body., The first factor is the inclusion of gender issues in engineeringtraining, which can be further broken down into two parts: The first part would be to includegender equality within the engineering training program, the second part of this first factorwould be to include a preparation for entry into the world of work with a gender perspective,both parts aiming to lay the groundwork for gender equality in engineering.The second factor is being able to regulate and measure training on gender equality issueswithin teachers from the School of Engineering. Teachers are considered as points ofreference s and main actors in promoting an environment of gender equality in the classroom.The trainings must include gender equity in engineering and
,” presented atthe American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference, 2022.[2] “The Entrepreneurial Mindset.” KEEN – Engineering Unleashed.https://engineeringunleashed.com/mindset-matters.aspx (accessed Feb. 6, 2022).[3] S. Pugh, Total Design: Integrated Methods for Successful Product Engineering, Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, Boston, 1991. Appendix A – Team Contract Template TEAM CONTRACT 1 ENGINEERING PROJECT Elizabethtown CollegeI. GENERAL INFORMATIONDate:Team Number:Weekly Meeting Time and Place:Team Members and Contact Information: Name
one of the implemented hardware and share it with the instructor. ● A middle ranked GPA student came up with his own design for negating numbers using 2’s complement. This student is currently working with one of the authors on implementing, testing, and publishing his own idea. ● Several students from varying GPA rankings were interested in doing undergraduate research on topics that are related to the course. The early involvement of students in research after their freshman year has created value for both students and instructors. The authors are planning to summarize this early interest in undergraduate research and how it was provoked by the added EML activities in a separate publication.Because these ratings
services.AcknowledgmentThe authors would like to thank J. Niehof for the beautiful images; P. Grochowski for review andcomments on the different versions of this paper; and the engineering librarians P. Grochowski,J. Niehof, and J. Thielen whose work and innovative thinking have made it possible to movethese efforts forward.Citations[1] N. J. Allee et al., “One Institution’s Experience in Transforming the Health Sciences Libraryof the Future,” Medical Reference Services Quarterly, vol. 33, no. 1, pp. 1–16, Jan. 2014, doi:10.1080/02763869.2014.866444.[2] J. Bail and M. Bragdon, “Getting on the Change Train: Facilitating a Reframing of theLiaison Model,” in Approaches to Liaison Librarianship: Innovations in Organization andEngagement, ACRL, 2021.[3] S. Carlson, The
Engineering Education, 85, 2, 93-96.[6] Jalali, Y., Matheis, C. (2019). Imagining relationally: a critical bridge between theory andpractice, AAC&U Transforming STEM Higher Education, Chicago, IL, Nov. 7-9.[7] Jalali, Y., Civjan, S. A. (2020), Many Facets of Imagination: What Really Matters inEngineering Ethics Instruction? Paper presented at 2020 ASEE Virtual Annual ConferenceContent Access, Virtual On line. 10.18260/1-2—34951[8] Royce, Josiah. (1885). The moral insight, In The religious aspect of philosophy: A critique ofthe bases of conduct and of faith. 131-170. Boston, MA, US: Houghton, Mifflin and Company.[9] Buber, M. (1958). I and Thou. New York, NY: Charles Scribner’s Sons.[10] Anzaldúa, G.E. (2015). Light in the dark: Rewriting identity
students to learn. Routledge, New York, 2013.27. Hayden, Katherine, Youwen Ouyang, Lidia Scinski, Brandon Olszewski, and Talbot Bielefeldt, “Increasing student interest and attitudes in STEM: Professional development and activities to engage and inspire learners,” Contemporary Issues in Technology and Teacher Education, 2011, 11(1), pg. 47-69.28. Lumsden, Linda S., Student Motivation To Learn, ERIC Digest, Number 92, 1994.29. Pellegrino, James W., Teaching, learning and assessing 21st century skills, in Guerriero, S. (ed.), Pedagogical Knowledge and the Changing Nature of the Teaching Profession, OECD Publishing, Paris, 2017, available online at: https://doi.org/10.1787/9789264270695-12-en30. Pellegrino, James W. and
viewpoints expressedby the authors. MITRE Public Release Case Number 23-1435. Distribution Unlimited.REFERENCES[1] U.S. Department of Defense, “DoD STEM.” https://dodstem.us/participate/opportunities/?audience=Students (accessed Feb. 24, 2023).[2] National Science Foundation, “NSF Directorate for STEM Education: Funding search,” NSF - National Science Foundation. https://beta.nsf.gov/funding/opportunities (accessed Feb. 24, 2023).[3] S. DuBravac, “The Current Sentiment of the Global Electronics Manufacturing Supply Chain.” IPC, Sep. 2021. [Online]. Available: https://emails.ipc.org/links/0921Current- Sentiment-GEMSC.pdf[4] Semiconductor Industry Association, “SIA Workforce Rountable March 16th, 2018 Summary Report: Challenges
Bulgaria and U.S.,and Dr. Yan was impressed by their Bulgarian pride and cultural awareness. Even though not allideas on the cultural elements materialized, the ideas are presented in a blog post to show whatcould be possible https://yan.wcu.edu/bulgaria/bulgarian-pride/The survey results’ comparison is provided in Figures 3-6 and Table 4. Figure 2. The two groups that finished their projects after demonstrationsFigure 3 presents the results when the students chose “agree”, “neutral”, or “disagree” on thethree statements on teamwork. • I have spent a lot of effort on the team-based project(s). • I enjoy working with other people on a team. • The project rendered a tangible deliverable.Interestingly, after the PBL course, all the
for rural teacher retention,” The Rural Educator, vol. 33, no. 3, 2012.[9] M. Goos, S. Dole, and V. Geiger, “Improving numeracy education in rural schools: Aprofessional development approach,” Mathematics Education Research Journal, vol. 23, no. 2,pp: 129-148, 2011.[10] P. Hardre, D. Sullivan, and N. Roberts, “Rural teachers' best motivating strategies: Ablending of teachers' and students' perspectives,” 2008.[11] T. Lyons, “Different countries, same science classes: Students’ experiences of schoolscience in their own words,” International journal of science education, vol. 28, no. 6, pp: 591-613, 2006.[12] F. Maina, J. Smit, and A. Serwadda, “Professional Development for Rural STEM Teacherson Data Science and Cybersecurity: A University and
‐Specific Faculty Learning Communities,” To Improve the Academy, 34 (1-2), 319-344, 2015.[13] S. Hansen, A. Kalish, W. Hall, C. Gynn, M.L. Holly, & D. Madigan, “Developing a Statewide Faculty Learning Community Program,” New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 97, 71-80, 2004.[14] O.J. Yonge & S.J. Davidson. “Promoting Scholarship and Faculty Development through Faculty Learning Communities. Quality Advancement in Nursing Education,” Quality Advancement in Nursing Education, 3, 2017.[15] L.W. Natkin & T. Kolbe, “Enhancing Sustainability Curricula Through Faculty Learning Communities,” International Journal of Sustainability in Higher Education, 17, 540–558, 2016.[16] S.M. Roth, “Improving Teaching Effectiveness and
entails feelingconcern for another person, whereas “feeling as” another entails feeling the same emotion, or atleast feeling a congruent emotion, as another [6]. According to Cuff [6], distinctions betweentenderness and compassion are more nuanced. Compassion generally involves experiencing anurge to help another after observing their emotion(s), while tenderness emphasizes thevulnerability of the individual being observed [6]. These distinctions highlight the import ofscholar’s being explicit with their definitions of the empathy concepts or dimensions they study,including concepts that they situate as other-than empathy.Clark et al. [4] performed a systematic review on organizational definitions of empathy. Basedon their analysis, they argued
.’s work includes the six-leveltaxonomy: knowledge, comprehension, application, analysis, synthesis, and evaluation. Theselevels of cognition are interdependent, with recognition that real learning is an interactive anditerative process. In A Taxonomy for Teaching, Learning, and Assessment [4], education theoristsand psychologists revisited Bloom’s cognitive domain, removed Bloom’s “synthesis” level, andadded “create” above evaluation [5]. These scholars also included separate taxonomies of thetypes of knowledge used in cognition: Factual Knowledge, Conceptual Knowledge, ProceduralKnowledge, and Metacognitive Knowledge. This study uses the revised framework to gaugewhether critical narratives can move students beyond lower-order thinking like
potential we did some limited trials with latexpours. These did not produce great results– colors seem more likely to blend, potentially due toviscosity of paint mixtures being too low. Despite these challenges, the act of acyrlic pourpainting can be very enjoyable and create attractive paintings.The paint spinning apparatus (Fig. 11) developed for this project costs ~$150 and consists of a12V 250W electric DC motor, a pulse-width modulation (PWM) speed controller, and a 12Vbattery. The motor is rated for 3000 RPM, but has a built in gear reducer of about 10:1, makingthe maximum operable speed about 300 RPM. The motor is mounted on wooden frame madefrom 2x4’s. A small adapter plate made by welding the motor output shaft gear to a 2.5
an increase in thenumber of cadets and other students in the high school enrolling in CS and Cybersecurity coursesand extracurricular activities at the schools. We would also expect to see more students (cadetsincluded) taking AP CS Principles. Given the Project’s focus on ensuring that underserved schoolsand schools with underrepresented students see growth that is on par with the other schools, wewould also expect to see that this increase is equitable across all schools.As part of our analysis, we surveyed the school teams to understand how COVID-19 impactedthe school’s implementation of their plans to include CS and Cybersecurity education in theirschools. Of the 23 schools that responded to the open-ended question about COVID-19’s
.25032, 2015.[10] S. Hoffmann, I. Hua, E. Blatchley, and L. Nies, “Integrating sustainability into coursesacross the engineering curriculum: A faculty workshop model,” American Society forEngineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition, Paper AC 2010-1802, 9 pp, 2010.[11] N. R. Weber, M. Dyehouse, C.A. Harris, R. David, J. Fang, I. Hua, and J. Strobel, “First-year engineering students’ environmental awareness and conceptual understanding through apilot sustainable development module,” American Society for Engineering Education AnnualConference & Exposition. Paper AC 2011-1917. 21 pp, 2011.[12] R. Morris , P. Childs, and T. Hamilton, “Sustainability by design: a reflection on thesuitability of pedagogic practice in design and
Paper ID #36943Adapting Chaos Theory for Undergraduate ElectricalEngineersBenjamin C. Flores (Professor)Hector A. Ochoa (Assistant Professor) Dr. Hector Ochoa is an Associate Professor of Electrical Engineering at Stephen F. Austin State University, where he develops curriculum and laboratories in engineering physics. Dr. Ochoa graduated with his doctorate and M.S. from the University of Texas at El Paso, and a Bachelor’s degree from The University of Guadalajara, Mexico. His current research interests include Radar Image Processing, Compressive Radar, and Engineering Education.Chandra S. Pappu (Assistant Professor
-Teaching-and-Learning- Toolkit.pdf. [Accessed: Feb. 12, 2023].[6] The Helping Hand Project, [Online]. Available: https://www.helpinghandproject.org/home-2-1. [Accessed: Feb. 12, 2023].[7] K. Talbot, ”Using Arduino to Design a Myoelectric Prosthetic”, Honors Theses, College of Saint Benedict and Saint John’s University, 2014.[Online]. Available: https://digitalcommons.csbsju.edu/honor theses/55[8] S. Yagli and S-J. Hsieh, ”MAKER: Designing and Building a Prosthetic Hand for a High School Engineering Design Course”, Proceedings of ASEE Annual Conference, 2018.[9] ”Limb Loss Statistics - Amputee Coalition”, [Online]. Available: https://www.amputee-coalition.org/limb-loss-resource-center/resources-filtered/resources-by- topic/limb
receive up to $10,000 per year to cover tuition, books, and feesand the STA-21’s pay costs above $10,000 per year [17].Baccalaureate Degree Completion Program (BDCP)Designed to assist current college students, the Baccalaureate Degree Completion Program(BDCP) not only pays for the degree, books, rent, and food but also provides full-time Officerpay and benefits while in college and a guaranteed job upon graduation. This program is open tocivilians, enlisted Navy Reserve Sailors, and those inactive in other branches. Applicants must:be enrolled or accepted at a four-year accredited college or university with no NROTC Program;be a full-time student; have completed 60 semester hours; and maintain at least a 2.8 GPA [18].Specialized College
integratedcurriculum at Pittsburgh,” in Proceedings of the AIChE Annual Meeting, November 16-21, 2008,Philadelphia, PA.[3] J.J. McCarthy, R.S. Parker, A.A. Abatan, and M. Besterfield-Sacre. “Building an EvaluationStrategy for an Integrated Curriculum in Chemical Engineering.” Advances in EngineeringEducation, 2(4):1-22, Summer, 2011.[4] J.J. McCarthy, and R.S. Parker. “Evaluation and Results for an Integrated Curriculum inChemical Engineering,” in Proceedings of 2011 ASEE Annual conference and Exposition,Vancouver, BC. 10.18260/1-2-17931.[5] M. J. Baird, and S. L. Shannon. “Unit Operations Lab Bazaar: incorporation of LaboratoryExperiences in Six Integrated Pillar Courses,” in Proceedings of the 2011 ASEE AnnualConference and Exposition, Vancouver, BC
throughoutits 2,600 years history. In particular, there are many earthquakes because of geologicalfeatures given Japan’s location at the marginal point of 4 major continental plates. There are111 active volcanoes in the Japan islands area, which is nearly 7.4% of the total for the entireplanet. In January 2020, the Japanese Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport andTourism disclosed a 70-80% probability of magnitude 8-9 class earthquake(s) within 30years. Even smaller scale but still impactful earthquakes are happening every year andcausing deadly damage. Considering the worldwide data that earthquakes accounted for moredeaths than all other natural hazards combined, causing nearly 56% of total global disastermortality between 1996 and 2015 [12
contents of Alexander emphasize analysis, which clearly aligns with their aims. Text isminimal, which is described by the authors [13, p. xii] as a “student-friendly writing style” which“avoid(s) wordiness and giving too much detail that could hide concepts and impede overallunderstanding of the material.” Alexander 2017 claims to include 2,481 problems of variouskinds which sends a consistent message emphasizing analysis.Modern engineering texts follow a structure which can be mapped to Whitehead’s stages ofromance, precision, and generalization, at least to some extent. Chapters begin with anapplication of the theory to be presented; applications are returned to after the main material ofthe chapter. While these “romantic” and “generalization
Conference And Exposition, Salt Lake City, UT, 2018.[8]D. A. Chen, J. A. Mejia, and S. Breslin, “Navigating equity work in engineering:contradicting messages encountered by minority faculty,” Digital Creativity, vol. 30, no. 4, pp.329–344, Oct. 2019, doi: 10.1080/14626268.2019.1678486.[9]E. McGee and L. Bentley, “The Equity Ethic: Black and Latinx College StudentsReengineering Their STEM Careers toward Justice,” American Journal of Education, vol. 124,no. 1, pp. 1–36, Nov. 2017, doi: 10.1086/693954.[10]E. A. Cech, “Culture of Disengagement in Engineering Education?,” Science, Technology, &Human Values, vol. 39, no. 1, pp. 42–72, Sep. 2013, doi: 10.1177/0162243913504305.[11]“Diversity, Equity & Inclusion | ABET,” Accreditation Board for
– Distinguished Lecture: “Pipeline, Pathway, or Ecosystem – Do our Metaphors Matter?” Dr. Alan Cheville, Bucknell University.19. G. L. Sills, P.E., M.ASCE; N. D. Vroman, P.E.; R. E. Wahl, P.E., M.ASCE; and N. T. Schwanz, P.E. Overview of New Orleans Levee Failures: Lessons Learned and Their Impact on National Levee Design and Assessment. Journal of Geotechnical and Geoenvironmental Engineering © ASCE / May 2008, pg. 556-565.20. Foltz, Z., Kaur, A., Tushaus, W. H., Mikelson, C. S., Skalak, B. V., and Mina, M., The United States Energy Policy: As Determined by Non-experts. Proceedings of the 2012 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference (2012). American Society for Engineering Education.21. Beever, J., & Hess
Supporting Students at Minority-Serving Institutions, vol. 2019, no. Issue 167: Models and Bridges for Supporting Students at Minority-Serving Institutions, 2019.[9] “In Our Own Best Interest: A (Brief) History of Tribal Colleges in America.” https://nacada.ksu.edu/Resources/Academic-Advising-Today/View-Articles/In-Our-Own-Best- Interest-Tribal-Colleges-in-America.aspx (accessed Feb. 09, 2023).[10] C. A. Nelson and J. R. Frye, “and Local Funding AUTHOR ACKNOWLEDGMENTS AUTHOR AFFILIATIONS MINORITY-SERVING INSTITUTIONS Series,” 2016.[11] M. M.-I. J. of Q. S. in and undefined 2012, “Welcome to a new world: Experiences of American Indian tribal college and university transfer students at predominantly white
, Canada, 26-29 June 2011.4. W.T. Riddell, E. Constans, J. Courtney, K. Dahm, R. Harvey, P.M. Jansson, M. Simone, P. von Lockette, B. Wolff, “LessonsLearned from Teaching Project Based Learning Communication and Design Courses,” 2007 ASEE Middle Atlantic SectionFall 2007 Conference, Philadelphia, PA, November 3, 2007.5. P.M. Jansson and R. Elwell, “Design of Photovoltaic Systems for Municipal and School Buildings in Ocean City, NewJersey,” ASEE 2007 Annual Conference Proceedings, Honolulu, HI, June 24-27, 2007.6. S. Hazel and P.M. Jansson, "Photovoltaic System Feasibility Assessments: Engineering Clinics Transforming RenewableMarkets," ASEE 2006 Annual Conference Proceedings, Chicago, IL, June 18-21, 2006.7. P.M. Jansson, S. A. Mandayam and J.L
course, theprimary source for the students was the text Science for Potters [3].The open-ended nature of the problem statement provides the teams of students the opportunity tocreate a diverse array of products that can be created from the local minerals. These can be seenby the wide range of products created by the MET 352 teams in the Spring of 2022. In Figure 1,the design competition winners can be seen, a metric based on scientific merit and creativity wasutilized to determine the winner(s), see Table 2. Table 2: MET 352 Principles of Metallurgical Design Project Competition Rubric Creativity and Originality Score Comments Proper labeling: type of
students across the world.References[1] S. Roslund, E. Rodgers, “Makerspaces” Minnesota: Cherry Lake Publishing, 2013[2] N. Lou, K. Peek, “There are 14 Times as Many Makerspaces as There Were a Decade Ago” Popular Science. Available: https://www.popsci.com/rise-makerspace-by-numbers/[3] Fab Foundation, “Registered Fab Lab Map” Fab Labs. Available: https://www.fablabs.io/labs[4] A. Hira, M. Hynes, “People, Means, and Activities: A Conceptual Framework for Realizing the Educational Potential of Makerspaces,” Educ. Res. Int., vol 2018, Available: https://doi.org/10.1155/2018/6923617[5] G. Pallaris, P. Zaphiris, A. Parmaxi, “Mapping the landscape of Makerspaces in higher education: an inventory of research
After the Social Justice Turn: Building Coalitions for Action. Routledge, 2019.[23] K. Moore, R. Walton, and N. N. Jones, “Redressing Inequities Within Our Margin of Maneuverability: A Narrative Inquiry Study.” Jul. 26, 2021.[24] Zakaria, Against White Feminism: Notes on Disruption . 2021. Accessed: Apr. 05, 2023. [Online]. Available: https://books.google.com/books?hl=en&lr=&id=UgcDEAAAQBAJ&oi=fnd&pg=PT4&dq=zakari a+against+white+feminism&ots=5OR7_iGAL1&sig=VWD0DbfaMPmIGkyQWHfl1W3tQhE#v= onepage&q=zakaria against white feminism&f=false[25] W. Reynolds-Dobbs, K. M. Thomas, and M. S. Harrison, “From Mammy to Superwoman Images That Hinder Black Women’s Career
and scientific inquiry. Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 40, 487- 509.Berka, S., Mu, B., Erickson, L.O., Perez-Ibanez, I., 2021. The role of study abroad curricular interventions in engineering students’ intercultural competence development. Proceedings from the 2021 ASEE Annual Conference, July 26-29, 2021 (virtual meeting). Paper ID #32547. https://peer.asee.org/37893Casad, B.J., Palomo, M., Mladenov, N., 2018. International scientific research experiences: developing global citizens and nurturing engineers and scientists of the future. Proceedings from the 2018 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Salt Lake City, UT, USA.Chemers, M. M., Hu, L., & Garcia, B. F. (2001). Academic self-efficacy
across engineering curriculum. AEE Journal, 6(2).3. Brunell, L. R. (2019). A real-world approach to introducing sustainability in civil engineeringcapstone design. In 2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition.4. Scott Stanford, M., Benson, L. C., Alluri, P., Martin, W. D., Klotz, L. E., Ogle, J. H., Kaye,N., Sarasua, W., and Schiff, S. (2013). Evaluating student and faculty outcomes for a real-worldcapstone project with sustainability considerations. Journal of Professional Issues inEngineering Education and Practice, 139(2), 123-133.5. Valdes-Vasquez, R., and Klotz, L. (2011). Incorporating the social dimension of sustainabilityinto civil engineering education. Journal of Professional Issues in Engineering Education &Practice, 137(4