING HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS’ COMPUTINGBELIEFSDaniel Heersink, Colorado School of MinesBarbara Moskal, Colorado School of MinesWanda Dann, Carnegie Mellon UniversityAlka Herriger, PurdueSteven Cooper, Purdue Page 15.813.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2010 Investigating High School Students’ Computing BeliefsAbstractMany projects throughout the United States are underway that seek to increase the appeal ofcomputing as a field of study. This article reports the results of pre and post attitudes surveyswhich were administered before and after two interventions. One of the interventions wasdesigned to change students’ attitudes with
AC 2010-1480: STUDENT SUCCESS – ORIENTED NEEDS ANALYSISFRAMEWORK: A PILOT STUDYTracee Gilbert, Virginia Tech Tracee Walker Gilbert is a Ph.D. candidate in Industrial and Systems Engineering at Virginia Tech. Her research focuses on designing and applying ISE methods and tools to improve engineering education, with particular emphasis on new approaches that will have lasting effects for the success of women and minority students in K-12 and higher education. Prior to pursuing graduate studies full-time, she worked as a Senior Systems Engineer in private industry where she lead projects to develop Geospatial Intelligence Systems from concept through implementation.Janis Terpenny, Virginia Tech
limits to growth: A report for the club of Rome’s project on the predicament of mankind. New York: Universe Books.18. Monastersky, R. 2006a. A new science breaks down boundaries, Chronicle of Higher Education. 53(9): A20.19. Monastersky, R. 2006b. Truth in advertising: Middlebury college‘s biomass plant, Chronicle of Higher Education. 53(9): A20.20. North, Douglass C. 1981. Structure and change in economic history. New York: Norton.21. Pierce, J., and Lovrich, N. 1986. Water resources, democracy, and the technical information quandary. Millwood, NY: Associated Faculty Press. Page 15.808.16
the local industry, in this case mainly oil andgas, without the need for overseas migration in order to obtain their education. Given theirdiverse backgrounds and their attendance to a certified Western higher education system,successful graduates will be capable of pursuing engineering projects on the local and globalscale.6Despite the drive of the Regional students to enter engineering disciplines, summaries of industryviews on Regional engineering graduates reveal that they are seen to be especially deficient interms of hands-on experience, team work, and independent critical thinking.7 It is thereforeespecially important to foster any industry links with the students—including the simulation ofday-to-day practice and equipment in order to
of theresponsible conduct of research (RCR). In recent years, two instruments for measuring ethicalsensitivity in science and engineering have been developed, namely, the Test of EthicalSensitivity in Science and Engineering (TESSE) developed by Borenstein, et al.6 and the Test forEthical Sensitivity in Science (TESS) by Clarkeburn.7 Although both investigated ethicalsensitivity to issues arising from out of science and engineering, neither focused primarily onassessing ethical sensitivity of STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics)researchers to the responsible conduct of research.As part of an NSF sponsored project we have designed an instrument for testing the ethicalsensitivity of STEM researchers to situations involving
made… Scientific literacy is the capacity to use scientific knowledge, to identify questions and to draw evidence-based conclusions in order to understand and help make decisions about the natural world and the changes made to it through human activity. (pp. 132–33)This definition of scientific literacy encompasses technology. In this area, the colleges ofengineering are uniquely poised to provide this type of literacy education to students from otherdisciplines. The Green Report-- Engineering Education for a Changing World5, released inOctober 1994 as a joint project report by the Engineering Deans Council and CorporateRoundtable of the American Society for Engineering Education (ASEE), challenged the deansof the colleges of
. Inquiry-based elementaryscience education provides students with some opportunities to engage in authentic science butthe subject area expertise required by teachers can be daunting and time consuming. Currentlyengineering education professionals are looking for opportunities to positively influenceelementary (STEM) experience but the school curriculum demands limit their opportunity toexpose students to the benefits of engineering problem solving. Through professionaldevelopment we have instituted some graphic-based modeling techniques that support andextend current inquiry science curriculum activities and leverage the engineering design cycle.Research and findings done as part of a two-year NSF-supported project in elementary educationwill be
search interfacesdedicated as finding aids to institutional and disciplinary repositories assures expandedintellectual access as well.The results of this project support these conclusions. In this study nearly 11% of the articleswere deposited in institutional or disciplinary repositories. Much higher were the percentages offaculty in all three disciplines, in all five institutions who have at least one article with someform of open access. IR deposition is still in its infancy in these fields and repeated studies suchas this one will determine if the percentage of available publications is on the rise. Free access isincreasingly becoming the mantra and predictably faculty will more and more prefer to pull theircited publications from the
publicised (e.g. at conferences), so that the dissertation can be supported by the scientific and research community, not only by the opinions of the opponents. Denmark: '…capacity to carry out a scientific project involving independent use of the scientific method of the subject thereby furthering research at a level corresponding to the international standard of the PhD within the subject area.' The Netherlands: '…The dissertation must report on original research and present scientific results. It should make an original contribution to knowledge in the field and testify to the candidate's mastery of the methodology' Portugal: '…The thesis is expected to be a scholarly work which contributes to the