about the purpose of supplemental material given? Questions · Did the participants clarify what questions they were supposed to answer? · Did the participants have a plan of action to answer the questions that they identified? Points of View · Did the participants ask whether there were other relevant viewpoints that should be considered? · Did the participants ask about the viewpoints expressed in
thecommissions are “enabled and appointed by the Board.” ASCE was unconvinced by thisargument, because the issue at hand was about establishing policies and procedures, notconducting accreditation activities.At the meeting, ASCE’s Board members went forward with their two planned motions regardingapproval authority for the APPM, and both were approved. From ASCE’s perspective, thisdecision affirmed the Board’s sole responsibility for approving ABET policies and procedures.Program NamingWithout question, the most complex and controversial accreditation policy issue faced by theASCE task committee has been program naming. At the heart of this issue is paragraphII.E.4.c.(2) of the APPM: “If a program name implies specialization(s) for which ProgramCriteria
areevaluated by some form of a final report. In the traditional civil engineering curriculum, undergraduate students take courses withboth lecture and laboratory formats. While the lecture courses provide the opportunity forstudents to absorb new information, the purpose of a laboratory is to expose students to thephysical problems associated with a course and reinforce course content. The traditional type oflaboratory has well-planned experiments, typically containing step-by-step guides leading thestudents through each experiment. Generally in groups of four or five, students in-turn conductthe experiment, regurgitate the results, and prepare a laboratory report, arguably fulfilling ABETstudent outcome (b) “an ability to design and conduct
Skill Building Academic Advising √ graduate from middle Research Planning/ Summer Academic Enrichment √ school with algebra 1 Initiation successfully completed. Tutoring
technologyto commercial publishers and via professional societies.Regarding the need for professional development, the report “Use of Technology to StrengthenK-12 Education in the United States”28 states that the substantial investment in hardware,software and infrastucture recommended by the Panel would be wasted if K-12 teachers are notprovided with the preparation and support they need to effectively integrate informationtechnologies into their teaching. The Panel also believes that the teachers should be provided notonly with ongoing mentoring and consultative support but also with the time required tofamiliarize themselves with available software and content, to incorporate technology into theirlesson plans, and to discuss technology use with
currently works as a Research Associate and Deputy Director at the Murdough Center for Engineering Professionalism (MCEP) and National Institute for Engineering Ethics (NIEE) at Texas Tech University. He oversees the day to day operations of the center’s distance learning courses for both engineering students and practicing engineers. Additionally, he provides lectures on ethical theory and other topics in an on-campus engineering ethics course. Burgess was also a member of the Ethics in the Curriculum Task Force for Texas Tech’s Quality Enhancement Plan. The Quality Enhancement Plan was a crucial component of Texas Tech’s accreditation with the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools. A theme throughout these roles
, University of Colorado, Boulder Alyssa Nicole Berg is currently an undergraduate in mechanical engineering at the University of Colorado, Boulder. She is interested in the energy field and plans on attending graduate school. Page 25.678.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2012 Graduate Students Mentoring Undergraduates in Research: Attitudes and Reflections about These ExperiencesOne-on-one mentoring relationships between 1st or 2nd year engineering undergraduate studentsand graduate student mentors were established and monitored during a semester-long formalresearch
also associated with low sciencelevels.18 A similar result is expected with the MST majors, except in addition to low levelsof math and science anxiety they should also have low levels of “T&E” anxiety, allowingthem to comfortably execute active, hands-on and technically-rich lesson plans for bothSTEM and non-STEM subjects. Page 15.108.10Table 3 The number of math anxiety measurements for three populations (MST, Math andnon-STEM majors) taken before and after two math classes (MAT105 and MAT202). Group Pre105 Post105 Pre202 Post202 MST 24 22 51 56
' basicunderstanding of fluid mechanics principles, and follow-up contact with students regarding theirpost-high school plans. With the exception of the follow-up contact, all other assessments wereanonymous and voluntary with the pre-post evaluations correlated using cartoon names. Each ofthe 12 students elected to participate in the assessment activities.For each major course taught, a standard course evaluation was administered by the MGS staff.The students responded to nine statements about the course and the instructors. Responses werevalued from 1-4, corresponding to “strongly disagree”, “disagree”, “agree”, and “strongly agree”.Example statements included “The instructor seemed well prepared for class”, “The class was
, and resources. At Lawrence Tech, the grant provided thefunding to integrate the existing entrepreneurial programs into a new innovative interdisciplinaryprogram focused on developing the “entrepreneurial mindset” on campus. The skills associatedwith the entrepreneurial mindset are communication, teamwork, leadership, ethics and ethicaldecision-making, opportunity recognition, persistence, creativity, innovation, tolerance forambiguity, risk analysis, creative problem solving, critical thinking, and business skills(including marketing, financial analysis, and strategic planning).1, 2LeadershipA leadership education program was initiated at Lawrence Tech in 2007 based on assessmentand program evaluation. First, a survey of employers of Lawrence
: “STEP helped me to realize how much I enjoy building rather than theorizing. Buildingis not available in much of the physics department unless students are involved in a fewparticular research labs.” “The chance to do outreach and mentor prospective engineers is not available anywherein my degree program. Also, learning how to teach and create lesson plans, or how to organizeand run a very large event were very valuable skills I've learned.” “Absolutely! I gained tremendous leadership and teaching opportunities from STEP.These were useful for me throughout the rest of my career at the University, and I have no doubtthey'll be useful when I begin my job in management consulting.” “One of the really great things I learned
2 Trait Creative 2 Trait Able to plan 1 Ability Page 10.710.9“Proceedings of the 2005 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition Copyright © 2005, American Society for Engineering Education” All skills and Abilities 18 16 14 12Frequency 10 8 6 4
the questions are repeated, including theirself-confidence in themselves as engineering students, their plans for the future, their perceptionof problems in the field for women and men, their expectations about jobs; thus, changes in theserespects over the course of the year can be measured. In addition, they are asked to evaluateprogrammatic features such as the engineering clinic, group work, lab work, workload and manyother aspects of the program; the interpersonal climate of faculty-student and peer relations; andtheir satisfaction with the major. In the current research project, to study how the features ofRowan’s engineering program are related to retention, survey responses of students who beganwith a major in engineering but
involve the tradeoff between the environmentand human life; and how this may change depending on the type of trees.Dam Construction. This MEA concerns the actual proposed construction of a dam in the SouthEastern Anatolia in Turkey. Having approved the initial plans, the Turkish government, for Page 15.499.6economic reasons, now must reduce the dam’s budget. Alternatives include reducing the dam’ssafety factor by either decreasing its height, substituting certain material or lengthening the timefor completing the project. Targeted concepts include: multi-criteria decision making, economicanalysis, and international perspectives in economic decision
undergraduates than any other. However wedo make the case in the following section that our work makes a contribution via a synthesis of Page 15.923.2the strengths of widely-used texts. Also, in recent years we have seen a steady increase in ouraccreditation program-outcome measures supported by our measurement systems course,although this material on piezoresistive sensors would contribute at most two hours of content tothe course. Based on these broad measures, we are satisfied that a presentation of sensoroperating principles like the one developed here contributes to meeting our learning objectives.We plan to develop an approach for measuring
interaction, questions, and general classroombehaviors of the students. Each RA splits their observational time between origination andremote sites so as to capture the breadth of student experience. Instructor Reflection. Sometime after the midpoint of the course, the project evaluatorconducts a structured interview with the calculus course instructor. The purpose of this interviewis to document the current perceptions and attitudes of the instructor as he is involved in teachingthe course. While it is planned that the same instructor will teach all calculus courses involved inthis study to reduce significant threats to validity, we anticipate a small amount of instructionalvariability as part of the natural evolution of teaching. We expect
discussing future goals, Sugar Cone studentsgenerated detailed descriptions of their future possible selves and the steps needed to achieve theseselves: I’m going to stick with the undergraduate Bioengineering program, pursue a Master’s and then, my goal is to ultimately work for a medical device company in research and design so, yeah, that’ll be the ultimate goal. Probably a Ph.D. also after I start working too. (Jeremy, male bioengineer junior) I plan to do the five year Master’s program here. And then, I’m thinking about med school. I’ve taken the practice MCAT a couple of times, but I’m not sure that’s really something I want to do, but I know that I’m very interested in the imaging, bioimaging type
might includeencouraging nominations for awards where they might otherwise not be considered or noticeddue to busy schedules. This may also include encouraging and allowing for self-nominations.Faculty suffer from busy teaching and research schedules. Careful planning with detailedschedules may alleviate the biases that increase due to hurried processes. Sufficient time will
being able to graduate. According to them,disengaged students who are mainly focused on their grades or in graduating without takingadvantage of the whole learning experience often struggle in many areas. One participantspecifically reflected on this issue: ―[Disengaged students] don‘t have long term plans, [they are] waiting for you to tell them what to do and when. [There is] no initiative or creativity. Everything is a means to an end: to pass or to graduate. You wonder what will happen to students like these – how will they cope? In a program like ours, they are the ones who consistently struggle with their engineering identity.‖This section of the interview provides insightful information on faculty members
Page 24.634.11been used as their community-based project. For example, they relied on their previousknowledge regarding the work Francisco and Miguel performed at the dairy farm and tried todevelop a plan to decrease the number of bacteria accumulated in the milk tanks at the farm.Through their observations, they identified different problems in the milking process, whichcould have prevented the high levels of bacteria in the milk such as: cleaning the udders with theappropriate method, changing and cleaning tubing when necessary, in-situ testing for mastitis,changing tank filters, proper training of employees, identification of sick cows, maintenance ofthe equipment, and proper temperature and pressure on the tanks to eliminate
benefit underserved communities. This pipelineis afforded by the program construct that moves innovation from incubation (Phase 1) tocommunity introduction (Phase 2) to a sustainable business (Phase 3). It should be noted that notall innovations are expected to make it through all 3 project phases. For a number of reasons aninnovation or technology may prove in any early stage to be unaffordable or otherwiseinappropriate and the project is dropped. In other cases, the business plan may prove to beunrealistic. However, the academic calendar accommodates this multi-year, phased programrather well, as the cycle involving feasibility, user needs, prototype development, pilotinstallation and business start-up generally takes 3-4 years if one is to
structural, vibrational, electromagnetic,biomedical electromagnetics, computational fluid dynamics, and heat transfer is a noted problem Page 24.212.5for some engineering graduates [16-17]. The Accreditation Board for Engineering and 2 Technology, Inc. (ABET, Inc.) expects engineering graduates to have "an ability to use thetechniques, skills, and modern engineering tools necessary for engineering practice"[18] such asFE analysis. Hence, engineering schools have, or are planning to add FE analysis to theircurricula [19-25], but these plans are not
. For example, in the first example, the action (i.e.,“develop a toolbox”) is something that the authors themselves are planning to do (i.e., “we willcontinue”). The next three examples are similar to each other in that they all explicitly drawattention to the action being promoted, but they differ from each other in the level ofassertiveness employed. Specifically, the assertiveness decreases from “should be” to “it isimportant to” to “could.” In the final example, the action is not specifically suggested but, rather,linked to an outcome that is likely to be considered desirable.Building upon the notion of an “implication for action” sentence, we developed a two-partprocedure consisting of (1) identifying and coding implications for action
Office Hours Tutoring24. Have you used these resources for any class in high school? _______ _______ _______25. Are you planning to use these resources for any class this semester? _______ _______ _______26. Have you used these resources for chemistry in high school? _______ _______ _______27. Are you planning to use these resources for chemistry this semester? _______ _______ _______General Conceptions of and Attitudes Towards this Semester in Chemistry28. Please circle how confident you are that you will do well in this class: 1 2 3 4 5(1=not confident, 2=little confidence, 3=some what confident, 4=confident, 5=very
terms of planning, implementation, accountability and evaluation, either as an individual or a partner in a group. ( problem solving) Have developed appropriate physical and manipulative kills in work and leisure contexts (physical). Have been helped to foster sensitivity and tolerance to the needs of others personal relationships (interpersonal/caring). Have been enabled to develop an appropriate set of spiritual, social and moral values (faith; morals) Have had opportunities to develop creativity and appreciation of creativity in others (aesthetic). Have developed responsibility for maintaining a healthy lifestyle, both physical and mental (health). Have developed an appreciation
- sign Experiences for Mechanical EngineersAbstractThis paper reports our current progress towards introducing hands-on machining, analysis anddesign experiences in freshman, sophomore, and capstone design courses in the Department ofMechanical Engineering at the University of Massachusetts Lowell. The selection, assembly, anddeployment of two low-cost, desktop computer-numerical-control (CNC) platforms is describedalong with our current plans for deploying desktop CNCs throughout a sequence of undergradu-ate engineering design courses. Finally, we present our proposed approach to evaluate the impactof curricular enhancement on our mechanical engineering students’ cognition, motivation andattitudes toward the profession.1.0 IntroductionThe
: “Our group found that some people are better than others at specific parts of the project and by everyone using their strengths we were able to teach others the necessary skills to understand the full analysis. As a team we definitely plan to take advantage of the knowledge of others.” “I learned a great deal about how to work with a group as well. Certain people have their own strengths and weaknesses and if you can play on those strengths the project will work much smoother.” “On a personal note, I learned that teamwork does trump individual talent.” “For the next project, I have learned to work ahead. I cannot let the work pile up until the very last minute to submit the final report
will suit him or her for alifetime, many successful people take time to slowly work out what it is that makes them tickand brings them fulfillment.No matter what the career choice is selected, students need to start planning in high school toensure they are prepared to take the correct major later at university. Some specific profiletests may help as a starting point for students to gain a better understanding of their interests,values and goals, alongside discussions with friends, family or professional career counselorsat school or elsewhere. Good career decisions require good information about personal traitsand preferences, and also about the real world and workforce.When considering engineering as a career choice, excelling in mathematics