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Displaying results 241 - 270 of 270 in total
Conference Session
ASEE Multimedia Session
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
M. P. Sharma; Matthew Hayes; Edward Anderson; Roman Taraban
Session 2793 Ethical Responsibility of Engineers for Alumnus Whistleblowing Roman Taraban, Edward E. Anderson, M. P. Sharma, and Matthew W. Hayes Texas Tech / Texas Tech / University of Wyoming / Texas TechIntroductionCollege workload—the amount of academic work expected of students—is one of the mostimportant factors affecting students’ engagement with their college studies, the quality ofinstruction and learning, and the drop-out rate.1 Workload is determined primarily by collegeinstructors, who control it through the number and nature of assignments in a course—i.e.,through the demands they make of students
Conference Session
Tricks of the Trade Outside of Class
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Manoj Patankar
universities in 1915 in order to allow facultymembers the freedom to research and publish without fear of retribution 1, 2. Consequently, therewere very few, specific reasons under which a tenured faculty could be terminated. For example,ethical misconduct and termination of the department are two of the typical reasons forterminating tenured faculty; however, such incidents are very rare. Furthermore, since January 1,1994, the Age Discrimination in Employment Act has prevented colleges and universities fromimposing mandatory retirement based on age 3. Therefore, award of tenure represents a life-timecommitment for employment on the part of the university.Promotion through the ranks of Assistant, Associate, and Professor is a matter of peerrecognition
Conference Session
Assessment & Quality Assurance in engr edu
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Robert Creese
senior design course requires a large number ofother activities, such as mentoring and peer advising of sophomores, community service projects,report writing and presentation skills, professional ethics, and etc. – and all of these activities,which may be “good” activities, do not help the student integrate the “islands of knowledge” intothe “capstone project”. Other senior design courses have formal team projects with competitionbetween teams from different universities. Few, if any, of the teams have offices on campus orcoordinated class schedules to provide a time or place for the team to work together on theproject as a full team. Teams with equipment may have a workshop space, but usually notsecure office space for discussion, for planning
Conference Session
Issues of Concern to New Faculty
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Richard Bannerot
by amechanical engineering student. Therefore, part of the course objective is to introducestudents to, and build their confidence in, problem-solving. The course is projectoriented and, during a typical semester, one major group project and two or three minorprojects (individual or group) are assigned. While the intent, extent and format of theminor projects change each semester, the format, structure and the evaluation process forthe major projects (which change each semester) have evolved to a more or less steadystate. While the course content includes a potpourri of topics, e.g., the design process,shop practice, manufacturing, creativity, ethics, statistics, intellectual property, codes andstandards, personality issues (Myers-Briggs
Conference Session
Closing Manufacturing Competency Gaps I
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Krishna Krishnan; Janet Twomey; Vis Madhavan; Don Malzahn; Lawrence Whitman
and thus alleviate the problems listed above.A case study is typically defined as, “a problem statement suitable for use by students and set innarrative form. The narrative should provide information that will lead more to a discussion of a 5problem than to its solution” . The use of cases studies in managerial and business science ispervasive and well documented5. The use of case studies in engineering education has just begunto become a useful tool for teaching subjects such as engineering ethics and economics.Recently Raju and Sankar6 reported on their research investigating “Teaching real-world issuesthrough case studies.” The typical approach is to use a single case study that was utilized in asingle course
Conference Session
Assessment in EM Education
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Sami Ainane; Janet Schmidt; Gary Pertmer
outcomes of an engineering education: “the ability to function on a multidisciplinary team” “the ability to communicate effectively” “an understanding of professional and ethical responsibility” “the broad education necessary to understand the impact of engineering solutions in aglobal and societal contest” “a recognition of the need for an ability to engage in life-long learning” “knowledge of contemporary issues” Page 7.778.1Proceedings of the 2002 American society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition Copyright 2002, American Society for Engineering
Conference Session
The Modern ChE Laboratory
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Christopher Brazel
Biomaterials/Tissue Engineering Introduction to Genetics Bioremediation Ethics in Bioengineering Drug and Gene Delivery In addition to offering biochemical engineering elective courses, a number of chemicalengineering programs have adopted biochemical engineering laboratory experiments into theircurriculum, either through the design of unit operations experiments to enhance the seniorengineering laboratory course, or through methods similar to the one described herein7, whereexperiments are tied in directly to the biochemical engineering lecture course. The range of chemical engineering-related topics (Table
Conference Session
Knowing Students:Diversity and Retention
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
John Demel
Program (IEP) and the Freshman EngineeringHonors (FEH) Program. These new programs retain part of the traditional material but add inhands-on laboratory experiences that lead to reverse engineering and design/build projects. Therelational practices – teamwork and project management, along with report writing and oralpresentations and ethics have assumed important roles in this program. The programs aredesigned to have faculty from all of the degree granting departments teach freshmen. Theseprograms were developed to improve the retention and early decision to stay or leave for newfreshmen and to lay a foundation to better address some of the ABET 2000 accreditation criteria.Retention has improved markedly. This paper provides a brief description
Conference Session
Curriculum and Laboratory Development
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Prasanta Kalita; Peter Lyne; Loren Bode; Alan Hansen
activities have includedfamiliarization with laboratories, computer facilities and network software. Taking into accountthe student learning outcomes specified by ABET, key topics that are now covered include timemanagement and study skills, habits of highly effective people 6, communication skills, creativityand problem solving techniques, and ethical situations in engineering practice. The micro steamcar project is introduced early in the semester so that students have most of the semester to buildtheir cars. In addition, students are assigned to work in teams from the outset.Problem solving is a fundamental skill that engineers are expected to have and is listed by ABETas a necessary attribute for an engineering graduate. However, relatively few
Conference Session
Global Engineering Education
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Daniel Pack; Steven Barrett
decided early on that there would be no pride in authorship. Each co-author was encouraged to critically assess the other’s writing. They both understood itwas for the overall good of the final product. Aside from a similar philosophy, it ishelpful to choose a co-author with a similar work ethic.In Pack and Barrett’s situation, it was a natural choice to work together as co-authors.Pack and Barrett had worked together on a number of projects before the book. Theirwork relationship was founded on friendship, a deep mutual respect for each otherscapabilities, and a similar work ethic. Furthermore, they decided early on that theywould provide a detailed plan to complete the book and that they would be mutuallyaccountable to one another to meet
Conference Session
Trends in Mechanical Engineering
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Proulx Denis; Martin Brouillette; Jean Nicolas; Charron François
. Again, this was done to promote the development of engineering competencies by presenting and applying, throughout the curriculum, material promoting the development of the correct attitudes or “know-how-to-be.” This material includes: teamwork, oral and written communications, creative problem solving, project and time management, ethics and professionalism.2.3 Programming of curriculum contentOnce the content was established, its programming through the eight semesters of the curriculumwas achieved by promoting lateral and longitudinal integration of course material. For us, lateral(or vertical) integration is the close integration of the material presented within a semester. Toachieve this, the material within a given
Conference Session
ASEE Multimedia Session
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Michael Doran; Leo Denton; Dawn McKinney
disciplines, and a myriad ofpersonal difficulties all of which impinge on student success. Other issues not treated by thecognitive-based approach also remain including academic misconduct and drop and failure ratesthat sometime exceed fifty percent. Affective objectives can provide an opportunity tomethodically deal with the attentive, emotional, attitudinal, and ethical dimensions of learning.14In the past year, however, course content has become stable, class sizes were reduced, and a pilotstudy was completed. The purpose of the pilot study was to confront problems largely externalto the cognitive domain, build student motivation, and achieve affective objectives as part of thestudents’ learning process. Central to the pilot study was the
Collection
2002 ASEE North Midwest Section Conference
Authors
Mani Mina
. When asked for the material, some will just bring you the printed version site or copy right off the site and include it in their reports. As the demand for their time and efforts increases, this problem will hunt them more. Unless dealt with correctly, with decisive action from the teacher in the freshman year, this great research tool (the Internet) will be wrongly utilized for the rest of their careers. One of the goals of the educators in the freshman year has to be giving the students guidelines and practices for efficient, ethical, and professional use of the Internet.9. Students can waste time on e-mail and chats and not spend time studying. Perhaps the most threatening item for each individual student is not having
Conference Session
Computers in Education Poster Session
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Gerson de Oliveira
pedagogicalpractices renewal and the “reorganization (th rough new approaches) of the teaching-learning process”. The author also says that isolated technology will not change anything orwill replace an updated teacher. According Lampert, “the computer has to be at the sametime super-esteemed and under-esteemed, it is not a panacea that will solve all teachingproblems” 25. The college teacher, in its educator role, has to be aware that “whentechnology is used with ethics, methodology and in a pondered way, it will be at mankindservice, bringing him a lot of benefits and updates”. It is also important, according to theauthor, to be aware of knowledge dynamics and its pratically explosive expansion. Theteacher must realize that, in this aspect, “only through
Conference Session
Assessment Issues
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Ottis Hoskins; Joni Spurlin; Jerome Lavelle; Sarah Rajala
Page 7.905.9entire undergraduate experience. “Proceedings of the 2002 American Society of Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition Copyright ã 2002, American Society of Engineering EducationFaculty who teach senior engineering courses may be used to gather data on many of theprogram’s outcomes. For example, the capstone senior design course may be use to gather datarelated to, not only engineering ability, but also on ethical consideration, impact of engineeringin global and social context, and how well students function on multidisciplinary teams.As shown in Figure 3, the data collected in some courses may already be available on thecomputer through electronic coursework submissions using tools
Conference Session
Developing ABET Outcomes F--J
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Timothy Hoffman; Christopher Zappe; Steven Shooter; Michael O'Donnell
51-L,” IEEE Spectrum, Vol. 24, No. 2, pp. 36-51. 3. Pinkus, R.L.B, Shuman, L.J., Hummon, N.P., Wolfe, H. (1997) Engineering Ethics: Balancing Cost, Schedule and Risk; Lessons Learned from the Space Shuttle, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. 4. Winsor, D.A. (1988) “Communication failures contributing to the Challenger accident: an example for technical communication,” IEEE Transactions on Professional Communication, Vol. 31, No. 3, pp. 101- 107. 5. Tufte, E.R. (1997) Visual Explanations: Images and Quantities, Evidence and Narrative, Graphics Press, Cheshire. 6. Lighthall, F.F. (1991) “Launching the space shuttle Challenger: disciplinary deficiencies in the analysis of engineering data
Conference Session
ASEE Multimedia Session
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Susan Smith; Anneliese Watt; Caroline Carvill; Julia Williams
to your audience Page 7.707.11why your topic is of interest to them. For example, discuss its history and past use. Discuss othertechniques that are used to achieve similar ends. Explain the impact of the topic in other places, Proceedings of the 2002 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition Copyright c 2002, American Society for Engineering Educationperhaps in other countries. Discuss the global impact of the topic and its possible futures.Discuss its economic, political, or ethical implications.To effectively communicate, that is, so that your voice will be heard, it is not
Conference Session
Educational Trends in Engineering
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Steven Mickelson
related to production, processing, storage, handling, distribution, and use of food and other biological products worldwide, and the responsible management of the environment and natural resources · An understanding of professional and ethical responsibility · An ability to use the techniques, skills, and engineering tools needed for engineering practice · A recognition of the need for, and an ability to engage in, life-long learning · An ability to communicate effectively · The knowledge to understand impacts of engineering solutions locally, nationally, and globally · A knowledge of important contemporary issues · A demonstrated knowledge of agricultural and/or biological sciences, and natural
Conference Session
Design and Innovation
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Daniel Raviv
Synectics Other criteria Ethical considerations Generalizing solutions Identifying potential problems VI. Implementation Planning Carrying through Following up Page 7.440.18Proceedings of the 2002 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition Copyright  2002, American Society for Engineering Education VII. Ideas to market VIII. Intellectual Property Introduction to intellectual property: Patents, Copyrights , Trademarks , Trade Secret, Unfair Competition. 16 * Patents What is a patent? Types of patents, Patentability Patent application; patent claims Disclosure
Conference Session
Assessment of Biomedical Engineering Programs
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Paul King; Joan Walker
connectionsamong concepts pertaining largely to domain content. These findings suggest thatconcept maps are a useful means to portraying the process of knowledge transformationfrom novice to expert. Given the stark differences in expert-novice mappings in bothstudies, however, we find it difficult to recommend that students be evaluated in terms ofhow well their maps converge with those of faculty. It is possible, however, that given a Page 7.322.13more tightly focused question about a specific issue or process (e.g., ethics), comparisonProceedings of the 2002 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference &Exposition
Conference Session
ASEE Multimedia Session
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Brian Argrow
that they appreciate this show of respect and even more have commented that they appreciate that a professor has taken the time to learn their name. 3. Openly discuss ethical/nonethical behavior. Make students aware of the consequences of unethical behavior in the classroom, in the workplace, and in society in general. If their behavior is unacceptable, let them know and enforce the appropriate consequences. 4. Require attendance—indirectly. Graded in-class activities, such as unit quizzes (discussed later), group exercises, etc., encourage attendance. Peer pressure and general enjoyment of an interactive classroom also contribute to low absenteeism. 5. The late-assignment trial allows the students to enforce
Conference Session
Design in the Engineering Core
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Hamid Hadim; Sven Esche
. 24 This design spine allows the development of many of the “soft skills” that areembodied in the ABET EC Criteria 2000. These skills demanded of engineering graduatesinclude effective teaming skills, project management, communications, ethics and engineeringeconomics. Thus, the acquiring of these skills evolves over the four years of the design sequence.In addition, the design spine is a means for enhancing learning, as each of the design courses islinked to a lecture course taught concurrently. Students experience this strong linkage for thefirst time in the second semester of the freshmen year when they take Mechanics of Solidsconcurrently with Engineering Design II. Mechanics of Solids is a 4-credit lecture/recitationcourse that replaced
Conference Session
Current Issues in Computing
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Jose Solarte; Denise Jackson
new technologies. This fact may also alter student’s necessities, expectation andgoals, during their education.Community and employers are also important stakeholders that must be considered. Communityexpectations regarding the quality of education are focused on the way that education encouragesthe responsibilities to the public and the need to practice good citizenship. These responsibilitiesrefer to ethical practices, protection of public health safety and environment, not only meet thelocal state and federal laws, but also considering them as opportunities for improvement beyondcompliance11. Thus, student should impact society on a proactive manner and must satisfyethical practices in all interactions with their communities.On the other
Conference Session
Learning Styles
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Philip Parker
instrument andwas the sole administrator of the KAI in this study. The KAI inventories were distributed to thestudents at the beginning of the semester. Basic confidential feedback of the students’ scores wasprovided several weeks later. No student’s score was revealed to any other individual (student,faculty or otherwise) during this study, in keeping with the ethical standards of the instrument.4.0 Learning Preferences: Theory and ApplicationFor this study, learning preferences are defined as the specific methods individuals prefer to useto access, process, and express information. Learning preferences include study habits,techniques for learning (e.g. rote memorization, write-to-learn), the types of problems peopleprefer to solve, social
Conference Session
Assessment in Large and Small Programs
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Dana Knox
., “Teaching vs. Preaching: EC2000 and the Engineering Ethics Dilemma”, Journal of Engineering Education, vol. 90, no. 1, January 2001, pp. 137-142. “Proceedings of the 2002 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition Copyright Ó 2002, American Society for Engineering Education”Biographical InformationDANA E. KNOX earned his B.S., M.E. and Ph.D. degrees in chemical engineering from Rensselaer PolytechnicInstitute. He joined the chemical engineering faculty at New Jersey Institute of Technology in 1982, and is currentlythe associate chair of that department. He and his wife Petra make their residence in Edison, NJ
Conference Session
New Ideas
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Oguz Soysal
and math knowledge should be sufficient to design and develop the product The product must be doable within the available time and a reasonable budget Students should experience different phases of the design and product development process The selected topic should involve different fields of expertise Students should be able to apply practical considerations such as cost, safety, reliability, economical use of resources, and ethical issuesBecause every year a different theme is selected, no single general-purpose textbook isavailable to cover all technical foundation that students might need. However, the basicconcepts needed for the selected project topics are usually covered in the first course
Conference Session
New Computer ET Course Development
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Kyle Hebsch; Jefferey Stevens; Andrew Gilchrist IV; Joel Weinstein
from day one although they eventually dissipated just in time for thepresentation.”“The work ethic from the beginning was very lax and, as commonly occurs in the rapidmoving quarter system at Northeastern, the company fell behind quickly. It can’t reallybe determined what pushed the team onto the track in the beginning, however the pushdidn’t affect the whole group until the deadlines were eminent.”One of the greatest problems for WareSoft Technology was dividing the work as well asgetting the appropriate personal to complete their assignments. The different backgroundsof the students was the first obstacle the team encountered, while lack of experience withthe platform being used was a close second. The company president had the dubious
Conference Session
Project Based Education in CE
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Eric Matsumoto
Page 7.511.1experiments; understand professional and ethical responsibility; understand the impact of Proceedings of the 2002 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition Copyright © 2002, American Society for Engineering Educationengineering solutions in a global and societal context; and recognize the need for, and have anability to, engage in life-long learning. In addition, few involve interaction with engineeringdesign and construction professionals.Many engineering programs count on the capstone design class to address these importantcriteria. However, implementing a suitable project in a design class improves student learning andallows students to develop abilities and
Conference Session
Focus on Undergraduate Impact
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Kathryn Jablokow
course taken by students after their sophomore year and an off-campus internshipcompleted during the summer after their junior year. The on-campus portion of the ILTM,which is the primary source of material for this paper, engages the students in an extremelyintensive six-week program that focuses on issues such as globalization, ethics, communicationskills, critical thinking, teamwork, and leadership. The students hear lectures and attendworkshops by faculty and corporate leaders, travel to selected industrial and business sites, andwork with companies on significant and real-world management and technological projects.For the project portion of the program, the 20 students are div ided into 4 project teams of 5students each. Each team is
Conference Session
Introduction to Engineering Courses
Collection
2002 Annual Conference
Authors
Thomas Fuja; Stephen Batill; Jay Brockman
, Newton’s solving concurrent spring Structure report, and Laws, statics simultaneous engineering constants discussion on systems of related issues cost modeling equations in satisfying indetermin- in engineering and control Matlab conflicting ate strutures ethics constraints finite elements economicsAs the table illustrates, a number of