Langer lab as a postdoc. He then worked at the Dow Chemical Company Coating Materials as a research scien- tist. He was the Dow Certified Green Belt Project Leader and worked on binder platform development for different commercial products. Dr. Jiang edited the first book on Janus particles and has published more than 50 peer reviewed journal articles and book chapters. Dr. Jiang was awarded with the Racheff-Intel Award for Outstanding Graduate Research. The technology he participated in developing at Dow received the Presidential Green Chemistry Challenge Award and the R&D 100 Award. He recently received the ACS Younger Chemists Committee Leadership Development Award, the 3M non-tenured faculty award, ACS-PRF
Paper ID #32158A Community of Practice Approach to Integrating Professional SkillsTraining with Graduate Thesis ResearchProf. Shan Jiang, Iowa State University Dr. Shan Jiang is an Assistant Professor in the Materials Science and Engineering department at Iowa State University. He obtained his Ph.D. from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, working with Professor Steve Granick on Janus particles. After graduation, he studied drug delivery at MIT Langer lab as a postdoc. He then worked at the Dow Chemical Company Coating Materials as a research scien- tist. He was the Dow Certified Green Belt Project Leader and
audience he co-authored a book on security literacy and has given numerous talks on security. His current funded research is targeted at developing robust countermeasures for network-based security exploits and large scale attack simulation environ- ments and is the director of the Internet-Scale Event and Attack Generation Environment (ISEAGE) test bed project. He has given over 75 presentations in the area of computer security and has testified in front of the U.S. Senate committee of the Judiciary on security issues associated with peer-to-peer networking. He has served as an ABET program evaluator representing IEEE for five years. He is a Fellow of IEEE and received the IEEE Educational Activities Board Major
).The course introduces students to hardware and software aspects of embedded systems includingmicrocontrollers, memory-mapped input/output, input/output interfaces, embedded programmingin C, initialization and configuration of peripherals in software, general purpose input/output(GPIO) ports, polling and interrupt processing, serial communication (UART), analog-to-digitalconversion (ADC), hardware timers (GPTM), input capture, pulse-width modulation, sensors,servo motors, mobile robots, and object detection. The first third of the course coversfoundational concepts and skills; the middle third, understanding and using microcontrollerperipherals (GPIO, UART, ADC, GPTM modules); and the final third, implementing a project inthe lab for an
environments and promotes creative need-based designs (Crain & Tull, 2004).Reissman et al. (2017) also proposed a new capstone course for Mechanical Engineering studentsat the University of Dayton, which emphasizes the application of physics-based and data miningtoward open-ended project prompts. Peter Idowu (2004) presented a study about the pre-capstonecourse at Penn State Harrisburg to solve the lack of clarity students have in developing projectideas. In this study, researchers concluded that a pre-capstone course enabled students tocommunicate effectively. Elvin Shields (2007) studied the effect of capstone engineering designexperience in fostering creativity. Various methods and techniques can assess students’ creativity. For example
Covid responses. The authors all taught problem-based or project-based coursesand quickly gravitated towards each other around the strong preference to continue thisapproach, independent of course delivery mode (i.e., face-to-face or distance). As part of thistransition, we focused on how we could continue to foster our students’ interactions with coursematerial, instructors, and their peers. We used collaborative technology to facilitate studentengagement once we began remote learning. During this transition, the University and college initiated student and faculty surveys tocapture lessons from the student’s overall experience. The authors decided to develop a secondsurvey that was administered to their own classes. Several of the
Paper ID #32154Developing a substation design curriculum for electronics engineeringtechnologyMr. Filipe Santos Araujo, Pittsburg State University Filipe has received his bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering at the Universidade Salvador, Brazil, with an emphasis in power systems. He is currently pursuing his master‘s degree at Pittsburg State Uni- versity in Kansas. He has worked in different areas: 3G and 4G telecommunication expansion projects in Brazil, automation of a truck assembly line in Indiana, and substation design in Kansas City. He is currently a graduate teaching assistant at Pittsburg State University