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Conference Session
Preparing Engineers for the Global Workplace
Collection
2007 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Bernd Widdig, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Jack Lohmann, Georgia Institute of Technology
Tagged Divisions
International
entmobi li tyt o spend time abroad during their undergraduate career. The mostcommon programs involve study, internships, or research experiences abroad. Most are shortterm (e.g., a summer, one semester) but occasionally may be longer (e.g., a year or multiplestays). He rewef oundt hatMI T’sI nte rna tiona lSc ienc eandTe chno logyI nit
Conference Session
Innovative Mechanics Education Programs and Projects
Collection
2007 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
William Howard, East Carolina University; Rick Williams, East Carolina University
Tagged Divisions
Mechanics
software was used along with a low-cost rapidprototyping system in a project in which high school students attempted to optimize the design ofa component subjected to well-defined loading and constraints.This project was conducted as part of Summer Ventures, a program in which talented highschool students from across North Carolina explore math and science-related careers at severalUniversity of North Carolina System campuses. This was the initial offering of engineering asan option for the students. Students selected three areas of participation. For three weeks, theyspent two hours per day in each of the selected areas. During the fourth and final week, theychose one of their three areas for more in-depth study.During the engineering portion of
Conference Session
Recruiting, Retention and Diversity in Engineering Technology
Collection
2007 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Tim Brower, Oregon Institute of Technology; Richard Grimsley, Project Lead The Way; Pam Newberry, Project Lead The Way
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Technology
decisions regarding thedirection and limitations of their chosen careers, technological developments, andthe use of technology to alter their own lives, and other major financial,professional, and personal questions that they will undoubtedly face. These skillscannot be taught as discrete topics. Rather, students need to learn them throughhigh quality, challenging lessons based on real world-problems that areunbounded by separate school subjects and unbounded by the silos that exist inour secondary educational system.One of the implementation steps recommended by the National Academies toincrease America’s talent pool is to utilize “K-12 curriculum materials modeledon a world-class standard: [this would] foster high-quality teaching with world
Conference Session
Emerging Trends in Engineering Education Poster Session
Collection
2007 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Bradley Kramer, Kansas State University; Todd Easton, Kansas State University
courses in their graduate program. Inaddition, these students know the department faculty and their research and so selecting anappropriate advisor is accomplished early. Faculty members also know the brightest students intheir courses and can actively recruit them into their research groups. It is important to note that Page 12.397.3this recruitment can occur early during the student’s academic career, which allows substantiallymore time for research than a traditional master’s degree student. In addition, a recruiteddomestic student can be paid far less than the $20,000+ required to support a foreign graduatestudent on a graduate assistantship
Conference Session
Engineering Ethics III
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Jason Borenstein, Georgia Tech; Matthew Drake, Duquesne University; Robert Kirkman, Georgia Institute of Technology; Julie Swann, Georgia Tech
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Ethics
likely bring the engineer into a potential conflict of interest. Yet students sometimeshave trouble seeing this as an ethical matter at all, casting as a matter of mere personalpreference. In this light, ethics education can be seen as an effort to give students’ eyes somepractice, as it were. Case studies and other materials can serve to demonstrate, for example, howaccepting what seems to be an innocent gift may lead to further temptations, which then lead inturn to a career-ending conflict of interest. The idea of ethical sensitivity overlaps with some aspects of the idea of moralimagination, as developed by Mark Johnson, Patricia Werhane, and others.[5-7] One aspect ofmoral imagination concerns the ways in which people use conceptual
Conference Session
Assessment of Engineering Technology Programs
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Albert Lozano, Pennsylvania State University - Wilkes-Barre
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Technology
the students seemed to appreciate the effect of thearticle reviews in increasing their technical knowledge. The questions with the higher marks(Question 7: Reviews were a bridge to real life engineering and Question 2: Helped realized thatalthough I do not master all the details, I have a good knowledge) clearly indicate this perception bythe students surveyed. It is interesting to note how although students will not re-read these articles Page 13.1413.5in the near future they still consider them as a valid tool for their professional career as they plan tokeep them as a resource once they graduate.b) Content of the articles. The
Conference Session
FPD8 - Early Intervention & Retention
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Gretchen Hein, Michigan Technological University; Amber Kemppainen, Michigan Technological University
Tagged Divisions
First-Year Programs
students enrolled in Pre-Calculus with anengineering course. The topics covered in the course were coordinated with the topics beingcovered in Pre-Calculus. For example, students apply the concepts learned regarding linear,power and exponential equations in pre-calculus to engineering applications in ENG1001. Thestudents enrolled in the course elected to participate in the program. Most of these students werepart of the Michigan Tech ExSEL program. ExSEL is a program that promotes students successthrough academic support services such as peer mentoring, study groups, study skills and timemanagement techniques, academic progress monitoring, campus resource referrals, campus andcommunity involvement events, and career and personal development
Conference Session
Graduate Student Experiences
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Rajesh Bachu, University of Bridgeport; Deepak S. Deepawale, University of Bridgeport; Buket Barkana, University of Bridgeport; Lawrence Hmurcik, University of Bridgeport
Tagged Divisions
Graduate Studies
the country. Enrollment hastripled over the last few years (currently, a total of 470 students). UB hosts the largest Page 13.176.5Technology Management Program in the nation (over 300 students).The University of Bridgeport has partnered with CPEP (Connecticut Pre-EngineeringProgram) for many years. Most recently, UB has offered 50 scholarships, at a total of$2.4 million, to qualified CPEP students. CPEP is a non-profit organization that helpsminority middle and high school students pursue careers in the science, technology,engineering and math.Most of our new students do not expect to have financial aid and campus jobs for theirfirst semester
Conference Session
Reaching Students: Innovations to Curriculum in ET
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
David Myszka, University of Dayton
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Technology
Page 13.168.2implementation these systems.Traditionally, product and manufacturing system design has been a common career area formechanical engineering and engineering technology graduates. To follow suit with the growinguse of sensors in these systems, mechanical programs have been strengthening their facilities andcurriculum related to instrumentation[3, 11, 12]. Topics covered in mechanical measurements hasbeen expanding to incorporate more digital data acquisition and electronic instrumentationtopics[5, 10, 16]. With this growth of industry usage, these courses are even being introduced ontogeneral engineering programs[8].Inspired by accreditation changes beginning in 2000, a large amount of research and dialog hascirculated regarding
Conference Session
DEED Poster Session
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Don Dekker, University of South Florida; Stephen Sundarrao, University of South Florida; Rajiv Dubey, University of South Florida
Tagged Divisions
Design in Engineering Education
students are skillful with another CAD program, they may take theproficiency exam using another program.Lectures:There are really three kinds of lectures and activities that occur during the semester. Sometimesthe entire class meets during the lecture period. Most of these periods have a guest lecturer, sothe entire class meets together. The schedule of these lectures is shown below. Week Topic 1 Tuesday Introduction, Course Outline, & Creativity, Course Instructor 1 Thursday Design Synthesis and Design Methodology, Course Instructor 2 Tuesday Product Evolution, Course Instructor 2 Thursday Career Center, Ms Dianne Russell 12 Tuesday Professionalism, Tampa Brass &
Conference Session
Civil Engineering Teaching Part One
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Jakob Bruhl; Eric Crispino
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
technical communication University at Buffalo Union College University of California at Irvine Iowa State University Cooper Union University of Tennessee University of Wisconsin at Madison The University of Notre Dame Page 13.1295.8Appendix B: Details of the Technical Writing Development Program Assignments Pages Pages from of Theme Reference Reading Section Titles1 Do I Really Have To? 4-7 (Beer) 3 “A Successful Engineering Career Requires Strong Writing Skills
Conference Session
Multidisciplinary Capstone Design Projects
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Charles Dolan, University of Wyoming; Ovid Plumb, University of Wyoming
Tagged Divisions
Multidisciplinary Engineering
resolved and met with the field Page 13.786.5engineers charged with the development.Class OrganizationEach class is organized to simulate a design office. Students are interviewed to determine theirtechnical and career interests and their desire to be a manager or development engineer. Timecommitments of each assignment are discussed, a class organization chart is developed, andcontact information assembled. The contact information becomes critical with theinterdisciplinary team because students often do not know their classmates from different majors.Class objectives are developed in the first two weeks. These include the global expectations
Conference Session
Student Recruitment and Retention
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Lisa Bullard, North Carolina State University; Richard Felder, North Carolina State University; Dianne Raubenheimer, North Carolina State University
Tagged Divisions
Educational Research and Methods
engineering curricula.Many students who matriculate in engineering do so because of the promise of high startingsalaries or family pressures or simply having done well in high school science and math, and notbecause of a particular interest in or aptitude for engineering. Not everyone would be happy in anengineering career, and the best thing that could happen to some students is to drop out ofengineering and switch to a curriculum that would lead to more enjoyable and fulfilling careers.The goal for the first engineering course should be to provide a realistic and well-taughtintroduction to the discipline, so that all students with the ability and interest needed to do wellas engineers have an experience that motivates them to remain in engineering
Conference Session
Modern Software Measurement Techniques
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Dale Litwhiler, Pennsylvania State University-Berks
Tagged Divisions
Instrumentation
AC 2008-522: WIND TUNNEL EVALUATION AND CALIBRATION OF MODELROCKET NOSECONE PITOT-STATIC PROBESDale Litwhiler, Pennsylvania State University-Berks Dale H. Litwhiler is an Assistant Professor at Penn State Berks-Lehigh Valley College in Reading, PA. He received his B.S. from Penn State University (1984), his M.S. from Syracuse University (1989) and his Ph.D. from Lehigh University (2000) all in electrical engineering. Prior to beginning his academic career in 2002, he worked with IBM Federal Systems and Lockheed Martin Commercial Space Systems as a hardware and software design engineer. Page
Conference Session
Industry Collaborations in Engineering Technology
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Frank Bartonek, Cessna Aircraft Company; Bruce Dallman, Pittsburg State University; James Lookadoo, Pittsburg State University
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Technology
started their careers with the space agency inthis laboratory group. From an inside perspective, it was easy to track their pastfootprints on the group’s communications effort. One of the alumni has completed adoctorate in electrical engineering and an MBA degree. He was serving as acommunications theoretical consultant for the group. The second alumnus is in processof finishing an MSEE degree while he was leading the advanced Field ProgrammableLogic Array programming. Both had key roles and together represented about tenpercent of the human capital in the CSTL enterprise. Putting a dollar amount on the totalalumni impact is somewhat imprecise. TDRSS is approximately a two billion dollarinvestment. The bulk of that is contracted with aerospace
Conference Session
Civil Engineering Teaching Part Three
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Norb Delatte, Cleveland State University
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
collapse. A meeting was held to decide what to do, and the bridgecollapsed just as the meeting was breaking up. The inability to make and implement a timelydecision illustrates the importance of effective communication (outcome g). It has been arguedthat Cooper failed to fulfill his professional and ethical responsibilities (outcome f)5. Mr. Cooper planned for the Quebec Bridge to be the crowning achievement of anillustrious career as a bridge engineer. However, by this time his health was poor and he wasunable to travel to the site. He was also poorly compensated for his work. Cooper’s difficultiesshow some of the realistic constraints (outcome c) inherent in every engineering project. Following the collapse, organizations such as
Conference Session
Best Practices in Aerospace Education
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Swami Karunamoorthy, Saint Louis University
Tagged Divisions
Aerospace
QualityImprovement.Step – 1: Program Educational Objectives (PEO)ABET definition states that “Program educational objectives are broad statements thatdescribe the career and professional accomplishments that the program is preparinggraduates to achieve.”A program not only educate certain skills, knowledge and values that a student supposedto know at the time of graduation but also what he/she would become by applying orpracticing those knowledge, skill and value. In simple terms, what is the purpose of theprogram? The answer to this question in broad statements should be developed afterseeking input from constituents. As a rule of thumb, the number of objectives can be atleast three and at most five.A program in general serves the constituency of Industry and/or
Conference Session
Professional Engineering Management Initiatives
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Donald Merino, Stevens Institute of Technology
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Management
an SME andthen peer reviewed by another SME in the field. The combination of these two processes ensuresthat the ASEM EM BoK was validated.Other Approaches to an EM BoKThere are a number of other approaches to establish an EM BoK using different approaches.One approach uses an industry survey as the primary basis to establish an EM BoK. While thisapproach captures EM Managers’ needs later in their careers, it does not address many of the Page 13.225.4basic topics taught to EM students in various programs. Also for this approach to have validitythere needs to be a process of peer review by practitioners and SMEs.Subject Matter Experts (SMEs
Conference Session
Improving the Teaching Skills of Graduate Students
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Adam Melvin, North Carolina State University; Lisa Bullard, North Carolina State University
Tagged Divisions
Graduate Studies
diversity inperspective and experience they provide. The faculty member has more experience teaching andknows what is required to run a course and what is expected of a teaching assistant throughoutthe semester. In addition, most faculty members served as a TA in their graduate careers andrecall their own experience. This outlook is particularly beneficial in dealing with concepts suchas teaching, working with your professor and writing lesson plans. The experienced TA, whojust recently finished their first semester as a TA, can provide the new TAs with life lessonslearned the hard way. This outlook is especially beneficial in dealing with concepts such asgrading, holding office hours and working in a team of TAs. Ultimately, all of the
Conference Session
Engineering Ethics II
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Brock Barry, Purdue University; Vincent Drnevich, Purdue University
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Ethics
performedby a private contractor.While assuming the role of the protagonist, the students are asked to consider and respond tothree separate scenarios. All three scenarios relate to acceptance of gifts and what could beconsidered bribery. Responses are recorded as simple “yes” or “no” answers to a total of 10questions.Although, the instrument addresses a single aspect of professional ethics, it is an aspect that thatthe authors anticipate will be encountered by graduates of their program. Many, if not most,practicing engineers will be faced with a bribery-related scenario during their career. Thesituation and hypothetical scenarios represent very realistic circumstances. As Herkert 11suggests, a realistic situation is a better instructional tool than
Conference Session
Curriculum Development and Teaching Models in NRE
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Erich Schneider, University of Texas at Austin
Tagged Divisions
Nuclear and Radiological
– while still in wide use areperhaps no longer being as intensively developed. This shift extends to the classroom in thesense that it is often easier to teach students to use Monte Carlo code packages especially whenthe system being studied contains irregular geometries.It can be argued that, since even PhD students will be unlikely to be called upon to develop theirown deterministic transport software during the course of their careers, teaching these methodsfrom other than a theoretical standpoint is not productive. On the other hand, it is very likely thatthese students will be called upon to make use of a ‘legacy’ deterministic transport code. Anumber of codes that use the discrete ordinates approximation to the transport equation remain in
Conference Session
Engineering Professional Development for K-12 Teac
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Elisabeth McGrath, Stevens Institute of Technology; Mercedes McKay, Stevens Institute of Technology; Dawna Schultz, Stevens Institute of Technology
Tagged Divisions
K-12 & Pre-College Engineering
mathematics, language arts, and nowscience, those subjects that are assessed as part of No Child Left Behind.De-mystifying engineering as a discipline and persuading policymakers and schooladministrators that engineering design and design-based problem-solving are importantcompetencies for 21st century citizens will require both evidence of student impact aswell as a clearer understanding by such constituencies of what engineering is (and is not);what its contributions to society and the economy are and will be in the future; and whyengineering careers are suitable for females and minorities. It will be necessary for awide range of constituencies to be involved and convinced that engineering shouldbecome a universal requirement for K-12
Conference Session
Institutional and Curricular Reform
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Pierre Lafleur, Ecole Polytechnique de Montreal; Yves Boudreault, Ecole Polytechnique de Montreal; Richard Prégent, École Polytechnique de Montréal
Tagged Divisions
Educational Research and Methods
context, increase the non-technical aspect,develop soft and management skills, consider the international challenge, and use new learningstrategies to help engineers update their knowledge during their entire career (2). It was evidentthat a cultural change was necessary to switch from “sink or swim” culture to a less competitiveand collaboration-based environment. In fact, we need a change of paradigm from a teacher-centered to a student-centered pedagogy (4).StructureThe road to success for this project requires everyone’s contribution and involvement. Eachperson’s opinion and contribution must be requested and valued. What is especially important isto avoid giving people the impression that changes are imposed upon them. In the same way
Conference Session
Electrical ET Curriculum and Projects
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Michael Dutko, Bloomsburg University; Cathy Auburger, Bloomsburg University; Patrick Anderson, Bloomsburg University; Biswajit Ray, Bloomsburg University
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Technology
towards computer-based automation career Ü Reliance on partner was a problem Ü Need to allocate more time to the coverage of interface electronics design Ü Include some biomedical measurements applicationSummaryExperience with student-initiated projects within the instrumentation and data acquisition coursewas presented. A few students struggled in defining the scope of their work at the beginning ofthe four-week project period since this was their first project-based learning experience. It wasalso observed that many students had not had to design, debug and test a system that hadmultiple functional blocks in their prior coursework. This contributed to students’ difficulty inbreaking the design into functional modules and
Conference Session
Instrumentation and Controls Laboratories
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Philip Brach, University of the District of Columbia; Ahmet Zeytinci, University of the District of Columbia
Tagged Divisions
Division Experimentation & Lab-Oriented Studies
willalways be developing as advances in technology take place, but the fundamental conceptsassociated with measurement will remain unchanged.It is the understanding of the fundamental concepts that are important for a students’ career, thetechnology of the moment for one’s first job, and an appreciation of how and why things arewhat they are so that they may add to the continuing development of our engineered world.ConclusionIn the first half of 20th century, all engineering students in the US studied surveying regardlesstheir discipline. Measurements are an essential part of not only every engineering discipline butvirtually every field of study. The concepts of error, random and systematic, are also common toall disciplines. The value of surveying
Conference Session
FPD7 - Global Warming & Sustainability for First-Year Students
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Blair Rowley, Wright State University; Kumar Yelamarthi, Central Michigan University; Thomas Bazzoli, Wright State University
Tagged Divisions
First-Year Programs
Research. He holds the MS in Nuclear Science and Engineering from the Air Force Institute of Technology. During his Air Force career he directed diverse research programs in modeling and testing of system performance, compositional mapping of submicron materials and machine translation of text. He was instrumental in establishing the college’s freshman program. Page 13.625.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2008 Freshman Engineering Student Perceptions on Global WarmingAbstract Managing the problems that global warming is being forecast to cause requires the educatedattention of many
Conference Session
Engineering Ethics IV
Collection
2008 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
George Catalano, State University of New York-Binghamton; Caroline Baillie, Queen's University; Donna Riley, Smith College; Dean Nieusma, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Ethics
Engineering: When Personal Values and Engineering Careers Converge,Lakeshore Press, 2005.iii H. McDonald, “Origins of the Word ‘Engineer,’” ASCE Transactions, 77, 1737. Reproduced in ASCECommittee on History and heritage of American Civil Engineering, 1970, Historical Publication No. 1.iv Aarne Vesilind, Peace Engineering, Lakeshore Press: Woodsville, N.H., 2005, pp.1-2.v Social and Economic Justice,” World Centric, http://www.worldcentric.org/stateworld/military.htmvi Daniel A. Vallero, “Just Engineering: Peace, Justice, and Sustainability,” Peace Engineering, LakeshorePress: Woodsville, N.H., 2005, pp.41-56.vii Krista E.M. Galley, ed., Global Climate Change and Wildlife in North America, Technical Review04-2, Bethesda, Md
Conference Session
Multidisciplinary Engineering Poster Session
Collection
2007 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Chell Roberts, Arizona State University; Darryl Morrell, Arizona State University; Mark Henderson, Arizona State University; Scott Danielson, Arizona State University; Robert Hinks, Arizona State University; Robert Grondin, Arizona State University; Thomas Sugar, Arizona State University; Chen-Yuan Kuo, Arizona State University
Tagged Divisions
Multidisciplinary Engineering
semester freshman project was to design andfabricate a rescue device that would safely transport a child or small animal from a three-storybuilding. Major projects are not used in other courses. The National Academy of Engineering7recommends that “… students should be introduced to the essence of engineering early in theirundergraduate careers” and that “… engineering educators should introduce interdisciplinarylearning in the undergraduate curriculum …”. The project courses are designed to be consistentwith these recommendations.We have attempted to have the project topics drive the content and selection of companionmodules, rather than content driving the projects. The project then provides an engineeringcontext for these companion modules. The
Conference Session
Modern Software Measurement Techniques
Collection
2007 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Charles Birdsong, California Polytechnic State University
Tagged Divisions
Instrumentation
of real world systems, modeling and controllerimplementation. There are currently four experiments: a two week analog DC servoposition control experiment, a two week LabVIEW based two tank water level regulator Page 12.478.2experiment, a two week LabVIEW based hydraulic servo control experiment and a oneweek frequency response experiment using the DC servo apparatus.An important goal is to periodically update the experiments to present hardware andsoftware that is state of the art so that students get exposure to tools that will benefit themin their careers as engineers. In the last decade hardware has been updated from analogcompensators to PLC
Conference Session
Retention of STEM Students
Collection
2007 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Ibibia Dabipi, University of Maryland-Eastern Shore; Joseph Arumala, University of Maryland-Eastern Shore
Tagged Divisions
Minorities in Engineering
pursued through the five-year UMCP plan for cooperativeengineering education which combines classroom theory with career-related workexperience. Individual counseling is available for students desiring to transfer to otherinstitutions. The Engineering Program is founded on the basic sciences and emphasizesthe development of a high degree of technical competence. It integrates these elements:(1) basic sciences, including mathematics, physics, and chemistry; (2) engineeringsciences including mechanics of solids and fluids, engineering materials,thermodynamics, electrical and electronic circuits, and transport phenomena; (3)engineering design which applies the above elements into the creation of systems,components and processes while optimizing