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Displaying results 241 - 268 of 268 in total
Conference Session
Measuring Perceptions of Engineering
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
John Ochs
Session 1410 References1. Christman, Leah and Ochs, John B., “Implementing an Entrepreneurial, Standards- Focused, Project-Based Learning Model,” Community of Agile Partners in Education (CAPE) Collaborative Faculty Project Grant, January 2004.2. Ochs, John, B, Watkins, Todd A, and Snyder, Drew M., “Lessons Learned in Building Cross-Disciplinary Partnerships in Entrepreneurship Education through Integrated Product Development (IPD),” Proceedings of the 2003 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition, June 2003.3. Ochs, John, B, and Watkins, Todd A., “Lehigh’s Interdisciplinary Capstone Courses in Integrated Product Development (IPD),” Abstract
Conference Session
Internet Computing and Networking
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
Shelton Houston; Christopher Herrod; Steven Blesse
areasfor these courses were system maintenance, data communications, network components, networkplanning & design, project management, and operating platforms. These courses were createdalong with 13 other courses to complete the four-year curriculum.Collectively, the courses offered a two-course sequence in computer architecture & maintenance,a four-course sequence in local area networking, a four-course sequence in wide area networking,a five-course sequence in Windows client-server networking, a two-course sequence in open Page 10.809.1source client-server networking, and a two-course senior capstone sequence. Proceedings of the
Conference Session
Best Zone Papers
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
John L. Falconer; Janet deGrazia; Al Weimer
to the multiple-choice questions by aiming the clicker at a wall-mountedreceivers and pressing A,B,C,D, or E. The H-ITT acquisition program display is also projected ontoa screen for the entire class to see. The ID number (or the student initials) of each clicker isdisplayed indicating that the student response has been successfully collected, but it does not showthe student answer. The H-ITT Acquisition program summarizes the data and displays the classresponses in histogram form,. After class, a separate program associates student names with the remote ID numbers andgrades the responses instantly. It allows the instructor to assign point values to each answer for eachquestion (e.g., 3 points for correct answer, 1 point for incorrect
Conference Session
Curriculum Development in Mechanical ET
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
Francis Di Bella
emergencyrepair of ruptured natural gas pipelines. University application of this interest includes instruction in thefollowing courses: Machine Design, Statics and Dynamics, Intro. to Design and Intro. to Product Design aswell as student Capstone Design Projects. He is also the Faculty Advisor for the Student’s Mini-Bajavehicle competition. He and his colleagues have instituted a Capstone Senior Design Project course forengineering technology students that includes an integrated group of Computer, Electrical and MechanicalEngineering Technology students. He has also structured an Intro. to Product Design course for non-engineering majors as part of the University’s new School of Technological Entrepreneurship .In 2002 Prof. Di Bella was awarded the
Conference Session
Assessment & Quality; Accreditation in Engineering Education
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
Azzedine Lansari; Akram Al-Rawi, McKendree University; Faouzi Bouslama, Université Laval
are required to develop an electronic portfolio that includessamples of their most important learning experiences, which may be projects, term papers,extracurricular experiences, and internship reports. The electronic portfolio is reviewed andassessed by faculty members on a regular basis to monitor student progress. During their finalsemester, students finalize their electronic portfolio and present their achievements to a facultypanel. The electronic portfolios allow students to document and reflect on their learningexperiences. Integrating learning outcomes into the curriculum provides a mean for faculty toassess the effectiveness of the academic programs.1. IntroductionUniversities in the USA and worldwide are taking a critical look at
Conference Session
Implementing the BOK - Can it Be Done?
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
Karl Meyer; Allen Estes; Ronald Welch
experience in the four sub-disciplines of Structures, Geotechnical, Hydrologyand Hydraulics, and Construction Management. A depth component in Structures is providedthrough required courses in Structural Analysis, Steel Design, and Reinforced Concrete Design.Additionally, there is a mandatory Capstone design course as well as a widely subscribedprogram of Independent Study projects. The three elective offerings are mostly in the area ofstructural or environmental engineering. Thermodynamics and Electrical Engineering provideengineering breadth outside the civil discipline.A key difference from other institutions in that all students have a full scholarship and are fullyexpected to graduate in four years. The summers are filled with military training
Conference Session
Graduate Aerospace Systems Engineering Design
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
Paul Lagace; Earll Murman
Aircraft Systems Engineering is introduced as anillustration of content and pedagogy addressing lifecycle topics. Based upon several years ofexperience of participation in these programs and in offering curriculum, the authors put forwardseven observations to stimulate further dialog and progress on this topic.IntroductionUndergraduate subjects on aircraft design have been taught for many years in aeronautical oraerospace engineering departments, often as a capstone subject. A key pedagogical objective isteaching tradeoffs among disciplinary needs to meet system-level requirements. The focus isusually on preliminary design or prototyping. Aircraft, however, are complex systemscomprising many subsystems, and usually represent only one element in an
Conference Session
Course and Curriculum Innovations in ECE
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
James Everly
PointAverage and complete 36 credit hours of Honors level coursework in order to receiver the "WithHonors" distinction at graduation. The 36 credit hours of coursework must include a minimumof 9 credit hours of Honors Special Topics courses. The remaining credit hours are obtainedfrom the following categories: Honors Contracts with faculty members, Independent Study,Advanced Placement Credit, Capstone Design Projects, and special Co-op projects [1].An Honors Contract for Electric Circuits II is the focus of this paper and emphasizes simplifiedtools and test procedures for determining the electrical parameters of a quartz crystal. On abroader scale, a companion paper at this conference by Ossman [2] describes the requirements ofthe University of
Conference Session
Curriculum Issues in Software Engineering
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
Steve Chenoweth; Donald Bagert
Future Growth of Software Engineering Baccalaureate Programs in the United States Donald J. Bagert, Stephen V. Chenoweth Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology Abstract Despite the large current number of software engineering professionals in the United States,as well as projections that it is one of the largest-growing fields in the nation for the currentdecade, growth in the number of Bachelor’s degree programs in the United States has recentlydeclined. There are currently only about thirty schools in the United States that offer abaccalaureate degree in software engineering (including several
Conference Session
Issues in Engineering Physics
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
James McNeil
, machine shop, optical design, instrumentation, and computers. Taken in the summerbetween the sophomore and junior years, the field session runs for six weeks. Once through thisintensive training, the students have the necessary skills to be useful in research labs and oftenfind employment in research labs. Another principal benefit of the summer field session is thehigh level of camaraderie developed and friendships formed among the students. After thisintensive experience, the students have bonded into a cohort physics class. These relationshipshelp sustain the students through the challenging junior year curriculum. The other notable curricular feature is the senior design capstone experience. Whilewell-known to any ABET-accredited
Conference Session
TC2K Issues and Experiences
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
Ronald Land
commercial systems designed to support web-based collection of assessment data.[6,7]Most of these systems are designed to support portfolio development or to permit individualfaculty members to establish and monitor student performance against self-specified courseobjectives. When looking at the needs of the Penn State programs and circumstances, thesesystems and approaches either did not offer the flexibility that was desired, were focused oncollecting fundamentally different information than was planned at Penn State, or involved much Page 10.867.4more expense than was felt feasible. Instead, a project was undertaken to develop an in-house
Conference Session
Assessment Issues in 1st-Yr Engineering
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
Mark Urban-Lurain; Taner Eskil; Marilyn Amey; Timothy Hinds; Jon Sticklen
Engineering and will soon complete his Ph.D. research in thearea of internet agent support for electronic commerce. Mr. Eskil has been instrumental in developments in theCollege of Engineering freshman gateway course in computational tools.An academic specialist in the MSU Mechanical Engineering Department, Timothy Hinds teaches undergraduatecourses in machine design and statics as well as advises senior engineering student teams working onindustrially sponsored capstone design projects. He also teaches a senior-level undergraduate internationaldesign project course and has taught graduate-level courses in innovation and technology management.Mark Urban-Lurain is Director of Instructional Technology Research and Development in the Division ofScience
Conference Session
Assessing Where We Stand
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
Robert Pangborn; Renata Engel
third of the programs reported thatmeasuring achievement of general education goals is attempted as part of the assessment activity.The kinds of assessment methods included a wide variety of student, alumni and employersurveys and interviews, and to a lesser extent, portfolios, capstone projects and practica, andstandardized testing. The survey also found substantial variability in the extent to which Page 10.193.2program outcomes were mapped to course goals and outcomes. Proceedings of the 2005 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition Copyright 2005, American Society for
Conference Session
Writing and Communication I
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
Beverlee Kissick; Alysia Starkey; Jung Oh; Judith Collins
. Page 10.1305.2 meet regularly to discuss, evaluate, revise, and reimplement our collaborative project. Proceedings of the 2005 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition Copyright ASEE 2005, American Society for Engineering Education Session 1661Review of literatureInformation literacy can be defined as a set of capabilities; however, it is also an instructionaland intellectual movement13, similar to cross-curricular writing programs that emerged in thelate 1960s with the writing-process movement. Instruction in IL is now viewed as an array ofactivities in an institutional, collaborative
Conference Session
Early College Retention Programs
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
Wayne Burleson; Theodore Djaferis; Paul Dobosh; Orin Hoffman
use the popularHandyboard robotic platform developed by Martin [10]. Some courses take the form ofmini-capstone courses, requiring several pre-requisite courses in electronics and/orprogramming [5]. Other courses are purely introductory, requiring no pre-requisites.Especially at liberal arts institutions, most of these courses have used the roboticplatforms as means to introduce the “big ideas” of engineering: iterative design, idealversus real world designs, design tradeoffs, and handling complexity [4].However, while students leaving these courses have had a broad exposure to bothhardware and software as well as a hands on introductions to some of the “big ideas”,they still lack certain engineering strategies and intuitions. Our experience
Conference Session
BME Potpourri
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
Roberta Berry; Jonathan Olinger; Paul Benkeser
different implications for the allocation ofpublic and private resources, a matter of concern in a world still characterized by scarcity inmeeting the basic needs of many. There may be widely held values concerning the environmentand sustainability that are separate from health and safety concerns. The twenty-first-centuryengineer must be aware of and competent to address these sorts of ethical and social issues—andthis imposes new demands on educational programs for engineers.11,12 As ABET recognizes incriterion 3(f), students must understand their “professional and ethical responsibility” [emphasisadded] and, in criterion 3(c), students must be able to design a project to meet “desired needswithin realistic constraints such as economic
Conference Session
Documenting Success
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
Carl Bern; Brian Steward; Amy Kaleita-Forbes; Steven Mickelson; Thomas Brumm
• active learning techniques • academic dishonesty • ABET accreditation • electronic portfolios • capstone design projects • competencies • advisingThe response by faculty, staff and graduate students to the ABE Learning Circle has been good.There is a core group of eight to ten faculty members that regularly attend. Many others haveindicated that they would like to attend, but schedule conflicts don’t allow them. And of course,having donuts available never hurts attendance.The ABE Learning Circle allows us to foster an interest in the scholarship of teaching within ourfaculty. It gives us an informal and non-threatening venue to explore new ideas and to
Conference Session
New Approaches & Techniques in Engineering I
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
Xianfgu Zong; Marcia Fischer; Malgorzata Chranowska-Jeske; James Morris; Fu Li; Cynthia Brown; Agnes Hoffman
, including its focus on service learning,community partnerships, internships and capstone experiences. The Maseeh College ofEngineering and Computer Science, one of seven PSU schools and colleges, offers B.S.,M.S., M.Eng., and Ph.D. degrees in a range of engineering and computer sciencedisciplines. Students in engineering and computer science at PSU benefit from closeinvolvement with local high-tech industry, including companies such as Intel, IDT, LSILogic, Credence, Electro-Scientific Industries, InFocus, Maxim, Mentor Graphics,Flextronics, Tektronix, Triquint Semiconductor, Siltronic, and others.PSU has a climate which supports international initiatives, led by President Dan Bernstine,who has identified internationalization of the campus and the
Conference Session
Ethical Roles: Admins, Government, Industry
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
June Marshall; John Marshall
Ethicsand Character Education curriculums, including the Character Counts! Coalition (1993),the Child Development Project (1981), and the Positive Action Model (1998). Inaddition, a presentation of a senior research paper on Character Education highlighted thenational call for educators to address this arena in classrooms.Students were actually relieved to be able to openly discuss these issues and garnerresponses to thoughts and questions from peers and faculty. They left that day feelingrefreshed by the honesty in their own personal evaluation of morals, values, and ethics.Students also felt energized by having taken this first step in understanding the role ofEthics and Character Education in today’s public school classrooms.Due to this positive
Conference Session
Potpourri Design
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
Steven Beyerlein; Eric Davishahl; Denny Davis; Jim Lyons; Kenneth Gentili
and Director of the TransferableIntegrated Design Engineering Education (TIDEE) project, a Pacific Northwest consortium of institutionsdeveloping improved curriculum and assessments for engineering design education. Dr. Davis teaches and assessesstudent learning in multidisciplinary capstone design courses. He is a Fellow of ASEE.STEVEN BEYERLEINSteven Beyerlein is professor of Mechanical Engineering at the University of Idaho, where he coordinates thecapstone design program and regularly participates in ongoing program assessment activities. For these efforts hewon the UI Outstanding Teaching Award in 2001. He received a Ph.D. in M.E. from Washington State Universityin 1987. His research interests include catalytic combustion systems
Conference Session
Non-Technical Skills for ET Students
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
Linda Hjorth; Barb Eichler; John Morello; Ahmed Khan
multi-media, group exercises,Internet exercises, and group lab projects to enhance and support direct instruction. Educatorscan enhance student learning by conducting lectures in a friendly manner, so that nobody feelsstress or is afraid to ask a question. No learning can take place in a tense environment.IV. Technology, Society and Culture Objectives and MethodologiesStudents at DeVry University are given the challenge and opportunity to guide and direct theirtechnological knowledge into responsible awareness and choices for local/global solutions ofproblems and 21st Century urgent issues. All DeVry students must pass a senior-level inter-disciplinary capstone Humanities course entitled “Technology, Society and Culture”. Thiscourse challenges
Conference Session
State of the Art in 1st-Year Programs
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
Kenneth Brannan; Phillip Wankat
Conference Session
Program Level Assessment
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
Constantin Chassapis; Hamid Hadim; Kishore Pochiraju; George Korfiatis; Keith Sheppard; David Vaccari
, - Projects, ME Program Committee Select Student Work to represent Outcomes - Laboratory, etc. proposes changes to - Courses or Program, - Program Outcomes, or - Assessment Process Students Complete Course Survey via the Compile Information into Web SPAD Form
Conference Session
International Engineering Education II
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
Radha Balamuralikrishna; Kurt Rosentrater
that this discipline has gained its rightful place in the company ofengineering and engineering technology. This new level of partnership and collaboration betweenengineering and technology programs promises to be a step in the right direction for society at large.Engineering and technology majors both supplement and complement each other’s knowledge andskills and it is crucial for educators to build bridges of active interaction. This paper takes aim atone specific as well as basic need in teamwork and interdisciplinary projects – ethics and itsimplications for professional practice. The primary focus here is to promote ethics education amonga wider audience that includes industrial technologists.A preliminary study suggests that students
Conference Session
Innovative Graduate Programs & Methods
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
Thomas Walker; Susan Magliaro; Michael Alley; Hassan Aref, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University; Alex Aning, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University; Hayden Griffin; Mark Sanders, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University; Marie Paretti, Virginia Tech; Richard Goff; Janis Terpenny, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University; Vinod Lohani, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University; Jenny Lo, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University; Jean Kampe, Michigan Technological University
learning, instruction, andevaluation and how to properly implement those theories in an engineering classroom. TheMEngE program is a non-thesis degree, which will require a minimum of 30 credits, includingthree to six credits for a project report.The proposed minimum entrance requirement for these two programs is a Bachelor of Science(BS) degree in engineering, physics, mathematics or any of the natural sciences and a 3.0 GPA inthe last 60 hours of the undergraduate program. Other applicants will have to meet specifiedrequired mathematics and science courses. Typical courses for these degrees include: Preparingfor the Engineering Professoriate (3 credits), Design in Engineering Education and Practice (3credits), Foundations of Engineering
Conference Session
Assessment & Quality; Accreditation in Engineering Education
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
Tom Thomas; Mohammad Alam
as course content revisions, curriculum modifications, modernization of capstone design project requirements, and updating of laboratories. Always keep in mind that the reviewers are going to be specifically looking at the process of program improvement, and the documentation must show that the programs are improving.4. Find an ABET champion and reward him/her Although the entire faculty in the department should be involved in preparing for ABET accreditation, there should be one individual that is responsible for preparing Page 10.1145.7 the ABET self-study report. This individual should be conversant with the latest
Conference Session
Design Education
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
Shyi-Jeng Tsai; Pei-Fen Chang; Jiunn-Chi Wu
though the objects discussed in the course (e.g. gear or linkage Mechanisms) are very concrete. Especially the symbolic representation of mechanisms is meaningless to most students if they cannot establish the mapping relation between abstract symbols and realistic mechanisms in mind.(2) There is no close relation between the individual course contents. It is not necessary, for example, the chapter “Cam Mechanisms” and “Gear Mechanisms” in a given order to teach. As a result, the students are not capable of integrating the diverse knowledge from the course to solve practical kinematic problems later by their project or capstone design.(3) Only by the chapter “Cam Mechanisms”, the students can acquire design ability
Conference Session
Emerging Trends in Engineering Education Poster Session
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
George Nowak; Barry Shoop; Lisa Shay
DELIBERATE LONGITUDINAL CURRICULAR INTEGRATION: TOPICAL LINKAGES AND CONCEPT REINFORCEMENT Barry L. Shoop, George A. Nowak, and Lisa A. Shay United States Military Academy, Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, West Point, New York, 10996 U.S.A. email: Barry.Shoop@usma.eduAbstract. Students in many engineering programs feel that their educational experience consists of a series of isolated courses that build expertise in discrete topical areas. The only time these discrete topics are integrated is in a capstone engineering project during their senior year. Understanding how topics covered in one