. Lutsenko, N. Seminikhyna and T. Svyrydiuk, “FosteringIntercultural Communicative Competence and Student Autonomy through Project-BasedLearning,” AWEJ Special Issue on Communication and Language in Virtual Spaces, pp.130-143, January 2023, DOI: 10.24093/awej/comm1.10[7] T. Fortune, S. Borkovic, A. Bhopti, R. Somoza, H. Chan Nhan and S. Rangwala,“Transformative Learning Through International Project-Based Learning in the Global South:Applying a Students-as-Partners Lens to a “High-Impact” Capstone,” Journal of Studies inInternational Education, vol. 23, no. 1, pp.49-65, November 2018,DOI: 10.1177/1028315318814571[8] P. P. Srinivasa, N.C. Niranjan and B.R. Shrinivasa, “Project Based Learning (PBL):Issues Faced by Faculty for its Effective
Paper ID #38369WIP: Designing disciplinary projects in an honors first-year engineeringcourse to improve retention and participation of first-year students.Dr. Joseph A. Lyon, Purdue University at West Lafayette (COE) Dr. Joseph A. Lyon is a lecturer in the College of Engineering at Purdue University. He holds a Ph.D. in engineering education, an M.S. in industrial engineering, and a B.S. in Agricultural and Biological Engineering from Purdue University. His research interests include models and modeling, computational thinking, and computation in engineering education.Dr. Jacqueline Callihan Linnes, Purdue University at West
Paper ID #38182Board 207: ACCESS in STEM: An S-STEM Project Supporting Economi-callyDisadvantaged STEM-Interested Students in Their First Two YearsErica ClineMenaka AbrahamSarah AlaeiDr. Heather Dillon, University of Washington, Tacoma Dr. Heather Dillon is Professor and Chair of Mechanical Engineering at the University of Washington Tacoma. Her research team is working on energy efficiency, renewable energy, fundamental heat transfer, and engineering education. Before joining academia, she worked for the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) as a senior research engineer working on both energy efficiency and renewable
Paper ID #36892Teaching engineering design through a team-based multi-disciplinaryhumanitarian engineering project: effects on engineering identity andsense of belongingDr. Shannon Barker, University of Virginia Dr. Shannon Barker completed her PhD at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, and completed two post-doctoral fellowships at the University of Washington and Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne, specializing in gene delivery. Shannon has been in graduate higher education leadership for six years both at the Georgia Institute of Technology and the University of Virginia, and is currently Associate Profes
solving real-world problems. He directs the operations of the Institute-wide Georgia Tech Capstone Design Expo, which highlights projects created by over 2000 Georgia Tech seniors graduating students on an annual basis. He serves as the faculty advisor for the student organization of over 100 student volunteers who all train, staff, and manage the operations of Georgia Tech’s Flowers Invention Studio – one of the nation’s premier volunteer student-run makerspace, open to all of the Georgia Tech community. Dr. Jariwala’s research interests are in the field of makerspaces, evidence-based design education, and advanced additive manufacturing process. During his Ph.D. studies, he was also a participant of the
addressing the demand to prepareengineers ready to grapple with complex global problems and effectively seek nuancedunderstandings in 2030 and beyond.New model for a holistic capstone experienceA decade ago, the Electrical Engineering Department at University of South Florida (USF)had one faculty member advising approximately 80% of the capstone projects. Initial internalevaluation of the capstone design courses and projects showed a disconnect between the twosemesters of the capstone design as well as project management and assessment challenges.In 2012, through a significant departmental-level reform, approximately 40% of the entiredepartment's full-time faculty got involved in capstone design. In the same year, a newcurriculum development
DesignIt has often been the bane of many employers that traditionally trained engineers lackunderstanding in the skills necessary to succeed in business. Often the engineer understands thetechnology, but not how that technology can benefit the business. It is skills like teamwork,communication, project management and financial implications of design, etc. that are missingfrom the traditional engineering education (Felder, Vest, etc). Authors like Sheppard et. al. saysthe classroom should be modified to allow ways these skills can be taught.Around 2010, a movement was started at Stevens to infuse Senior Capstone Design experiencewith necessary skills outside of the major discipline. However, the discipline specific SeniorCapstone Design Advisors
assignments facilitate students being able to learnremotely. Applications and lab projects can be controlled using IoT capabilities. As processorshave improved more affordable microprocessor or computer alternatives such as Arduino,Raspberry Pi and other similar platforms have become more commonly utilized in educationalsettings. In this project, IoT concepts, educational materials and methods are introduced tostudents through various avenues such as Independent Study courses, Capstone Senior Designcourses and Sensors courses.BackgroundFigure 1 shows a simple representation of an IoT system that utilizes a Raspberry Pi. TheRaspberry Pi could be replaced by an Arduino, Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA), or aProgrammable Logic Controller (PLC). In
Raise Your Hand. The program brought together severalundergraduate capstone design teams, multiple sub-teams connected through a VerticallyIntegrated Projects (VIP) team, undergraduate researchers, extracurricular high school students,and a graduate student. The contribution of this work is the description of the evolving projectmanagements strategies that project leaders used to organize program efforts and integrate thestudent work for a successful deployment of the exhibit in Fall 2022.In this paper, we discuss the project context, team composition, learning outcomes, projectstages, and key techniques that coordinated and structured the project. The project contextdescribes the design vision for the Raise Your Hand exhibit, which was
design courses are typically project-based, where students work inteams to address a “customer-provided” problem and develop real working solutions. This typeof project-based learning requires that students synthesize knowledge and apply skills to anopen-ended design problem. The open-ended nature of “customer-provided” problems thatstudents encounter in capstone design courses contrasts with the structured and constrained“instructor-provided” problems seen in their earlier coursework [1], [2]. Solving complex,unstructured problems is an essential skill for a working engineer, but it requires a differentskillset than that which is needed to solve the standard textbook problems typically seen inclassrooms [2]–[6]. Solutions to textbook problems
can result in conflict or issues when completing project tasks. AtUniversity of Indianapolis’ R.B. Annis School of Engineering, we noticed that student interestlevel in a project topic is a significant factor toward commitment and contribution to projectcompletion.Our institution’s senior capstone course requires students to participate in design projects asmembers of multidisciplinary teams solving open-ended real-world problems. Assigning studentsto projects can be a complicated process, especially considering student preferences, majors,skills, and the needs/nature of the project. We are a young program continuing to grow and areinterested in a systematic approach to assign teams. Currently, a rank-based survey is used togauge student
comparing survey results from before (in person) and during (remote) thepandemic. Preliminary results show that overall project outcomes and productivity were as highor, in some cases, higher during the pandemic than prior to the pandemic. These findings suggestthat the innovative remote teaching strategies implemented by the teaching team providedeffective options in the absence of certain hands-on experiences that are considered critical toengineering capstone design courses. A discussion on these teaching strategies in the contextbeyond the pandemic are considered in the discussion.IntroductionEngineering capstone design courses provide students with a team-based project experience inaddressing an open-ended, real-world, unmet need. In the
utilizecompetencies developed in the first three years of the curriculum in the solution of a complexdesign problem.Educational excellence requires exposing students to the current edge of research. To ensure thatstudent projects are along the same trajectory that the industry is moving, educators mustcontinually introduce emerging techniques, practices, and applications into the curriculum. Thefields of Internet of Things (IoT) and Wireless Sensor Networks (WSN) are growing rapidly, andthere is increasing interest in providing undergraduate students with a foundation in these areas.This paper presents IoT and WSN projects that our undergraduate computer and electricalengineering students have done in their senior capstone course in wildfire
(CSUB). He recei ©American Society for Engineering Education, 2023 CORE FEATURE EXTRACTION WITH COMPUTER VISIONI. Introduction This work details the senior project capstone experience of a group of undergraduatestudents at the California State University, Bakersfield (CSUB), a medium-size, comprehensive,Hispanic Serving Institution (HSI). The work is novel and potentially commercializable in thefield of energy conversion and petrochemical extraction. A thorough description of theirmethodology is provided, and their results show promise. In addition, we discuss the curriculumand project management structure that enabled an undergraduate senior project group to interfacewith oil and gas companies to
thecertificate, both undergraduate and graduate students are required to attend 6 standards-relatedseminars. The seminar series is described later in this paper.Other requirements for undergraduate students include: • Completing a total of 12 credits (4 lecture courses or a combination of lectures and labs) with a grade of “B” or better in each course. The certificate courses may be selected from a list of MEEN, CEEN, and AEEN courses. • Completing a senior capstone project that has a significant component focused on standards.Graduate student requirements are similar with the following differences: • Completing a total of 9 credits (3 courses) with a grade of “B” or better in each course. The certificate courses are
a scanning electron microscope (SEM). There are several points ofcontention that make fatigue testing difficult while being observed by an SEM: (i) Building afatigue testing machine small enough to fit within the SEM chamber is a different task; (ii)Building a fatigue tester small enough to fit within the SEM is feasible but most of the onescreated for market use are costly; (iii) Building a fatigue tester that can still apply the loadscorrectly to the sample and at the correct frequency is a difficult task; and (iv) A system thatapplies cyclic loads to a sample will create vibrations and will obscure the SEM from correctlyobserving the sample. The goal of this capstone project was to design a micro-fatigue tester forin-situ monitoring of
points (referred to here as snapshots) were alsoincluded that encouraged effective project management. Students were required to review eachother’s designs, and students in the follow-on capstone course also provided feedback to theteams as their designs progressed. In this work-in-progress paper, details about the coursestructure and materials are presented, learning assessment approaches are discussed, andpreliminary assessment results from the initial offering are described.Introduction and MotivationEvery ABET-accredited engineering program is required to include “a culminating majorengineering design experience that 1) incorporates appropriate engineering standards andmultiple constraints, and 2) is based on the knowledge and skills
allows cross-institution and interdisciplinarycollaboration on novel design projects and 2) to build students’ technical and collaboration skillsthat will be useful for careers at the intersection of cybersecurity and autonomous systems.Students learned core cybersecurity concepts using closed-ended assignments and expanded theirresearch and design skills with an open-ended design project. Throughout this process, theylearned how to collaborate with other teammates through modern collaboration tools, such asGithub, Google Drive, and Discord. Our student survey indicates that this pilot program achievedits goals and indicates that future iterations should refine the program’s structure and processes.Keywordsexperiential learning, capstone
infiltrates many areas of engineering andscience. Yet within engineering programs, students often have few opportunities to developexpertise in data science or even to explore how data science is relevant to their degreespecializations. This paper reports on an NSF-funded study of a program that prepares STEMstudents to engage with data science in coursework and then mentors them as they secureinternships and complete a capstone that demonstrates their application of data science expertise.Drawing on a mixed-methods study, including student reflections, capstone project assessment,and survey reporting, this paper suggests not only that students make deep connections betweentheir existing majors and data science but also that students trained in our
class sizes and the interest, 1-3 interns can be assigned to a team by theinstructors.The students who do not participate in this internship experience or those who don’t get placedare assigned a separate project to fulfill the requirement. Once the pairing is complete, the actualimplementation of the project starts. The design teams then develop the project promptcomparable to the regular controls project but adapted to their capstone project. The twoinstructors ensure that the scope of the work assigned is feasible. The interns start their workwith background information collection based on the assigned prompt. Although, at this point,the juniors haven’t learned all the concepts needed for project completion, they are advised towork on it as
programs in the US include a capstonesenior design experience, the level of training that the students receive in the product design anddevelopment process can vary considerably between programs. In some cases, students learn theproduct design process in parallel with their capstone senior design project. In others, there areone or more previous courses that focus on teaching different phases of the product design anddevelopment process. Also, there are other factors that impact student learning such as variationsin the design process favored by each faculty member supervising a capstone senior designproject, the specific design process presented and the terminology used in different productdesign textbooks, and the product design textbook
semester,during which they enroll in a capstone design course that utilizes multidisciplinary groups ofARCHE and ARCH students to design and analyze a building project over the course of asemester. While the capstone portion of the program is not unique to Oklahoma StateUniversity, the immersion of first-year Architectural Engineering students into the architecturaldesign studio is and forms the basis of this paper.Literature ReviewMarino, Cross, Feinaur, McCusker, and Casale noticed first-year engineering students oftenidentify themselves as one particular type of engineer, for example “I’m an Electrical Engineer,”without understanding the multidisciplinary nature of both engineering and engineering projects[3]. The authors suggest that students
knowledge needed” is a common reason for engineeringprojects' failure in Low- and Middle-Income Countries (LMICs). Our prior work has investigatedwhich contextual factors engineering designers consider and how they incorporate contextualfactors into their global health design processes. In this study, we extended this prior research tocompare the design behavior of student and professional global health engineering designers. Aspart of this research, we conducted semi-structured interviews with fifteen experienced designengineers who work on health-related technologies in LMICs. We also conducted semi-structured interviews and reviewed final reports from six mechanical engineering capstone teamsworking on global health-themed projects. While
and Monitor Temperatures and Atmospheric Air ParametersAbstract The optimization and performance of many systems require data collection for thetemperature variation of solids, liquids, and air parameters that vary from one location toanother. For example, monitoring the performance of an Atmospheric Water Generator Devicethat utilizes geothermal heat rejection to condense vapor in the humid air. This device requiresair parameters, water temperatures, and soil temperature variation to be measured to understandthe system. This paper presents a capstone project that involved the design and implementationof an inexpensive data acquisition system that utilizes off-the-shelf components. Twelveparameters are collected
changes to anarchitectural engineering program in the Midwest. Responses were collected across 52 closedand eight open-ended items to gain an industry perspective on the relative importance of coursetopics in the curriculum, the selection of Architectural Engineering (AE) degree concentrationoptions, the format of graduate degree capstone projects, and the factors that AE&C employersconsider when hiring graduates and experienced employees. The curriculum changes inspired bythis survey are presented together alongside the program’s previous AE curriculum to morethoroughly characterize the program attributes that are desired by the AE&C industry.IntroductionThe Architectural Engineering (AE) program considered in this study is at the
. The purpose of this collaboration is the development anddissemination of tailored low carbon footprint water treatment plants to further global access tosafe drinking water using gravity-powered technology. The AguaClara Reach partnershipleverages projects across undergraduate research, courses, and capstone. With futureopportunities that will pair with community engaged learning courses providing multipleavenues of engagement across the collaboration.Establishing the Humanitarian Engineering LabNeed and IdeationOver the last twenty years, the Engineering for Sustainable Development field has been growingacross the academic domain. Many universities are offering programming and courses in thespace. Establishing labs and programs to prepare
Paper ID #39229Engagement in Practice: Better Preparing Students for Community-EngagedEngineering by Restructuring an Academic Program, Minor, and Curricu-lumDr. Kristen M. Conroy, The Ohio State University Dr. Kristen Conroy has a PhD in Biological Engineering from Ohio State University. Her main area of fo- cus is sanitation. She has worked with partner organization, UNiTED, to teach courses where engineering students focus on collaborative projects in Kpando, Ghana. She also teaches the Food, Agricultural and Biological Engineering Capstone, Energy in Biological Systems, and the Introduction to Humanitarian Engineering
Applications, Business Operations, and Theatre Arts, among others.Students will take courses in this area of interest and apply an engineering mindset to develop ahybrid set of skills and experiences, followed by a semester-long senior thesis project. The BS inEngineering is designed to be ABET accreditable and will provide students with a strongtechnical engineering background through upper-level courses taken the junior and senior yearand a yearlong capstone engineering project.All students also complete the broad college core distribution requirements, maintaining theliberal arts standards of the college. Both programs will be completed within the 130-credit capfor the college. These programs specifically draw on the strengths of the college to
Paper ID #36578Entrepreneurial Mindset (EM) in Undergraduate Vibration ClassDr. Chau M. Tran, Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, North Carolina State University Chau Tran is an Associate Teaching Professor in the Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering department at NC State University. He is currently the course coordinator for capstone senior design and previously was the course coordinator for Vibration, the director for undergraduate advising and the director for undergraduate laboratory. He teaches senior design and Vibration annually. He received his Ph.D. in Mechanical Engineering from NC State University in 1998
materials to prototype the mechanical components of UAVs by 3D printers, and(e) create G and M codes to manufacture the parts by CNC machines if metal parts are desirablesuch as linkage and landing components.This paper explains samples of mini projects that are developed to prepare students toaccomplish the above tasks (a-e) and their ability for entry into manufacturing careers. Inaddition, the mini projects in newly developed modules and sequences will also prepare studentsfor senior capstone projects and internships.MethodologyThe initial designs of mechanical/structural components of two UAVs/drones start in ENGT 105:Computer-Aided Design (CAD) I, course, and will be completed in a Senior Capstone Project,ENGT 498, course. Two quadcopter drone