Paper ID #43060Enhanced Learning by Visualization Applying Embedded Hands-On in ElectromagneticsClassDr. Hoo Kim, LeTourneau University Hoo Kim, Ph.D., P.E., is an Associate Professor in the School of Engineering and Engineering Technology at LeTourneau University. He received his B.S. and M.S. degrees from POSTECH, Pohang, South Korea, and his Ph.D. from the University of Texas at AustinNeil Rogers, United States Air Force AcademyDr. George York, United States Air Force Academy George York, PhD, PE, is a Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at the United States Air Force Academy, CO, and is currently the
engineering at a major universitythat likely did not have many Appalachian attendees, earned their engineering degree and arenow working in the field as engineers. On the campuses of major universities, Central Appalachian students are oftenmarginalized because these educational spaces were not created with their needs and experiencesin mind. The primary research question is, “What types of cultural capital did CentralAppalachian engineers use to become career-ready engineers during their undergraduateengineering experience at a major university?” This study seeks to provide pilot data for afuture phenomenographic study, with the outcome space being stories of success to provide pathsforward for tomorrow’s engineering students from the Central
application-focused and hands-on learning, perhaps to a greater extent than in engineering” [1, p. 167]. As a result, the ETcurricula incorporate more laboratory-based courses. While the ET curricula also contain coursesin engineering sciences, these courses are redesigned with an application focus in mind to teachstudents how concepts from engineering sciences are applied in practice [1].Although there are differences in the training of engineering technology graduates as comparedto that of their engineering counterparts, there is a significant overlap in the career trajectories ofthe two degrees. The Engineering Technology Council of the American Society for EngineeringEducation notes in its goals that while “the degree is engineering technology
practice. We review a small number of their foundational works here. Riley’schapter on engineering mindsets uses engineering jokes to draw out normative perspectives rooted instereotypes.28 Each joke reveals an underlying assumption about what it means to be a “real” engineer—adoption of a positivist epistemology, acceptance of military authority, elevation of technical certaintyover subjective interpretation, disdain for literacy, and a single-minded focus on technical optimization.She points out that while self-deprecating jokes may lighten the mood, they can also be used to deflectattention from these otherwise serious and consequential commitments, erecting an obstacle to sociallyjust change. Her argument affirms Godfrey and Parker’s finding
response appropriately compensated and/or recognized, what else should PROTEGE keep in mind when involving graduate students? Please feel free to share any concerns you may have with the current vision of this board. If there anything else you would like to Open response share? This is an open question providing more space for you to share and be heard. Feel free to input as much or as little as you would like here. Are there any other engineering graduate Open response students that are involved in equity-work that you would like to recommend to complete this questionnaire?All responses from Google Forms were automatically imported into Google Sheets. Multiplechoice and checkbox questions were analyzed for frequencies of responses. Due to
Paper ID #42120Navigating the Mystery: An Approach for Integrating Experiential Learningin Ethics into an Engineering Leadership ProgramDr. James N. Magarian, Massachusetts Institute of Technology James Magarian is a Sr. Lecturer with the Gordon-MIT Engineering Leadership (GEL) Program. He joined MIT and GEL after nearly a decade in industry as a mechanical engineer and engineering manager in aerospace/defense. His research focuses on engineering workforce formation and the education-careers transition.John M. Feiler, Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyLeo McGonagle, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Leo McGonagle
affective, Orientation- all elements Mechanical Engineering Course [27] behavioral Being- all elements cognitive, Skill- Perspective Taking, Affective Sharing, Self & Other Awareness, Mode Switching How Role-Playing Builds Empathy and Concern affective, Orientation-all for Social Justice [36] behavioral Being- all Inner engineering: Evaluating the utility of mindfulness training to cultivate intrapersonal Skill- Emotion Regulation unclear and
. 1, pp. 55–67, Jan. 2022, doi: 10.1080/10400419.2021.1997175.[21] L. R. Murphy, S. R. Daly, T. Makhlouf, and C. M. Seifert, “Board 286: ‘Exploring Other People’s Mind, Exploring Your Own Mind’ —A Story of Divergent Thinking from Mechanical Engineering Practice,” presented at the 2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Jun. 2023. Accessed: Oct. 11, 2023. [Online]. Available: https://peer.asee.org/board-286-exploring-other-people-s-mind-exploring-your-own-mind-a- story-of-divergent-thinking-from-mechanical-engineering-practice[22] V. C. McGowan and P. Bell, “Engineering Education as the Development of Critical Sociotechnical Literacy,” Sci. Educ., vol. 29, no. 4, pp. 981–1005, 2020, doi: 10.1007/s11191-020
Paper ID #42077Effects of Using Computer-Aided Drawing Programs to Implement SustainableEngineering Design Principles on First-Year Engineering StudentsDr. Burcu Ozden, Pennsylvania State University Dr. Burcu Ozden holds a master’s degree in physics education as well as a doctorate in physics. She is currently an assistant professor at Penn State Abington. Her work focuses on defects, exciton-polaritons, radiation studies, engineering education, and the integration of sustainability in engineering.Muge Olgun Baytas, The Ministry of Education, Turkey Dr. M¨uge Ol˘gun-Baytas¸ holds a doctorate in Curriculum and Instruction from
beginning of the ECIIA project togauge their knowledge about autism, and their attitudes towards autistic individuals, and to measure theiradvocacy for autistic individuals to be included in engineering education and industry. Research fromHuws & Jones (2010) and Obeid et al. (2015) informed the development of the semi-structured focusgroup that measures autism knowledge and attitudes24-26. The questions posed to CommunityCollaborators are presented in Table 1.Table 1Focus Group Questions for Community Collaborators 1. What comes to your mind when you think about autism? What are autism spectrum disorders in your own words? 2. How would you know if someone has autism? 3. Can you tell me how you got these ideas about autism
Paper ID #43952Head, Heart, Hands: A Rubric for Creating Inclusive STEM Learning EnvironmentsDr. Meagan C Pollock, Engineer Inclusion As an engineer turned educator, through her company, Engineer Inclusion, Dr. Meagan Pollock focuses on helping others intentionally engineer inclusion® in education and the workforce.Lara Hebert, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign Serves as the Outreach and Public Engagement Coordinator for The Grainger College of Engineering. She brings to this position and this initiative expertise in teacher education and curriculum design.Dr. Lynford Goddard, University of Illinois Urbana-ChampaignDr. Luisa
empathetic communication. A systematic review found that simulation-basedinterventions that are both immersive and experiential were the most effective method ofempathic education [32]. In a scoping review of empathy in nursing students, simulationincreased empathy levels and confidence, and is deemed beneficial for enhancing empathyawareness, sensitivity, and decreasing negative emotions [31].Empathy is central to the nursing role, fostering and promoting the therapeutic nurse-patientrelationship. Empathetic nursing care requires self-reflection, mindfulness, giving of oneself, andviewing the patient as a whole. Empathy allows patients to feel validated, understood, andrespected. Collaboration and communication between nursing and engineering is
, master’s from the University of New Orleans, and bachelor’s from Louisiana State University.Dr. Rochelle L Williams, Northeastern University Rochelle L. Williams, Ph.D. is the Chief Programs Officer at the National Society of Black Engineers. She is a former Chair of the MIND Division and ASEE Projects Board.Ahlam Alharbi, Imam Abdulrahman Bin Faisal University ©American Society for Engineering Education, 2024 Engagement in Practice: A Roadmap for Academia and Non-profit CollaborationAbstractUnderstanding collaboration strategies among university researchers, non-profits, and industryorganizations is crucial for developing robust research networks that will contribute
students'narration of their experience with EPAL. In the future I will make sure to take advantage of what EPALs (Engineering Peer Advising Leaders) has to offer to underclassmen students like me (Student 2). During my visit I came in with three questions in mind to ask the EPAL advisor….. All in all, I found my visit with the EPAL to be very thought provoking and useful as I was able to get multiple questions concerning answered about my major answer from the EPAL (Student 2).Challenges with Peer AdvisingDifficulty with advising students from different majors.One primary difficulty EPALs encountered was advising students who were in a different majorfrom their own. An EPAL noted “I couldn’t talk
many people to turn to for help besides counselors and faculty. The S-STEMProgram would be very helpful in this aspect through the guidance and mentoring they offer tostudents in an effort to help them succeed in the field of engineering.”Students also wrote about hopes to build a community of like-minded peers, as one male Whiteenvironmental engineering student states, “I also hope this program can help introduce me tolike-minded individuals going into engineering-related fields. I would love to help build upon theSTEM community at UCI and positively impact my campus.” Several students believe a diversecommunity can provide immense support as they transition into a new and overwhelmingenvironment as, one male White mechanical engineering
Paper ID #42991Board 225: Collaborative Research: Research Initiation: Assessing GlobalEngagement Interventions to Advance Global Engineering Competence forEngineering FormationProf. Scott Schneider, University of Dayton Scott J. Schneider is an Associate Professor and the ETHOS Professor for Leadership in Community at the University of Dayton. Schneider is currently focusing his research in the areas of engineering education and community engaged learning.Prof. Erick S. Vasquez-Guardado, University of Dayton Erick S. Vasquez-Guardado (Erick S. Vasquez) is an Associate Professor in the Department of Chemical and
choice in rural Appalachia: Sparking and sustaining interest, International Journal of Engineering Education, vol. 33, no. 1B, pp. 463-475. 7National Academies of Sciences Engineering and Medicine (NASEM, 2018). How people learn II: Learners, contexts, and cultures. The National Academies Press. https://doi.org/10.17226/24783National Center for Education Statistics (NCES, 2016). Selected statistics from the public elementary and secondary education universe: School year 2014-15. Table 4. National Center for Education Statistics.National Research Council. (NRC, 2000). How people learn: Brain, mind, experience, and school. National
privileges while teaching. As such, the courseis designed with various goals in mind. For instance, it allows participants to think reflectivelyand critically about their current teacher practices. It improves their understanding of advancedplacement and state standards. It facilitates the transformation of their teaching practices byexploring best practices in educational pedagogy. Moreover, by participating in the course,educators disseminate the Nanosystems Engineering Research Center for Nanotechnology-Enabled Water Treatment (NEWT) conducted at Rice University, Arizona State University, YaleUniversity, and the University of Texas at El Paso. Finally, participants are able to incorporateproject-based learning and engineering practices in their
ETD 505 Examining the Academic Success and Transition Experiences of Engineering Transfer Students: A Comparative Analysis of ETS- IMPRESS and Traditional Engineering Pathways Sarah (Yin Yin) Tan, Song-Lin Yang, David M. Labyak Michigan Technological UniversityAbstractAcademic and career success hinges on diverse factors including students’ perception of schoolreadiness and expectation. Previous studies have indicated that transfer students transitioningfrom a 2-year college to a 4-year university in engineering programs, specifically thoseparticipating
willbecome familiar with the language, tools, and mindset of engineers, which could be important intheir careers as well as for personal growth in a 21st century society. In addition, the academicand demographic diversity in the classroom enhances our activities and discussions.With all of these goals in mind, we developed two first-year engineering courses. One class,APPL 110 Design and Making for Engineers, focuses on design and fabrication through a seriesof design projects using the campus makerspace. The second class, APPL 101 ExploringEngineering, provides an overview of engineering, while focusing on other aspects of the designprocess, such as biomimicry to brainstorm design ideas, modeling and simulation to addressdesign questions, and
consideration is that you clearly indicate which parts of your submission are your own work, and which parts are communicating someone else’s work. A failure to make this distinction is commonly called plagiarism. However, in the engineering workplace, what academics call ‘plagiarism’ is usually thought of as ‘benefitting from someone else’s expertise’. Engineering knowledge is communal expertise hard-won over many years. With this in mind, I am open – indeed desirous – to see you learn how to re-use concepts and code. But thoughtfully! In your assignments, you must justify your decisions. This includes re-use decisions, e.g. of designs, of components, or of tests.”LLM PedagogyTo support students in using LLMs, the course staff developed
itself makes the students have to take risks. And then personally, I guess I don't mind making something hard for myself to make sure that I try to do it more… I am very confident that I understand the engineering that I want to understand. I'm not 100% Confident in statics … If I wanted to go farther in statics, I'd probably have to learn more. (Student #3) That changes my experience of learning, because then I'm number one, I'm not afraid to fail. Number two, I push myself to actually understand the concept because I'm not just trying to memorize the definition out of a book, because the book is right in front of me. And I could read that definition, I have to make sure I actually understand what it
learning,including collaborative and PBL, in this course.AcknowledgmentThis material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant No.2044255. The authors thank Dr. Beate Zimmer for the Linearization and Units assignmentscreated during the first phase of this project, as previously disseminated [28].References [1] National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. How People Learn: Brain, Mind, Experience, and School: Expanded Edition, Eds. J. D. Bransford et al., Washington, DC: The National Academies Press, 2000. https://doi.org/10.17226/9853. [2] B. R. Belland, C. Kim, and M. Hannafin, “A framework for designing scaffolds that improve motivation and cognition,” Educ. Psychol., 48, pp
Paper ID #42192WIP: Using a Human-Centered Engineering Design Framework to DevelopLearning Progressions in an Aerospace Engineering ProgramMs. Taylor Tucker Parks, University of Illinois at Urbana - Champaign Taylor Parks is a research fellow in engineering education at the Siebel Center for Design. She earned her bachelor’s in engineering mechanics and master’s in curriculum & instruction from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. Her research focuses on promoting teamwork in complex engineering problem solving through collaborative task design. She currently co-leads the integration of human-centered design
(Brilliant Minds) was designed to provide earlyengineering and mathematics career awareness and skill development for middle school students ina small Saturday program in partnership with a community organization in Honduras. The programwas delivered as a four- week Saturday program with the support of local education aides usingEnglish/Spanish bilingual, hands-on curricular materials and special virtual sessions involvingLatina/o professionals from various STEM fields with a special focus on engineering andmathematics careers.The program was designed to support the learning needs of 7th-9th grade students as a series of fourafter-school/Saturdays in Honduras at a faith-based community center. Given that the program wasdesigned in the U.S. but
engineers,” Engineering Studies, vol. 14, no. 1, pp. 17–33, Jan. 2022. [Online]. Available:https://doi.org/10.1080/19378629.2022.2037617.[42] J. Trevelyan, “Mind the gaps: Engineering education and practice,” in Proceedings of the21st annual conference for the Australasian Association for Engineering Education, 2010.[43] T. S. Henderson, C. J. Finelli, and J. M. Millunchick, “Work in Progress: Undergraduatesocialization in engineering: The role of institutional tactics and proactive behaviors,” presentedat the 2018 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Jun. 2018. [Online]. Available:https://peer.asee.org/work-in-progress-undergraduate-socialization-in-engineering-the-role-of-institutional-tactics-and-proactive-behaviors.
Engineering Survey major/concurrent Participant Cohort Gender Race/ethnicity master's degree? 1 3 Woman Asian Yes 2 3 Woman Black Yes 3 2 Woman White Yes 4 2 Woman Asian Yes 5 2 Woman White Yes 6 2 Woman Asian Yes 7 2 Woman Latino/a Yes4.0 Research Findings4.1 Conceptions of stretch assignments (Research Question 1)Defining stretches. When asked what comes to mind when they think of the term “stretchassignments
:10/10), oranother who wrote similarly “I use a seal in my work, and sign communications with P.Eng.(WW, IR: 10/10). Other women spoke about licensure in the context of whether it was requiredby their employer for their current roles. Women in this group mentioned both instances wheretheir license was required as well as those where it wasn’t. One woman mentioned her licensehaving value even in a role where it wasn’t required, sharing that “Working in the environmentalfield, the 'engineering' designation carries a certain weight over other enviro professionals, so Ido identify with it and include it in my email signature, etc. It's a requirement for my currentrole, mind you, but [for] my previous position [it] wasn't.” (WW, IR: 7/10).Theme 3
Paper ID #42359Does the French Engineering Education Approach to Internships Work inChina? Perception of Chinese Students Enrolled in a Sino-French EngineeringProgram in ChinaDr. Ying Lyu, Beihang University Ying Lyu is an associate professor at Beihang University in Beijing, China, where she is based at the Institute of Higher Education, part of the university’s School of Humanities and Social Sciences. She holds a Ph.D degree in higher education from Beihang University. Her research interests include engineering education and international and comparative higher education.Prof. Chuantao Yin, Beihang University Dr
Paper ID #41847Co-offering Engineering and Non-Engineering Courses on Faculty-led Tripsto Foster Global Competence via Interdisciplinary LearningDr. Yanjun Yan, Western Carolina University Yanjun Yan is an Associate Professor in Engineering and Technology at Western Carolina University. Her research interests include engineering education, artificial intelligence, swarm robotics, and statistical signal processing.Gael Graham, Western Carolina University Gael Graham has been a professor of history at Western Carolina University for over thirty years. Her teaching and research interests include education, Asian history, and