Education, 2019 Sustainable Design Experience: The Race to Zero CompetitionAbstractThe architecture, engineering and construction (AEC) industry has become more complex,requiring changes in both design and construction processes and demanding more collaborationamong all the stakeholders. Enhancing collaboration in the AEC industry highly depends onchanges in the education of AEC professionals to provide an educational venue for students toexperience collaborative learning and develop the required professional culture and skills. Byusing the Purdue Team’s experience in the 2018 RTZ competition as a case study, this paperprovides insight into the interdisciplinary collaboration experience of designing a zero-energybuilding (ZEB) and
duties entailed working with prospective freshmen and transfer engineering students. In 2018, he transitioned to the role of Assistant Research Professor in the Department of Bioengineering at the Clark School. His research interests transfer students who first enroll in community colleges, as well as developing broader and more nuanced engineering performance indicators. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2019 Exploring Within-Group Differences in Student-Faculty Interactions among Black Engineering Students at a Selective Four-Year Engineering CollegeIntroductionAcross all disciplines in higher education, faculty support is especially important for facilitatingstudent success (Tinto
. His work has been published through the American Society for Engineering Education (ASEE) and the Institute for Electrical and Electronics Engineering (IEEE); he is an active member of both organizations. He holds a PhD and BS in Electrical Engineering from the University of Kentucky. ©American Society for Engineering Education, 2024 Paper ID #42797Dr. B ”Grant” Grant Crawford P.E., Quinnipiac University Grant Crawford, PhD, P.E., F.ASEE, Colonel (retired) U.S. Army, is a Professor of Mechanical Engineering for the School of Computing and Engineering at Quinnipiac University. He is a former Director of
University of Maryland, College Park. He joined the university in 2017 as an assistant clinical professor and research educator for the Designing Innovation Research Stream, where he advises first-year and sophomore students on design research methodologies. Dr. Fazelpour developed two project-based courses aimed at teaching students design and design research. In 2018, he transitioned to the Department of Mechanical Engineering to teach design-related courses, including computer-aided design and machine design. Additionally, he introduced a new course focused on design for manufacturing and assembly. Dr. Fazelpour’s active engagement in professional organizations includes membership in ASME and ASEE. He has held various
andhow the industry, the type of company, and other participants’ demographics might affect thefrequency and types of ethics and equity issues the engineers face in their practice.References 1. Chintam, K., & Prybutok, A. N., & Archuleta, C. M., & Deberghes, A., & DiBiase, B., & Li, R., & Richards, J., & Seitz, L., & Cole, J. (2023, June), Designing, codifying, and implementing social justice content in a required course on engineering and research skills for first-year graduate students. Paper presented at 2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Baltimore, Maryland. https://doi.org/10.18260/1-2--43005 2. Shields, B. (2022). Justice, equity, diversity, and inclusion curriculum within
and R. W. Lent, Eds. John Wiley & Sons, 2005, pp. 42–69.[7] M. L. Savickas, “Career construction theory and practice,” in Career Development and Counseling: Putting Theory and Research to Work, 2nd ed., D. Brown and R. W. Lent, Eds. 2013, pp. 147–183.[8] C. A. Pantoja, “How and why women leave engineering careers: Toward an integrated framework of counseling and organizational psychology career theories,” in ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition Conference Proceedings, online, Jun. 2021[9] J. H. Kim, Understanding Narrative Inquiry: The Crafting and Analysis of Stories as Research. Thousand Oakes, CA: Sage Publications, 2016.[10] J. Cruz, and N. Kellam,” Beginning an engineer’s journey: A narrative
analysis on the value of oral exams as early diagnostic tool (Kim et al., ASEE 2022). Minju is interested in designing assessments that can capture and motivate students’ deep conceptual learning, such as oral exams and the usage of visual representations (e.g., diagrams and manual gestures).Dr. Carolyn L Sandoval, University of California, San Diego Dr. Sandoval is the Associate Director of the Teaching + Learning Commons at the University of Cali- fornia, San Diego. She earned a PhD in Adult Education-Human Resource Development. Her research interests include adult learning and development, faculty deZongnan Wang, University of California, San Diego Zongnan is currently a 2nd-year undergraduate student with a major in
transformative worldviews, which "holdsthat research inquiry needs to be intertwined with politics and a political change agenda toconfront social oppression at whatever levels it occurs" [16, p. 9]. The authors acknowledge thepotential detrimental effects that oppressive forms of communication can have on the subsequentdecisions and actions of marginalized and minoritized students in disciplines like, but not limitedto, engineering.Research Question: The research question that drove this study is: What are the emotions expressed bystudents about who should and shouldn’t become and belong in engineering and how are theyconnecting these to active or passive HC experiences?Research Design and Instrument: Between 2018 and 2019, a mixed-method
with their time and expertise. The financialsupport of the USCGA Alumni Association is also gratefully appreciated!References[1] Miller, Paul, “Project-Based Coursework in a Naval Architecture Curriculum”, Proceedingsof the ASEE Conference, Nashville, TN, 2003[2] Wobbe, Kristin, and Stoddard, Elisabeth, eds., “Project-Based Learning In The First Year”,Stylus Publishing, Sterling, VA, 2019[3] www.teachingwithsmallboats.org, accessed 12Feb2022[4] Gougeon, Meade, “The Gougeon Brothers on Boat Construction – Wood and WEST SystemMaterials, 5th Edition”, Gougeon Brothers, Inc., Bay City, Michigan, 2005[5] Witt, Glen L, “Boatbuilding With Plywood”, Modified 3rd Edition, Glen-L Marine Designs,Bellflower, CA, 1989[6] www.thewoodenboatschool.com
(RESPECT), Philadelphia, PA, USA, 2022, pp. 1–2.[5] A. Haverkamp, “The complexity of nonbinary gender inclusion in engineering culture,” presented at the 2018 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Salt Lake City, UT, USA, Jun. 23–27, 2018.[6] P. H. Collins and S. Bilge, Intersectionality. Cambridge, U.K.: Polity Press, 2016.[7] P. H. Collins, “Intersectionality’s definitional dilemmas,” Annual Review of Sociology, vol. 41, no. 1, pp. 1–20, 2015.[8] T. J. Weston, W. M. Dubow and A. Kaminsky, “Predicting women’s persistence in computer science- and technology-related majors from high school to college,” ACM Transactions on Computing Education, vol. 20, no. 1, pp. 1–16, 2019.[9] A. Munson, B. Moskal, A
physical prototyping and detailed design activities can mesh with this intervention.References:[1] National Academy of Engineering, U. S. (2004). The engineer of 2020: Visions of engineeringin the new century. Washington, DC: National Academies Press.[2] Buchanan, R. (1992). Wicked Problems in Design Thinking. Design Issues, 8(2), 5–21.https://doi.org/10.2307/1511637[3] Lönngren, J. (2017). Wicked problems in engineering education: preparing future engineers towork for sustainability. Chalmers University of Technology.[4] “Grand Challenges - 14 Grand Challenges for Engineering,” Engineeringchallenges.org, 2019.http://www.engineeringchallenges.org/challenges.aspx[5] De Graaff, E., & Kolmos, A. (2007). Management of change: implementation of
. Professor Villani presented a paper entitled, Solving the Gender Disparity Puzzle in Computing Disciplines at a Commuter State College at ISECON virtual conference in October 2021 and co-moderated a Birds of a Feather session at SIGSCE 2022 virtually entitled: Mentoring a Women in Computing Club: The Good, The Bad and The Ugly. Dr. Villani presented a paper at ASEE 2022 in Minneapolis, MN entitled: Designed A (Re)Orientation Program for Women Computing Students at a Commuter College and Measuring its Effectiveness. Fall 2023 a paper entitled: An Early Measure of Women-Focused Initiatives in Gender-Imbalanced Computing programs were presented at CCSC Eastern Conference. Dr. Villani has been a Grace Hopper Scholarship
Atienza for her contribution to developing the BEADLE curriculum. The authors alsothank Justine Bailey and Cinthya Rosales for thoroughly testing the curriculum.References[1] R. Hussein and D. Wilson, “Remote Versus In-hand Hardware Laboratory in Digital CircuitsCourses,” American Society for Engineering Education ASEE conference, Electrical andComputer Engineering Division, Jul. 2021. [Online]. Available: https://peer.asee.org/37662[2] R. Hussein, B. Chap, M. Inonan, M. Guo, F. Monroy, R. Maloney, S. Alves, and S. Kalisi,“Remote Hub Lab – RHL: Broadly Accessible Technologies for Education and Telehealth”, 20thAnnual International Conference on Remote Engineering and Virtual Instrumentation REV 2023[3] R. Harper and H. Thiry, “Advising from
positive ones thatpromote Black students to pursue and persist in advancing their education in engineering.References[1] E. O. McGee and D. O. Stovall, "The Mental Health of Black College Students: A Call for Critical RAce Theorists to Integrate Mental Health into the Analysis," Educational Theory, vol. 10, no. 2, pp. 167-193, 2015.[2] E. O. McGee, D. M. Griffith and S. L. Houston II, ""I Know I Have to Work Twice as Hard and Hope That Makes Me Good Enough": Exploring the Stress and Strain of Black Doctoral Students in Enigineering and Computing," Teachers College Record, vol. 121, p. 38, 2019.[3] J. K. Hyun, B. C. Quinn, T. Madon and S. Lustig, "Graduate student mental health: Needs assessment and utilization of counseling
. Budhrani, and C. Wang, “Examining Faculty Perception of Their Readiness to Teach Online,” Online Learning, vol. 23, no. 3, pp. 97-119, 2019.[3] K. M. Andersen, and M. D. Avery, “Faculty teaching time: A time comparison of web- based and face-to-face graduate nursing programs,” International Journal of Nursing Education Scholarship, vol. 5, no. 1, pp. 1–12, 2008.[4] R. Van de Vord and K. Pogue, “Teaching time investment: Does online really take more time than face-to-face?,” International Review of Research in Open and Distributed Learning, vol. 13, no. 3, pp. 132-146, 2012.[5] Y. Chen, S. Kang, A. Gallup, K. L. Ferris, and V. Svihla, “Proximity and safety as a foundation for supporting faculty to adapt
, and E. H. Chudler, “'Helped me feel relevant again in the classroom': Longitudinal evaluation of a Research Experience for Teachers program in neural engineering (Evaluation),” Paper presented at 2018 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Salt Lake City, Utah, June 2018. [Online]. Available https://peer.asee.org/helped-me-feel-relevant-again-in-the-classroom-longitudinal- evaluation-of-a-research-experience-for-a-teachers-program-in-neural-engineering- evaluation[18] “Neuroethics Case Studies,” Center for Neurotechnology, October 2014. [Online]. Available http://centerforneurotech.org/sites/default/files/CSNE%20Neuroethics%20Cases_for%20 distribution.pdf.[19] J. T. Chowning, “Socratic
. She is an Associate Editor for the ”Journal of American Indian Education” and has authored or edited three books and numerous articles in peer reviewed national and international journals. Her most recent edited volume was published in 2019 and is called ”The Price of Nice: How Good Intentions Maintain Educa- tional Inequity.”Dr. Ricky Camplain Ricky Camplain, PhD is an assistant professor of Health Sciences and the Center for Health Equity Re- search at Northern Arizona University. Dr. Camplain is a Comanche scholar who was trained in epidemio- logic methods at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Gillings School of Global Public Health where I received a Master of Science in Public Health (MSPH
Recreational Mathematics.Mineola, N.Y.: Dover Publications, 2000.[9] K. Azad, Math, Better Explained, 2014.[10] O. E. Fernandez, Everyday Calculus: Discovering the Hidden Math All around Us.Princeton: Princeton UP, 2014.[11] T. Apostol, A Visual Approach to Calculus Problems, Engineering & Science, no. 3, 2000www.mamikon.com/VisualCalc.pdf[12] www.mamikon.com[13] D. Raviv, “Have you seen an integral? Visual, intuitive and relevant explanations of basicengineering-related mathematical concepts,” ASEE National Conference, Salt Lake City, UT,June 2018.[14] L. Edelstein-Keshet, Differential Calculus for the Life Sciences, 2018In: http://www.math.ubc.ca/~keshet/OpenBook.pdf[15] H. Kojima and S. Togami, The Manga Guide to Calculus, No Starch Press, 2009
increase its members’ trust, comfort, and performance in that setting [27].MethodologyContextDuring the first year of the E4USA project, nine high school teachers were recruited to teach theE4USA course in local high schools. Each teacher attended one of two five-day PD workshops ata large U.S. university during the summer of 2019. Instructors were university professors, manyof whom had helped design the curriculum. To address implicit biases and stereotype threat, acontinuing issue within engineering education, teacher participants were tasked to read the firstthree chapters of the book “Whistling Vivaldi - How stereotypes affect us and what we can do”[17] before attending the PD. Through personal stories and research results, the author provides
, the authors plan to continue to study the impact of MESH on onlinecourses on disaggregated student grades by collecting more student responses in these courses in2021. Long-term the authors plan to create a MESH planning tool to help professors think abouthow to incorporate MESH structures into both synchronous and asynchronous class time, andmake intentional choices about how to create a culturally balanced online environment.Bibliography[1] Riegle-Crumb, C., King, B., & Irizarry, Y. (2019). Does STEM Stand Out? Examining Racial/Ethnic Gaps inPersistence Across Postsecondary Fields. Educational Researcher, 48(3), 133–144[2] Hurtado S, Cabrera NL, Lin MH, Arellano L, Espinosa LL. Diversifying Science: Underrepresented StudentExperiences
persuade her undergraduate students to investigate interesting questions in fluid mechanics with her.Heidi Reuter c American Society for Engineering Education, 2019 The Art and Science of Fluid Mechanics as a General Education CourseAbstractA new experimental course on flow visualization (PHOTO 321N) is offered to undergraduatestudents as a General Education (GenEd) course at Penn State University. This course isintended to make integration between two knowledge domains: Art and Science of FluidMechanics. The course is not math oriented and is designed for the students with minimal to nobackground in photography or physics of fluid mechanics. Students explore a
Melgares, University of Kansas Graduate student at the University of Kansas c American Society for Engineering Education, 2019 The Impact of Course Transformation on Student Learning and Success in Fundamental Electrical Engineering/Computer Science CoursesIntroductionStudies repeatedly show improvements in learning, achievement, and success for students afterimplementation of active learning and student-centered teaching practices. Active learningimproves retention of content, achievement level, and success in courses [1, 2]. Research onflipped classrooms in engineering education has shown positive effects including increasedretention, better performance on learning
helped to develop different academic support programs across the school including Undergraduate Teaching Fellows to support active learning in the classroom, small-group tutoring in courses, and the Practice Exams.Grace ClarkDr. Molly McVey, University of Kansas Dr. Molly A. McVey is a post-doctoral teaching fellow at the University of Kansas School of Engineering where she works with faculty to incorporate evidence-based and student-centered teaching methods, and to research the impacts of changes made to teaching on student learning and success. Dr. McVey earned her Ph.D in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Kansas. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2019
College c American Society for Engineering Education, 2019 Impact of First-Year Programming for Underprepared StudentsAbstractThis Complete Evidence-Based Practice paper addresses an intervention started two years agoat the Thayer School of Engineering at Dartmouth college aimed at improving the first-yearexperience and retention of underprepared students in the engineering major. Programcomponents, program analysis and retention results are presented.Background and MotivationThe percentage of students from underrepresented groups earning degrees inengineering remains low nationally (NSF, 2015). While women earned close to 60% ofall bachelor’s degrees in 2012, less than 20% of those degrees were in engineering(NSF
Paper ID #26817Incorporating DOD Research and Historical Materials into a Second-semesterIntroductory Calculus-based Physics CourseDr. Mary Yvonne Lanzerotti, U.S. Military Academy Dr. Lanzerotti is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Physics and Nuclear Engineering at United States Military Academy (West Point, NY). She has conducted research presented at 2017 ASEE on learner-centered teaching techniques in her classes at Air Force Institute of Technology, where she was an Associate Professor of Computer Engineering. She has also held positions at IBM at the Thomas J. Watson Research Center, where she was
tailored the IEEE/ACM guidelines for ITprograms to the local needs, following a continuous quality improvement (CQI) plan thataddressed the eight General Criteria and the Program Criteria established by the EngineeringTechnology Accreditation Commission (ETAC) of ABET. In October of 2014, the IET wasaccredited by the ETAC Commission of ABET, with the next comprehensive review beingscheduled by 2019. This paper describes the accreditation process for the IET program atNorthern New Mexico College from its conception to accreditation. Index TermsABET, Accreditation, Information Engineering Technology, Student Outcomes.1. IntroductionFounded in 1909 as the “Spanish American Normal School at New Mexico,” Northern