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- INDUSTRY DAY SESSION: CMC PANEL SESSION TWO
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- 2015 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Chiang Shih, Florida A&M University/Florida State University; Gregory John Kostrzewsky, Cummins, Inc; Lin Xiang Sun, Danfoss Turbocor Compressors
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, and professional responsibility so they can be successful in theircareers. Few of these elements can be simulated effectively in a traditional academicenvironment and the participation of engineering practitioners becomes critical. Similar to mostengineering programs, we have achieved this through the involvement of our advisory councilmembers in this capacity and this paper presents our experience in developing an academic-industrial partnership over the years. The relationship starts with the integration of theseindustry leaders into our program’s continuous improvement process, including ABETaccreditation assessment, the sponsorship of senior capstone design projects, and othereducational activities. The development of the partnership has
- Conference Session
- INDUSTRY DAY SESSION: CMC PANEL SESSION ONE
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- 2015 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Il-Seop Shin, Western Illinois University, Quad Cities; Blair J. McDonald P.E., Western Illinois University; Khaled Zbeeb, Western Illinois University; William F. Pratt, Western Illinois University
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mixed-signal CMOS Integrated Circuit designer and a system engineer at NewLANS, Inc. in Acton, Massachusetts until 2010. He became a Visiting Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering at the University of North Florida in Jacksonville, Florida in 2010. Since August 2012, he has been with the School of Engineering at Western Illinois University, Quad Cities as an Assistant Professor of Engineering. His current academic interests include project-based learning with real-world problems, training in critical thinking for students to improve efficient problem solving skills, and enhancement of interactive teaching/learning inside and outside classroom. His main research interests are integration of high performance
- Conference Session
- INDUSTRY DAY SESSION: CMC PANEL SESSION ONE
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- 2015 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Robert B. Rhoads, Ohio State University; Jacob T Allenstein, Ohio State University; Krista M. Kecskemety, Ohio State University; Clifford A Whitfield, Ohio State University
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programs aredifficult to create without college wide support and structure to foster this growth.7The Ohio State University (OSU) offers students, through its Multidisciplinary CapstoneProgram (MDC), a broad range of opportunities for both engineering and non-engineeringstudents to work directly with industry personnel on company-sponsored product and processdesign projects. OSU provides students an opportunity to apply their academics and professionaland practical skills to real-world problems as a member of a multidisciplinary team. Theprogram is a two-semester project design sequence. Based on the project scope, the coordinatorsform teams and assign a faculty advisor to ensure project success. The sponsor is vested in theprogram by assigning an
- Conference Session
- INDUSTRY DAY SESSION: CMC PANEL SESSION TWO
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- 2015 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Susannah Howe, Smith College
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such short visits and recommendations for pursuing a similar sabbatical experience. Introduction Sabbatical experiences provide an opportunity for faculty to immerse themselves in current scholarship, to explore new areas of research, and/or to pursue professional development. For capstone design instructors, many of whom coordinate projects with industry sponsors, a logical option for sabbatical is to spend it in industry. This option is particularly attractive and useful for faculty members who have followed the standard academic pathway and have not previously worked as practicing engineers. The engineering literature is surprisingly sparse on faculty sabbaticals, and what literature exists focuses more on the use of sabbaticals for
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- INDUSTRY DAY SESSION: CMC PANEL SESSION TWO
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- 2015 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Osvaldo M. Micheloud, Tecnologico de Monterrey (ITESM)
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from “made in Mexico” to “designed and made inMexico”. This trend soon required better trained engineers in design of new products, and thissparked the idea of founding a Consortium with companies that have similar requirements forskilled people and to train all of them under the umbrella of a full time energy engineeringgraduate program. However, faculty know that real industrial experience seldom comes in booksor scientific papers, so a decision was made to ask companies to support the students, and Page 26.955.3faculty, with their top engineers as mentors in their thesis projects. On the other hand, theuniversity understands that there is a
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- INDUSTRY DAY SESSION: CMC PANEL SESSION ONE
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- 2015 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Deborah A. Trytten, University of Oklahoma; Rui Pan, University of Oklahoma; Cindy E Foor, University of Oklahoma; Randa L. Shehab, University of Oklahoma; Susan E. Walden, University of Oklahoma
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: How do members of under-represented groups' identities and pathways intersect with SELECT culture to facilitate or encumber participation in SELECT?The structure of the paper is as follows. The next section will describe the research methodology.The Results section will present two separate narratives of Sarah's and Alice’s engineeringexperiences as they pertain to team competition. The Discussion section will compare andcontrast Sarah's and Alice’s experiences and interpret those experiences, including placing theseexperiences in the context of the literature. The final section will draw conclusions.2.0 MethodologyThis manuscript uses data from a large research project using qualitative and quantitativeresearch methodologies and an
- Conference Session
- INDUSTRY DAY SESSION: CMC PANEL SESSION ONE
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- 2015 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Rui (Celia) Pan, University of Oklahoma; Randa L. Shehab, University of Oklahoma; Cindy E Foor, University of Oklahoma; Deborah A. Trytten, University of Oklahoma; Susan E. Walden, University of Oklahoma
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Corporate Member Council, Diversity
student, experiential-learning, engineeringcompetition teams (SELECT) to practice and improve their engineering skills. SELECT attracttremendous resources from both industry and academia. Despite considerable efforts over thepast decades to recruit and retain women and minorities in engineering, female and minoritystudents still comprise a small portion of SELECT participants.This paper stems from a multi-year research project to identify and explain which factorscontribute to cultures of inclusion or exclusion among various SELECT. We constructed asurvey to determine the generalizability of findings obtained from interviews with SELECTteams and enhance our understanding of cultures within SELECT.Overall, the survey showed most teams have low
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- INDUSTRY DAY SESSION: CMC PANEL SESSION TWO
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- 2015 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Mary K. Pilotte, Purdue University, West Lafayette; Rick I Zadoks, Caterpillar Inc.; Monica Farmer Cox, Purdue University, West Lafayette
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. With over 20 years of industrial work experience, and supportive of her academic roles, Mary actively leads academic outreach to industrial firms to develop in-classroom, project-based, active learning through identification of ”real life”, in-context problem scenarios. Pilotte’s research interests involve understanding engineering culture, identity, and communication in the context of professional engineering practice. Expanded interests include understanding student benefits associated with in-context active learning, innovative distance learning, and global learning experiences. She holds Bachelor of Science degree in Organizational Leadership and Supervision from Purdue Univer- sity, an MBA from the Goizueta