research experienceThe impact of undergraduate research, including summer research experiences, has beenresearched extensively and the findings indicate a beneficial effect on intellectual, professionaland personal growth for students and increased job satisfaction and professional outcomes forfaculty1, 2. Students from under-represented groups in particular are thought to benefit from anundergraduate research experience, since they often experience less access to the informalmentoring and networking opportunities and the quality high school education that traditionalstudents enjoy. Participation in undergraduate research has proven to be an effective strategy toremedy such gaps in access for under-represented groups. A study on the impact
to seek employment and be employed inthe nuclear industry, labs, or research facilities after graduation for a period of time determinedby the length of time they received the NRC scholarships. This commitment was typically sixmonths of employment for every partial or full year of scholarship received.The second part involved the enhancement program. This part included student support activitiesto ensure continued student interest in the STEM fields and nuclear programs, talentdevelopment through STEM course support, such as tutoring, undergraduate researchopportunities, field trips that included visits to the collaborating institution and career fairs, andworking lunch meetings where the scholarship recipients came together. The
Friday Afternoon Session 1- Faculty Information Theoretic thread of Compression, Encryption, and Error Control for the Cloud Oscar N. Garcia, Garima Bajwa, Cynthia L. Claiborne, Shanti R. Thiyagaraja, Mohamed Fazeen, Eric H. Pruett Electrical Engineering and Center for Information and Computer Security College of Engineering, University of North Texas AbstractThis paper is based on the theme, topics and experiences of a senior/first-year-graduate verysuccessful new course taught during the Fall of 2012 to an enthusiastic small group of seniorsand graduate
Science with an emphasis in Database Engineering. He is currently employed at Lucid Software Inc.Dr. Afsaneh Minaie, Utah Valley University Afsaneh Minaie is a professor of Computer Engineering at Utah Valley University. Her research interests include gender issues in the academic sciences and engineering elds, Embedded Systems Design, Mobile Computing, Wireless Sensor Networks, and Databases.Dr. Ali Sanati-Mehrizy Dr. Ali Sanati-Mehrizy is a graduate of the Milton S. Hershey Pennsylvania State University College of Medicine. He completed his undergraduate studies in Biology from the University of Utah. In July 2013, he will begin a Pediatrics residency at the UMDNJ-Newark University Hospital. His research interests
theory of self-authorship3 will be introduced as the theoreticalframework for looking at the individual through the lenses of context and institution, as well asthe larger cultural paradigm. Next, the methodological framework informing the research designand the research design and methods used throughout this study will be offered. Finally, theresearch findings of identity development and formation of females who have persisted inundergraduate engineering programs and how this impacts their professional choices will bediscussed.Literature ReviewResearch reflects increased enrollments of females in STEM majors; for example, women makeup the majority of those studying the physical and life sciences (57%). Yet the proportion ofSTEM major females
were incorporated into curricula only as presentation items, if coveredexplicitly at all. In any case, students were not being required to do any related work. It is well-recognized, however, that students learn best when they have to do something themselves.Therefore, programs must ensure that there are discrete modules covering these topicssomewhere in their curriculums, and preferably in multiple contexts. For example, anintroductory course could include a lecture on the regulatory environment affecting the field.Then, the capstone design report could require a discussion of regulatory issues, if any.Contemporary issues, societal issues, etc., certainly are easily fit throughout the curriculum.Besides preparing the students for their
. d. For the “life-long learning” outcome, one can use examples of undergraduate research projects and examples of library literature searches found in project reports. Some programs also put forth the number of students who apply to graduate school.No Mappings of SOs to PEOs,No matter how the PEOs and SOs are defined by the program, the PEV will expect to see amapping of the PEOs to the SOs in the self-study. One example of such a mapping is shown inTable 12.Insufficient Posting/Publishing of SOsThe SOs represent a commitment to the learning experiences of the students in the program, andthus should be clearly conveyed to all constituents by adequate posting and publishing the SOs,such as: a. In the university catalog within
Faculty as well as faculty from other colleges and universities on STEM related grants, activities, and endeavors. Dr. Fontenot teachers Professional Communications for Engineers: practical applications to written, oral, and Internet communication as well as an introduction to engineering ethics and service learning. She sits on numerous councils and boards, including the Texas Alliance for Minorities in Engineering Board, Texas Tech Teacher Education Council, the Pre College Engineering Council, and the Service Learning Faculty Advisory Council. She publishes in engineering related journals and presents at STEM conferences like ASEE, STEM Best Practices, and Frontiers in Education.Mr. Richard A Burgess, Texas Tech
, while the US suffers anincreasingly serious decline in the number of engineering graduates and a lack of well-educatedengineers.While until quite recently U.S. engineering firms dominated in global infrastructure projects andthe development of new design and engineering solutions, they are now becoming minorparticipants and are quite often not even invited to propose and bid for important projects. Earlierlast century the US has built structures such as the Empire State Building in fewer than 18 Proceedings of the 2013 ASEE Gulf-Southwest Annual Conference, The University of Texas at Arlington, March 21 – 23, 2013. Copyright 2013, American Society for Engineering
Paper ID #6832Implementing a Student-Suggested Course in Engineering Career Develop-mentDr. Julie E. Sharp, Vanderbilt University Dr. Julie E. Sharp, M.A.T., M.A., Ph.D., is Professor of the Practice of Technical Communications in the Vanderbilt University School of Engineering, where she teaches written and oral communication courses in the Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering and the General Engineering Division. Her teaching and research interests include job search communication, learning styles, and integrating com- munication in engineering courses. In 2012, she won an Apex Award for Excellence in
Paper ID #7638Assessment of a New Approach to Implement Life-Long Learning into Civiland Environmental Engineering CoursesDr. Claude Villiers, Florida Gulf Coast University Dr. Villiers is an associate professor in the U.A. Whitaker College of Engineering (WCOE) at Florida Gulf Coast University. He received his Ph.D. in Civil Engineering with a concentration in Materials and Construction from the University of Florida in 2004. His areas of principal research interest are Civil Engineering Materials and Asphalt Technology, Highway and Pavement Design, Transportation, Specifications and Construction Variability of Pavement
product team; the team could include people who must fulfill roles in finance,marketing, history, law, design, procurement, scientific research, manufacture, maintenance, andthe list could go on and on. The ability to effectively communicate is the most important skillthat allows an engineer-leader to bridge the gap. The continual development of all leaders,especially engineer-leaders, must include training and development of this most important skill.Therefore, every single LTP offsite has included this element as a means for training our futureleaders to bridge the gap. The “Decision Making: The Full Monty!” offsite weekend summitwas no exception.What makes the program unique compared to others?What other classroom, training, teaching, or
. For some people, it means alot of work and efforts preparing the best lecture possible in order to teach a course. It needs tobe understood that Online Learning should not be the same in every field. If we consider lecturesin the field of social sciences, they may require a big amount of graphs, pictures, tables, anddiagrams, in arts, they may require audio, high-quality images, and video. However, it is adifferent story when STEM courses are considered. Even between the fields that compose theSTEM area, there are remarkable differences between the teaching styles. For example, in math, Proceedings of the 2013 ASEE Gulf-Southwest Annual Conference, The University of Texas at Arlington, March 21
for Today’s Practicing Engineers”, Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) 1997 Conference •”Successful Model for Corporate-University Col- laboration”, International Association for Continuing Engineering education (IACEE), 2001 5th World Conference, in partnership with the University of Michigan-Ann Arbor •”Designing Engineer Educa- tional Partnership Model”, IACEE 2001 5th World Conference, in partnership with Michigan Technolog- ical University •”Reengineering a Successful Graduate Program”, IACEE 2001 5th World Conference, in partnership with Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute •”Developing Product and Manufacturing Integra- tion Engineers”, IACEE 2001 5th World Conference, in partnership with
Paper ID #6655Developing a Marketing High-Technology Products and Innovations Course:First Year ReviewDr. James V Green, University of Maryland, College Park Dr. James V. Green leads the education activities of Mtech at the University of Maryland as the Di- rector of Entrepreneurship Education with responsibilities for the Hinman CEOs Program, the Hillman Entrepreneurs Program, and the Entrepreneurship and Innovation Program. As a Senior Lecturer and Associate Director with Mtech, Dr. Green designs and teaches undergraduate and graduate courses in entrepreneurship and technology commercialization. Dr. Green’s research
engineering degrees. The Biomedical Engineering degreewas created in 1970 and was among the first few in the Nation. In 1999, the science andengineering colleges were combined to become the College of Engineering and Science. Thisreorganization and the administrative changes led to a new vision for the college to be the best atintegrating engineering and science in both education and research1,2. With this new vision,nanotechnology was determined to be a strategic area of focus. Funding was obtained to build aresearch center, the Institute for Micromanufacturing in 1999. Several faculty were hired withexpertise in nanotechnology, and graduate courses were added to the roster until a fullMicro/Nano concentration was established in the Ph.D
– foundations of teachingand learning. Tier 2: Scholarship – educational research and scholarly work in the field. Tier 3:Practice and Portfolio – reflective teaching portfolio development and peer mentoring.Tier 1 Content: Foundations of Teaching and Learning - Putting theory into practiceAreas of focus for this level of faculty development should include: Learning styles/Learning processes. Learning theory. Course and curriculum design. Constructive Alignment. Active learning (student engagement). Assessment and Evaluation. Teaching with Technology.Tier 2 Content: Scholarship:In this level participants become engaged in a largely self-directed process of developing,documenting, and exploring their own ‘mental model’ of
development? Service learning is useful for acquainting students with elements of professional practice such as communication, relationship building and networking as well as the required level of care for various tasks. o Service learning improves student understanding of the impact of engineering designs and solutions to real projects that can have a positive impact on different groups in society.2) Compare the value of international experiences with the value of similar domestic experiences Because of the regional diversity present in the United States, I believe that domestic service learning projects can provide an equally rich experience as international ones
Tool, Die and Mold Making. The second year laboratory waslocated in a different, much newer facility than the original machining laboratory. The two yearassociate degree in Tool, Die and Mold Making was important to local industry, and therefore tothe college. Even though the need for Tool, Die and Mold Makers was a critical one, thenumbers were not large. Shortly after this program was implemented the largest employer ofprogram graduates had significant cutbacks. This did not cause the enrollment numbers to shrinkdramatically, but it did suggest that enrollment growth in this program would be limited. Inorder to best leverage available resources for the program, a complete redesign of thecombinations of course offerings, the physical
, instructional goals, personal preferences, and educationalresources.The POGIL approach relies on inquiry-based, student-centered classrooms and laboratories thatenhance learning skills while insuring content mastery.7 POGIL is designed to replace traditionallecture-only methods by encouraging students to discuss course materials, rather than listening tothe instructor. Literature in the field of student learning indicates that the POGIL approach hasbeen effectively used in disciplines such as mathematics, biology, and chemistry for post-secondary education.3,4,7The innovative POGIL approach is a nationally tested and proven pedagogical strategy thatincorporates recent educational research on how students learn from kindergarten through post-secondary
, students in this course have been offeredthe option of attending a hands-on library workshop and receiving extra credit on a relatedproject report. Since several hundred students enroll in over 25 sections of this course each fall,the workshop format was developed as an alternative to traditional one-shot library instruction,which is not practicable on this scale. To better assess how the workshops were serving thestudents in these large classes, a group of instructors from the class and the engineering librarianworked together to evaluate student success with research projects and overall informationliteracy within the freshman engineering curriculum. The first initiative was to design a citationstudy assessing submitted projects for quality and
Institute of Technology. She worked for several years as a manufacturing controls engineer for Ford Motor Company and Detroit Edison before returning to graduate school to pursue her PhD. She has been an active member of the American Society of Engineering Edu- cation (ASEE) and the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) since 2004. Her research interests include multidisciplinary educational robotics, human-robot interfaces and identifying strategies to increase enrollment and retention of women and minorities in engineering. She is the co-founder of the first multidisciplinary minor in robotics at Rose-Hulman. She is currently the director of the minor. She is also co-PI of the Rose-Hulman building
(HESA) program at Ohio State University, working as a graduate research association for Dr. Terrell L. Strayhorn’s Research Group for Higher Education Research & Policy (CHERP). His research interests lie at the intersection of diverse higher education experiences, sense of belonging, and the psychological impact of college environments.Mr. Michael Steven Williams, Ohio State University Currently a Ph.D. student in Higher Education and Student Affairs at Ohio State University, Williams’s research interests center on two aspects of higher education: (1) the student, particularly graduate stu- dent socialization and mentoring and (2) the institution, with focus on specialized institutions such as historically Black
Nanoengineering featurecoursework involving engineering at the nanoscale. It is designed for students with a strongbackground in engineering who seek additional, specialized training in order to find industrial orgovernment positions in fields that utilize nanotechnology. The graduate program has four focusareas: Nanocomposites, Nanoelectronics, Nanobiology and Computational Nano. Further detailsabout JSNN can be found at http://jsnn.ncat.uncg.edu In 2010 North Carolina A&T State University and The University of North Carolina atGreensboro signed a Memorandum of Understanding on behalf of JSNN with BharatiVidyapeeth Deemed University in Pune, India (BVDU) which involves student and facultyexchanges. As a part of this program, two faculty
, and a Ph.D. in Mechanical Engineering from UCLA in 1992. He is currently pursuing an M.A. in Biblical Literature from Oral Roberts University. His current research interests involve contributions from the field of engineering to the current science/theology discussion, reverse engineering of natural systems, and the preparation of scientists and engineers for missions work within technical communities.Hon. Peter Wesley Odom Mr., Oral Roberts University P. W. Odom is currently an undergraduate student of Engineering Physics at Oral Roberts University. His intentions are to begin graduate work in modern physics and engineering after graduation with the eventual goal of obtaining a Ph.D. and becoming a professor of
and University of Puerto Rico Mayagüez colleagues12. These workshops aretailored for engineering faculty and engineering deans interested in renovating theirengineering programs to better serve their country/region’s needs. Faculty from relateddisciplines and graduate students interested in pursuing academic careers are encouraged toattend. The workshops provide a space and time for faculty and deans to learn aboutengineering education issues, revamping its curricula, effective teaching/learning methodsand become aware of best practices so they can become more effective educators.During the last two years, HP has partnered with IIDEA, the International Institute forDeveloping Engineering Academics13, to not only sponsor, but also participate
received his bachelor’s degree in Civil Engineering from Florida State University in 2006 and his master’s degree in Environmental Engineering from Purdue University in 2008. While in the School of Engineering Education, he works as a graduate research assistant in the X-Roads Research Group and has an interest in cross-disciplinary practice and engineering identity development. Page 23.644.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2013 Global Engineering Design Symposium: Engaging the Sociocultural Dimensions of Engineering Problem SolvingAbstractGlobal
and graduation and the other between graduation and theirsecond year as a practicing engineer, The two specific aims of this project are: (1) model thedevelopment of student and early-career engineer epistemology and conceptual understanding ofcivil design concepts, and (2) identify key conceptual and epistemological changes that challengeearly-career engineers. The specific research questions of this project are: 1. How do engineering students change conceptually and epistemologically during the course of their undergraduate education? a. Which previous student beliefs and ways of thinking are the most resistant to change and interfere the most with learning? 2. How do early-career engineers change
workforce requirement. FLATE’s flexible college and career pathway (Figure 1.)was created for Florida students and incumbent workers in order to prepare them with theeducation, skills, and credentials to support both small and large manufacturers, and to create atrained workforce for Florida which would have a positive impact on the economy and attractnew business enterprises to the state. The restructure of the A.S. Degree for engineeringtechnology education statewide required the direct address of significant challenges connected toindustry relevance, student recruitment, curriculum content, and faculty professionaldevelopment. The complexity of this higher technical education transformation is best describedin five phases: Research and Planning
, the grandsons ofCharles Lindbergh and the Ryan NYP designer Donald Hall along with the Aerospace Vehicle Proceedings of the 2013 ASEE Gulf-Southwest Annual Conference, The University of Texas at Arlington, March 21 – 23, 2013. Copyright 2013, American Society for Engineering EducationDesign (AVD) Laboratory have decided to define a modern challenge to honor the 1927 designand operator team to better understand the impact of state-of-the-art technology on advancedaircraft performance.It would not be a stretch to say that since the 1950s there have been no significant gains ingeneral aviation (GA) operations and technology. This study hopes to re-energize