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Displaying results 1531 - 1560 of 1874 in total
Conference Session
ERM Technical Session 15: Perspectives on Engineering Careers and Workplaces
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Gretchen A. Dietz, University of Florida; Elliot P. Douglas, University of Florida; Erica D. McCray, University of Florida
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Educational Research and Methods
. was formed in conjunction with thecreation of the nation as a social project. Critical race theorists identify that race is indicative ofnot just the creation, but its continuation each day [14]. Although we are using two frameworksto look at individual and structural racism from a critical perspective, we recognize that theseframeworks are not part of critical race theory.Engineering Education and Critical Race StudiesEngineering education research focuses on guiding the future engineering practice towardsimproved quality and diversity. Some engineering education researchers investigate the field’spersistent racial homogeneity [4]. There is constant talk about the need for diversity, and effortsare made through “minority in engineering
Conference Session
Mechanics Division Technical Session 4
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Eric Davishahl, Whatcom Community College; Todd R. Haskell, Western Washington University; Jill Davishahl, Western Washington University; Lee Singleton, Whatcom Community College; Wade H. Goodridge, Utah State University
Tagged Divisions
Mechanics
University Todd Haskell is a cognitive scientist interested in learning and the development of expertise, especially in STEM fields. He is currently Associate Professor of Psychology at Western Washington University. In previous projects Dr. Haskell has worked on understanding how chemistry novices and experts navi- gate between macroscopic, symbolic, and small particle representations, and how pre-service elementary teachers translate an understanding of energy concepts from physics to other disciplines.Ms. Jill Davishahl, Western Washington University Jill Davishahl is the Director of Pre-Engineering Program Development and faculty member at West- ern Washington University. She spends her time teaching, developing and
Conference Session
Transfer and Transitions
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Elizabeth Schott, Florida SouthWestern State College; Cynthia Orndoff, Florida Gulf Coast University
Tagged Divisions
Two-Year College
projection, 16% of the top 25 are engineering [2]. Of the total occupationsrequiring a bachelor's degree, 13% are in engineering [2]. Those employed with a bachelor'sdegree in engineering comprise 23% of the top one-half of the median average and 13% of thetop quarter median wage earners [2]. Thus, engineering is one of the highest paying and in-demand professions for students graduating with a bachelor's degree.There are "two viable pathways to the baccalaureate degree [which] have developed in the pastone hundred years - a direct entry route where a student begins and ends at a four-yearinstitution, and a transfer route" [1]. The transfer route is usually accomplished by the studentattending a smaller institution, whether two years or four years
Conference Session
Computing Research I
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Mohsen Taheri, Florida International University; Monique S. Ross, Florida International University; Zahra Hazari, Florida International University; Mark A Weiss, Florida International University; Michael Georgiopoulos, University of Central Florida; Ken Christensen P.E., University of South Florida; Tiana Solis, Florida International University; Deepa Chari, Florida International University; Zahra Taheri
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Computing and Information Technology
Computing Identity and Persistence Across Multiple Groups Using Structural Equation ModelingAbstractDespite the projected growth of computer and information technology occupations, manycomputing students fail to graduate. Studying students’ self-beliefs is one way to understandpersistence in a school setting. This paper explores how students' disciplinary identity sub-constructs including competence/performance, recognition, interest, and sense of belongingcontribute to academic persistence. A survey of 1,640 students as part of an NSF grant wasconducted at three South Florida metropolitan public universities. A quantitative analysis wasperformed which included a structural equation model (SEM) and a multigroup SEM. The
Conference Session
Engineering Ethics Division Technical Session - Ethics in the First Year
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Gunter Bombaerts; Karolina Doulougeri, Eindhoven University of Technology
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Ethics
History and Ethics of Technology).Dr. Karolina Doulougeri, Eindhoven University of Technology Dr. Karolina Doulougeri is a post-doctoral research fellow in the Technological University of Eindhoven. Her research focuses on engineering students’ motivation and deep learning strategies, coaching in design based learning and educational redesign of engineering courses. She received her PhD in Organizational Psychology from the University of Macedonia, in Greece. She has worked in several international research projects focusing on students and employees’ well- being, professional development and performance. Her work has been published in peer reviewed journals and presented in several international conferences
Conference Session
Experimentation and Laboratory-Oriented Studies Division Technical Session 2
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Sarah J. Christian, Carnegie Mellon University; Chad Hershock, Carnegie Mellon University; Michael Cameron Melville, Carnegie Mellon University
Tagged Divisions
Experimentation and Laboratory-Oriented Studies
University’s Eberly Center for Teaching Excellence and Educational Innovation, where he consults with faculty, graduate students, and post-docs to design, implement, and assess research projects that relate to teaching and learning in their classrooms. He also contributes to a variety of program-level assessment projects on the CMU campus. Mike’s training includes an M.A. and Ph.D. in Social Psychology from the University of New Hampshire, as well as an M.Ed. in sport and performance psychology from Springfield College. His interests include the science of learning, research methodology, and data analysis. Prior to joining the Eberly Center in 2017, Mike worked as the Teaching and Learning Research Coordinator at the Center
Conference Session
Aligning Graduate Programs with Industrial Needs
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Teresa J. Didiano, University of Toronto; Lydia Wilkinson, University of Toronto; Jonathan Turner, University of Toronto; Mark Franklin, University of Toronto & OneLifeTools; Jason H. Anderson, University of Toronto; Markus Bussmann, University of Toronto; Doug Reeve P.Eng., University of Toronto; Julie Audet P.Eng., University of Toronto
Tagged Divisions
Graduate Studies
improvements and our desire to capture information we heard in conversations withparticipants. The evaluation was approved by the Research Ethics Board at the University ofToronto as a quality improvement project. Findings presented in this paper were not gainedthrough research but rather a quality improvement project for The OPTIONS Program.The pre-evaluation included demographic and information gathering questions (e.g., degree-related work experience, extra-curricular/professional development activities). We do not presentsuch data in this paper. The post-evaluation had four open-ended questions including: “What didyou like about the program” and “What did you not like about the program?”. The post-evaluation also assessed the usefulness of
Conference Session
Improved Pathways to Graduate Studies
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Jacques C. Richard, Texas A&M University; So Yoon Yoon, Texas A&M University; Maria Claudia Alves , Texas A&M University; Vikram K. Kinra, Texas A&M University
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Graduate Studies
, and educational psychology, as well as a co-PI, an external evaluator or advisory board member on several NSF-funded projects (CA- REER, iCorps, REU, RIEF, etc.).Dr. Maria Claudia Alves , Texas A&M University Maria Claudia Alves Director for the Halliburton Engineering Global Programs at Texas A&M University Ms. Maria C. Alves is the Director for the Halliburton Engineering Global Programs at Texas A&M University . She has been in this position since July 2012. In this position she is responsible for inter- nationalizing the research and education activities of the College of Engineering. Under her leadership the college has significantly increased the number of students studying abroad, established new
Conference Session
FOCUS ON EXHIBITS: Welcome Reception & NEW THIS YEAR! 2018 Best Division Paper Nominee Poster Session Sponsored by Engineering Unleashed
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Nicole L Ramo, University of Michigan
Tagged Topics
ASEE Headquarters
st 1 year 64% 61% 85 + 42 = 127 2nd year 23% 25% 31 + 17 = 48 rd 3 year 8% 9% 10 + 6 = 16 4th year 5% 5% 7 + 4 = 11 During the first week of the semester, students self-enrolled in teams of 6 or 7 for an out-of-class design project using the self-sign-up group feature of Canvas (Instructure, Salt Lake CityUT); these same teams were also used for all in-class learning activities. Class periods devoted toactive learning where indicated as such on the course syllabus and schedule. On these scheduled
Conference Session
Curriculum and Assessment II
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Xiannong Meng, Bucknell University; Jianming Deng, Jinling Institute of Technology and Southeast University
Tagged Divisions
Computing and Information Technology
total number of hours is not specified by the school. Some schoolsdesignate some commonly recognized math courses as computer science courses, i.e., givingthem computer science course numbers. We took the liberty to move such courses to the mathcourse category. Examples include discrete math, probability and statistics, and modern algebra.In addition, some schools list the lab or project portion of the course separately from the course,while others do not. The hours listed in the table below follow whatever the schools listed. Itcould be slightly misleading in some cases, depending on whether or not the lab or projectportion of the courses is listed separately. Table 1 shows the four pieces of data from the eightschools. The credit hours as
Conference Session
Materials Division Technical Session 2
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Lessa Grunenfelder, University of Southern California
Tagged Divisions
Materials
component of thecourse. No negative comments were made about the labs. While the theory has not been tested, itis possible that the terminology choice of “Labs” for class activities labs was beneficial, asengineering students are familiar with a lab setting and respect labs as a valuable component ofthe discipline. This can be contrasted with connotations that may exist for words like “activities”or “group projects,” which may engender student resistance.Most negative comments related to the online system used for textbook readings and homework,an issue encountered in previous studies in which the same system has been implemented [8].While it has flaws, the WileyPLUS system enabled access to all course materials from onelocation (the Blackboard
Conference Session
Engineering Ethics Division Technical Session - Ethics Across Contexts
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Gokhan Egilmez, University of New Haven; Phillip A. Viscomi, University of New Haven ; Maria-Isabel Carnasciali, University of New Haven
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Ethics
since the engineering workforceembodies multi-disciplinary, multi-national project and multi-culturally diverse teams. Today, most of theproducts and services that affect our lives arise from sophisticated processes utilizing engineering design,complex problem solving, and teamwork. In this context, engineers make, or are involved in, manydecision-making situations where effective engineering ethics education is essential in the direct and ripple-effects of their decision process. According to a recent study, more than half of the colleges (59%) in theU.S. where engineering is taught were found to have adopted educational goals related to ethical reasoning[6].In terms of ethical development, which is the total process of teaching the knowledge
Conference Session
High-Impact Teaching and Learning
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Simon Thomas Ghanat P.E., The Citadel; James Kaklamanos, Merrimack College; Tanya Kunberger P.E., Florida Gulf Coast University; Corrie Walton-Macaulay Ph.D., P.E., Saint Martin's University; Suresh Immanuel P.E., University of Evansville; David A. Saftner, University of Minnesota Duluth; Brock E. Barry P.E., U.S. Military Academy; Shawn Griffiths, University of Wyoming; Craig M. Shillaber, Northeastern University; Chris Swan, Tufts University
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
project manager on projects through- out the United States. He is a licensed professional engineer in multiple states. Dr. Barry’s areas of research include assessment of professional ethics, teaching and learning in engineering education, non- verbal communication in the classroom, and learning through historical engineering accomplishments. He has authored and co-authored a significant number of journal articles and book chapters on these topics.Shawn Griffiths, University of Wyoming Shawn Griffiths is an Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering at the University of Wyoming. Shawn holds a B.S. in Civil Engineering from Utah State University (2009), M.S. in Civil Engineering from the University of Arkansas (2011) and
Conference Session
NSF Grantees Poster Session
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Vivek Sivaraman Narayanaswamy, Arizona State University; Uday Shankar Shanthamallu; Abhinav Dixit, ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY; Sunil Rao; Raja Ayyanar, Arizona State University; Cihan Tepedelenlioglu, Arizona State University; Andreas S Spanias, Arizona State University; Mahesh K Banavar, Clarkson University; Sameeksha Katoch; Emma Pedersen; Photini Spanias; Pavan Turaga; Farib Khondoker, SenSIP Center - Arizona State University
Tagged Topics
NSF Grantees Poster Session
unsupervised methods for ML is the k-means clustering. It has extensiveapplications in IoT systems [24], and more recently solar analytics [3]. The introduction of k-meansin education, using our award-winning J-DSP was described in [11,16]. In this paper, we discuss howk-means is introduced in our classes in the context of solar energy monitoring and control. We have used the k-means algorithm as part of our Cyber Physical systems project [6] and havedescribed a method to detect and characterize solar array faults [4,5,17]. In this education project, weform a J-DSP simulation of k-means for fault detection to present to class for the purpose of showinghow ML is used in solar energy systems. The results obtained using k-means is shown in Fig. 7
Conference Session
Engineering Design for Elementary Students
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Karen Miel, Tufts University; Merredith D. Portsmore, Tufts University; Emily Fuller, Tufts University; Kelli Paul, Indiana University; Euisuk Sung, Indiana University; Adam V. Maltese, Indiana University
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Pre-College Engineering Education
year graduate student at Tufts University’s Eliot Pearson Department of Child Study and Human Development. She received a bachelor’s degree in child development from Texas Christian University. She currently works as a research assistant on the Role Models in Elementary Engineering project, which studies how elementary school students develop engineering role models and assume identities as engineers.Dr. Kelli Paul, Indiana University Dr. Kelli Paul is a postdoctoral researcher in science education at Indiana University. She received her Ph.D. in Educational Psychology specializing in Inquiry Methodology from Indiana University in 2006. She managed a consulting business for 10 years working on evaluations that
Conference Session
ASEE TUESDAY PLENARY FEATURING BEST PAPERS & INDUSTRY DAY SPEAKER Sponsored by University of South Florida & University of Maryland
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Abisola Coretta Kusimo, Stanford University ; Marissa Elena Thompson, Stanford University ; Sara A. Atwood, Elizabethtown College; Sheri Sheppard, Stanford University
Tagged Topics
ASEE Board of Directors, Corporate Member Council
mastery experiences.Fourth, the mitigation of negative interpretations of somatic and emotional states during the taskcan help develop self-efficacy. Physical and psychological experiences such as increased heartrate and rapid breathing before a presentation, or tiredness of muscles after exercise, can eitherbe interpreted as a positive performance-enhancer or as something to be avoided. Reframingnegative interpretations of these states can build self-efficacy directly and encourage moremastery experiences.Contextual examples of each of Bandura’s four sources of self-efficacy in undergraduateengineering education: first, mastery experiences could consist of completing practice problemsto master theory, engaging in project work and hands-on
Conference Session
Engineering Design for Elementary Students
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
John C. Oliva, Corteva Agriscience; Diane Spence
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Pre-College Engineering Education
related careers was more complete andaccurate.In-Class Presentation OverviewThe “4th Grade Engineering” sessions that are the subject of the paper at hand comprised just asingle class period each year lasting approximately 1.5 to 2.0 hours. This is significantly lessambitious than the outreach programs that other authors have documented which extend to six oreven eight sessions spread out over the course of an academic year [11], [12], [13]. At this point,this pilot project is in its fourth year, and the “4th Grade Engineering” classroom activity has beenrepeated 10 times for a total of approximately 150 to 160 students.Introduction to EngineeringTo directly address the already noted identity issue that engineering suffers from, the “4 th
Conference Session
Technical Session 1: Issues Impacting Students Learning How to Program
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
J.w. Bruce, Tennessee Technological University; Bryan A. Jones, Mississippi State University; Mahnas Jean Mohammadi-Aragh, Mississippi State University
Tagged Divisions
Computers in Education
premise behind LP is that you do not document aprogram. Instead, LP has you write a document that contains a program [6].Using LP, educators can provide their students with an executable text – high-quality prose withdetailed explanations, figures, diagrams, hyperlinks, etc. Simultaneously, students can read,learn, compile, execute, and explore ideas. Knuth’s LP paradigm is also consistent with cognitiveload theory [12], which states that keeping related concepts close, temporally or spatially, canimprove the ability of students to grasp difficult ideas [13][14]. ----------------------------------------------------------------------- -- Title: Parallel to Serial Converter (PAR2SER) -- Project: ASEE 2019
Conference Session
ERM Technical Session 12: Creativity and Problem Framing
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Lindsey D White, University of New Mexico; Vanessa Svihla, University of New Mexico; Yan Chen, University of New Mexico; Todd Hynson, University of New Mexico; Ian A. Drackert, University of New Mexico; Jordan Orion James, University of New Mexico; Claire Yvonne Saul; Austin C. Megli, University of New Mexico
Tagged Divisions
Educational Research and Methods
. Prior to beginning her PhD, she worked for almost 7 years at Stanford University as a Certified Athletic Trainer.Dr. Vanessa Svihla, University of New Mexico Dr. Vanessa Svihla is a learning scientist and associate professor at the University of New Mexico in the Organization, Information & Learning Sciences program and in the Chemical & Biological Engineering Department. She served as Co-PI on an NSF RET Grant and a USDA NIFA grant, and is currently co-PI on three NSF-funded projects in engineering and computer science education, including a Revolutionizing Engineering Departments project. She was selected as a National Academy of Education / Spencer Post- doctoral Fellow and a 2018 NSF CAREER awardee in
Conference Session
ERM Technical Session 21: Student Grades and Feedback
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Hassan Ali Al Yagoub, Purdue University-Main Campus, West Lafayette (College of Engineering); Hossein EbrahimNejad, Purdue University-Main Campus, West Lafayette (College of Engineering); Matthew W. Ohland, Purdue University-Main Campus, West Lafayette (College of Engineering)
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Educational Research and Methods
semester GPA and their cumulative graduating GPA. Theuse of grades and GPA as a proxy for academic success have been used widely in a large numberof studies, and this study focuses on documenting how students’ grades fluctuate with time andthe role this play in students’ persistence. We apply Ordinary Least Squares and Ordinal Logisticregressions to a longitudinal database to identify the characteristics of that population. Thispopulation is a subset of the database and included 52,946 engineering students from 14 U.S.universities. In the United States there has been an urge to improve the number of engineeringgraduates in preparedness and numbers for over a decade [1] [2] [3]. Furthermore, the Bureau ofLabor statistics projected increase
Conference Session
Biomedical Division Postcard Session
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
William H Guilford, University of Virginia; Meg Keeley M.D.; Brian P. Helmke, University of Virginia; Timothy E. Allen, University of Virginia
Tagged Divisions
Biomedical Engineering
choose one of their own identified problemsfor their Capstone project, and to identify clinician collaborators for every problem they report.We will also be requiring Scholars to more closely with the BME faculty in crafting case studies,and will enact measures to ensure timely completion of deliverables. We are still consideringwhether any training is needed for the medical student mentors.Literature cited[1] J. Ackerman and R. Schaar, “Clinical Observational Design Experience: A Large Design Oriented Clinical Immersion Course Based In Emergency Departments,” VentureWell, 2016.[2] S. Sood, M. Short, R. Hirsh, J. Kadlowec, and T. Merrill, “Biodesign through Clinical Immersion,” 2015. [Online]. Available: http://venturewell.org/open/wp
Conference Session
Student Division Technical Session 2
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Hao Li, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Anette Hosoi, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Tagged Divisions
Student
, and your supervisor has given you the following project: A horizontal cantilevered beam is used to support traffic lights as shown. For the horizontal part of the beam, several designs are possible: 1. Circular cross-section with radius 5cm at the fixed end (where it’s attached to the vertical pole) tapering to a circular cross section with radius 10cm at the free end 2. Circular cross-section with radius 10cm at the fixed end tapering to a circular cross section with radius 5cm at the free end 3. Circular cross section with radius 7.5cm throughout the beam 4. A different design You will need to find the best design and justify it with reasoning. Figure 1: Problem used for this
Conference Session
ERM Technical Session
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Katherine Goodman, University of Colorado, Denver; Jean Hertzberg, University of Colorado, Boulder
Tagged Divisions
Educational Research and Methods
Engineering at CU-Boulder. She teaches graduate and undergraduate courses in measurement techniques, thermodynamics, fluid mechanics, heat transfer, design and computer tools. She has pioneered a spectacular course on the art and physics of flow visualization, and is conducting research on the impact of the course with respect to visual perception and educational outcomes. Her disciplinary research centers around pulsatile, vortex dominated flows with applications in both combustion and bio-fluid dynamics. She is also interested in a variety of flow field measurement techniques. Current projects include velocity and vorticity in human cardiac ventricles and large vessels. c American Society
Conference Session
ERM Technical Session 2: The Study of Identity in Engineering Education
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Caroline Bolton, Bucknell University; Kaela M. Martin, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University; Elif Miskioglu, Bucknell University
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Educational Research and Methods
Professor of Chemical Engineering at Bucknell University. She graduated from Ohio State University in 2015 with a PhD in Chemical Engineering, and is interested in student learning in engineering. In particular, her work focuses on various aspects of students’ develop- ment from novice to expert, including development of engineering intuition, as well as critical thinking, problem-solving, and communication skills. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2019 WIP: Using Critical Incident Technique to Illuminate the Relationship between Engineering Identity and Academic MotivationIntroduction This work in progress research paper presents preliminary work on a project
Conference Session
M3C: Mentoring into the profession
Collection
2019 FYEE Conference
Authors
Whitney Gaskins, University of Cincinnati; Dewey Burnell Clark Jr
Tagged Topics
Diversity, FYEE Conference - Paper Submission
, international experiences, community engagement, etc.Progress Reports: Progress reports help students monitor their academic performance throughoutthe semester. Each student is required to fill out 2 progress reports per semester for each course.A secondary goal of each progress report is for improved faculty-student interaction.Community Engagement: Each student is required to perform 15 hours of volunteer K-12approved outreach service and document the experience. For an experience to be approvedstudents must complete their hours with a program that has a focus on STEMM. Documentationis submitted in the E-portfolio.Program Coaching: Students will arrange to meet the degree program academic advisor and anassigned project team member (program coaches
Conference Session
M1A: WIP - Learning experiences 1
Collection
2019 FYEE Conference
Authors
Olukemi Akintewe, University of South Florida; Jonathan Elliot Gaines, University of South Florida; Schinnel Kylan Small, University of South Florida
Tagged Topics
FYEE Conference - Paper Submission
design classroomAbstractThe effectiveness of a learner-centered pedagogical model called “Flip-J” is evaluated in thiswork-in-progress paper. First-year engineering students participated in a project-basedengineering design process curriculum with a service-learning component. Students wereassigned weekly reading materials to be discussed in-class using a four stage Flip-J process. Thestages were: 1) individual reading assignments outside of classroom; 2) in-class formation ofcollaborative expert groups; 3) in-class formation of cooperative Jigsaw groups and 4) in-classreflection exercises. More than 80% of the students indicated a productive experience from thecooperative learning strategy used. Students’ feedback also included recommendations
Conference Session
M3A: Learning in Context 1
Collection
2019 FYEE Conference
Authors
Aysa Galbraith, University of Arkansas; Heath Aren Schluterman, University of Arkansas; Leslie Bartsch Massey, University of Arkansas; Brandon Crisel
Tagged Topics
FYEE Conference - Paper Submission
-Math. At the end of each semester, students are asked to completean end-of-semester survey as their last assignment, which counts toward their grade. As a part ofthis survey, students rate certain aspects of the projects and course using a 5-point Likert scaleand are allowed to leave additional comments and suggestions for improvement. We analyzedthe end-of-semester survey results for the following five questions: The assignments associated with this course: 1) improved my engineering problem-solving skills. 2) improved my ability to communicate solutions to engineering problems. 3) provided me with a meaningful experience working on a diverse team. 4) helped me appreciate the multi-disciplinary nature of engineering. 5
Conference Session
M3C: Mentoring into the profession
Collection
2019 FYEE Conference
Authors
Roger J Marino P.E., Drexel University; Rosie Sullivan, Drexel University (Eng. & Eng. Tech.); Dionne Gordon-Starks, College of Engineering, Drexel University
Tagged Topics
FYEE Conference - Paper Submission
attend an event on campusand write about their experience at the event. The reflection paper included the requirement toelucidate how attending the event may help the student to build their network at the University.In addition to this assignment, course instructors were focused on building in additional groupactivities and in-class assignments that encouraged students to share ideas with peers, thusbuilding their in-class peer network. A final group project was replaced with a final reflectionpaper.undeclared studentsThe greatest adjustment to the delivery of this course was the increased focus on supportingUndeclared Engineering students. During AY 1718 Undeclared Engineering students wereintegrated into sections that were major-specific. The
Collection
2018 Gulf Southwest Section Conference
Authors
Maura Borrego; Anita Patrick; Luis Martins; Meagan Kendall
, Catherine Riegle-Crumb, and Carolyn robustness of test statistics to nonnormality andSeepersad for their partnership on this project as well as the specification error in confirmatory factor analysis’,student participants, instructors, department chairs and Psychological methods, 1996, 1, (1), pp. 16other department liaisons for assisting with data collection. 9 Gliem, J.A., and Gliem, R.R.: ‘Calculating, interpreting, and reporting Cronbach’s alpha reliability coefficient for Likert-type scales’, in Editor (Ed.)^(Eds.): References
Collection
2018 Gulf Southwest Section Conference
Authors
Stephany Coffman-Wolph; Kimberlyn Gray; Marcia Pool
existing course material and in-class activi- field and becoming a successful practitioner [1]. Below, theties. The research project will use two-sections of the same authors describe the activities which will be used in thecourse taught during the same semester with approximately course to integrate problem-solving into the curriculum200 students in each section. Nine hands-on activities, while teaching the programming course concepts requiredeach covering a fundamental programming concept, were for an introductory computer science class. The course iscreated to explain these concepts to students with a visual, taught with a high-level of active learning as is shown inreal-world component. Both sections will cover