1820 RWY 10C 1 16684 PD 25-Sep-15 D ORD A320 121 N/A 02010KT 6SM BR FEW012 FEW200 BKN250 18/17 A3022 1905 RWY 4L 14 16661 PD 19-Sep-15 D ORD MD83 N/A 121 32007KT 10SM FEW060 FEW250 19/07 A3007 1842 RWY 28C 16 16605 PD 9-Sep-15 B ORD E145 E145 121 121 06006KT 10SM FEW025 SCT250 24/09 A2998 1528 28 16483 PD 12-Aug-15 C ORD B787 E170 129 121 08005KT 10SM SCT040 26/16 A3013 1612 16 16432 VPD 6-Aug-15 C ORD N/A B744 VEH 129 08003KT 10SM BKN150
Paper ID #20640Student Outcomes Of Participating in an International Research ExperienceMs. Lauren Michelle Hatfield, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Lauren is a graduate assistant for Research and Graduate Studies in the College of Engineering at Virginia Tech. She supports the Research and Graduate Studies team by conducting research and assisting on research projects focused on current engineering students and the programs which serve them. Lauren is pursuing her Ph.D. in Educational Research and holds a BA in English from the University of Connecticut and an M.Ed. in Higher Education Administration
and theoretical requirements in engineering program.Future WorkThe CoBot learning environment modules will be used for development of a new undergraduatecourse: Introduction to Collaborative Robotics and Applications.AcknowledgmentsThe presented work is supported by NSF grant (#1601454) [Learning Program for Cobots inAdvanced Manufacturing Systems].ReferencesAkella, P., Peshkin, M., Colgate, E.D., Wannasuphorasit, W., Nagesh, N., Wells, J., Holland, S., Pearson, T. and Peacock, B., (1999). Cobots for the automobile assembly line, In Robotics and Automation, Proceedings, 1999 IEEE International Conference on. Vol. 1, pp: 728-733.Anandan T. M., The Realm of Collaborative Robots – Empowering Us in Many Forms, Robotic
-106.Cantrell, S. (2015). Science, Technology, Engineering, Art and Mathematics: Key Elements in the Evolution of the Contemporary Art Quilt (Doctoral dissertation, George Mason University).Constantino, T., Kellam, N., Cramond, B., & Crowder, I. (2010). An interdisciplinary design studio: How can art and engineering collaborate to increase students' creativity? Art Education, 63(2), 49-53.Hetland, L., Winner, E., Veenema, S., & Sheridan, Kimberly, M. (n.d.). Studio Thinking 2: the benefits of a visual arts education. Reston, VA, USA: National Art Education Association and Teachers College Press.IDEO.org, (2015) The Field Guide to Human-Centered Design.Ochterski, J., & Jupacchino-Gilson, L
6.5correct answer. The other 39 students selected the incorrect answer of . 5 Given the triangle in the diagram, compute the value of tan(𝛼). 5 5 A. B. 6.5 7.5 6.5 D. Cannot calculate tan(𝛼
) programoutcomes. Four of the relevant program outcomes are listed below.• Outcome a: "an ability to apply knowledge of mathematics, science, and engineering" The proposed project requires the student to apply communications theory to a practical circuit implementation.• Outcome b: "an ability to design and conduct experiments, as well as to analyze and interpret data" The proposed project provides the opportunity for the student to experiment with the circuit parameters and evaluate the circuit response.• Outcome e: "an ability to identify, formulate, and solve engineering problems" The proposed project gives the student a chance to solve for a number of circuit components and signal parameters associated with the assignment
Experiencing Engineering, ASEE Annual Conference,Vancouver, Canada, June 2011.[18] Women in STEM: A Gender Gap to Innovation (2011). United States Department ofCommerce.[19] Cunningham, B. C., Mulvaney Hoyer, K., & Sparks, D. (2015). Gender Differences inScience, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM) Interest, Credits Earned, andNAEP Performance in the 12th Grad (Publication No. NCES 2015075). Appendices:Pre-Survey Form: ……………………………………………………………………………1APost-Survey Form: …………………………………………..………………………………1BFlyer: …………………………………………………………………………………….…….21C
Paper ID #18282Case Studies of Problem Exploration Processes in Engineering DesignMs. Jaryn Studer, Iowa State University Jaryn Studer is a Graduate Research Assistant at Iowa State University pursuing her M.S. in Human Computer Interaction. She received her B.S. in Industrial Engineering at West Virginia University. Her research interests include design and strategies to develop creative thinking.Dr. Shanna R. Daly, University of Michigan Shanna Daly is an Assistant Professor in Mechanical Engineering at the University of Michigan. She has a B.E. in Chemical Engineering from the University of Dayton (2003) and a Ph.D. in
from http://cee.ucdavis.edu/educational_analytics/gorp-tool.htmlMichaels, S., & O'Connor, C. (2012). Talk science primer. TERC.Prince, M. (2004). Does Active Learning Work? A Review of the Research. Journal of Engineering Education, 93(3), 223-231. doi:10.1002/j.2168-9830.2004.tb00809.xResnick, L. B., & Hall, M. W. (2000). Principles of learning for effort-based education.Smith, M. K., Jones, F. H., Gilbert, S. L., & Wieman, C. E. (2013). The Classroom Observation Protocol for Undergraduate STEM (COPUS): A New Instrument to Characterize University STEM Classroom Practices. Cell Biology Education, 12(4), 618-627. doi:10.1187/cbe.13-08-0154EngineeringLearningClassroomObservationTool
. Lindaboothsweeney.net15. Taylor, R.G., Scanlon, B., Döll, P., Rodell, M., Van Beek, R., Wada, Y., Longuevergne, L., Leblanc, M.,Famiglietti, J.S., Edmunds, M. and Konikow, L., 2013. Ground water and climate change. Nature ClimateChange, 3(4), pp.322-32916. United Nations (2014) World Urbanization Prospects: The 2014 Revision, Highlights (ST/ESA/SER.A/352).United Nations, Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division.17. Wang, M., Han, J., Dunn, J.B., Cai, H. and Elgowainy, A., 2012. Well-to-wheels energy use and greenhouse gasemissions of ethanol from corn, sugarcane and cellulosic biomass for US use. Environmental Research Letters, 7(4),p.045905.18. Wang, Z., Dunn, J.B. and Wang, M.Q. 2014. Updates to the Corn Ethanol Pathway and Development of
for removal of emerging contaminants during water and wastewater treatment. At CalPoly, she works with both civil and environmental engineering undergraduate students to to expand her research into application of wastewater reuse for agricultural applications, as well as effective storm water management via Low Impact Development techniques. Before Cal Poly, Dr. Oulton was a consulting engineer at Cannon in San Luis Obispo, where her projects included the Guadalupe Restoration Project, storm water management for Diablo Canyon Nuclear Power Plant, water management and wastewater treatment projects for local municipalities, and pollution control design for numerous development and remediation projects throughout
://github.com/joshpelkey/cmap-parse>. [7] Paas, F., Tuovinen, J. E., Tabbers, H., & Van Gerven, P. W. 2003. Cognitive load measurement as a means to advance cognitive load theory. Educational psychologist, 38(1), 63-71. [8] Hoffman, B., & Schraw, G. 2010. Conceptions of Efficiency: Applications in Learning and Problem Solving. Educational Psychologist,45(1), 1-14. doi:10.1080/00461520903213618 [9] Antonenko, P., Paas, F., Grabner, R., & van Gog, T. 2010. Using electroencephalography to measure cognitive load. Educational Psychology Review, 22(4), 425-438.[10] Hart, S. G. 2006. NASA-task load index (NASA-TLX); 20 years later. In Proceedings of the human factors and ergonomics society annual meeting, Vol. 50, No. 9, pp
of Engineering Education.3. Fragoso-Diaz, G. M., Gray, B., & Jones, E. (2015). Enhancing Students’ Learning Experience Using Case Studies. 122nd ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition. Seattle: American Society for Engineering Education.4. Gibson, J. D. (1998). The Use of Industrial Design Projects as a Means for Integrating Senior Engineering Design and Engineering Economics. 1998 ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition. American Society for Engineering Education.5. Hackney, R. A., McMaster, T., & Harris, A. (2003). Using cases as a teaching tool in IS education. Journal of Information Systems Education, 14(3), 229-234.6. Hartman, J. C. (1999). Readers' Forum: Suggestions for Teaching Engineering
, each group (with allmembers participating) presents a multi-format (oral presentation accompanied by PowerPointimages and data) report to faculty and peers. This report is supplemented with a full writtenreport and a two-page executive summary. Appendix B includes the executive summaries of thesix projects and provide insight as to the depth and scope of the student efforts. Figure 2: In Rome, discussing Roman engineering near the Vittorio Emanuele monumentJournalThroughout the program, each student participates in maintain her or his group’s research journalas well as maintaining a personal engineering journal, the purpose of which is to aid indeveloping an ability to: • observe, • question
-sponsored seniordesigns focusing on two important aspects of them: (a) as an internship experience and a bridgeto job placement and (b) their role as a capstone class in the corresponding majors.Senior Design SurveyA survey of students enrolled in Senior Design classes in all majors in the School of Engineeringand Computer Science was conducted in late Fall 2016. In some sections of senior design theinstructors distributed hardcopy questionnaires. An online survey was distributed to the studentsthat did not complete a hardcopy survey. The total response rate was about 60%.The first few questions established the background of the responders.Q1: Are you involved in a UT-Design or other industry-sponsored senior design project thissemester?87.5% of
Paper ID #18404Developing Integrated Standards for Systematic Civil Engineering CourseDesignProf. Jim Morgan, Charles Sturt University Jim Morgan is the father of two daughters and the spouse of an engineer. Before joining Charles Sturt University as Professor of Engineering and Inaugural Course Director in 2015, he was on the faculty in civil engineering at Texas A&M for over 30 years. Jim was active in the freshman engineering program at A&M for nearly 20 years; was an active participant in the NSF Foundation Coalition from 1993 to 2003; also has received funding for his engineering education research from the
Paper ID #20059Teaching Engineering in the General Education Program at the University ofMarylandProf. Robert M. Briber, University of Maryland, College Park Robert M. Briber is a professor of Materials Science and Engineering and Associate Dean for Research for the College of Engineering at the University of Maryland. He was Chair of the Department of Materials Science and Engineering from 2003-2015. He has a B.S. degree in Materials Science and Engineering from Cornell University and a Ph.D. degree in Polymer Science and Engineering from the University of Massachusetts. His research areas are in the physics of polymers
learned in previous courses into a realsystem integration project. This interaction would provide a deeper level of assessment of thestudent competencies related to control systems, material handling, industrial robots, andsystems integration within the modern manufacturing environment.References [1] Marra, R. M., Jonassen, D. H., Palmer, B., & Luft, S. (2014). Why Problem-Based Learning Works: Theoretical Foundations. Journal on Excellence in College Teaching, 25(3-4), 221–238. [2] Schwering, R. E. (2015). Optimizing Learning in Project-Based Capstone Courses. Academy of Educational Leadership Journal, 19(1), 90–104. [3] Stevenson, W. J. (2015). Operations Management, (12th). New York, NY: Mc Graw Hill. [4
mathematics within the field of robotics as aresult of this educational module.AcknowledgementsWork that leads to this paper is partially supported by the National Science Foundation undergrants number CNS-0953976, CNS-1618369, and CNS-1446461.References[1] B. C. Cunningham and K. M. H. D. Sparks, "Gender Differences in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM) Interest, Credits Earned, and NAEP Performance in the 12th Grade," National Center for Education Statistics, 2015.[2] P. Ranganathan, R. Schultz and M. Mardani, "Use of Lego NXT Mindstorms Brick in Engineering Education," Department of Electrical Engineering, University of North Dakota, Grand Forks, North Dakota, 2009.[3] F. Taban, E. Acar, I. Fidan and A. Zora
Frontiers in Education Conference, 1995. Proceedings. 1995 (Vol. 2, pp. 4a2-5). IEEE. [6] Huratado, Eagan, Chang (2010). Degrees of success: Bachelor’s degree completion rates among initial STEM majors. Research Brief – Higher Education Research Institute at UCLA. January 2010. Retrieved online: https://tinyurl.com/hrddhhf [7] Lau, L. K. (2003). Institutional factors affecting student retention. EDUCATION- INDIANAPOLIS THEN CHULA VISTA-, 124(1), 126-136. [8] Metzner, B. S., & Bean, J. P. (1987). The estimation of a conceptual model of nontraditional undergraduate student attrition. Research in higher education, 27(1), 15- 38. [9
(Vol. 28, pp. 425–435). Retrieved from https://uspfodc.us/resources/41/download/Engeering_Students_and_EShip_Education_- _Involvement_Attitudes_and_Outcomes.pdfEpicenter. (2017). Epicenter Program: National Center for Engineering Pathways to Innovation. Retrieved from http://epicenter.stanford.edu/page/aboutJin, Q., Gilmartin, S. K., Chen, H. L., Johnson, S. K., Weiner, M. B., Lerner, R. M., & Sheppard, S. (2016). Entrepreneurial Career Choice and Characteristics of Engineering and Business Students. International Journal of Engineering Education, 32(2), 598–613.Katz, J. A. (2003). The chronology and intellectual trajectory of American entrepreneurship education 1876-1999. Journal of Business Venturing, 18(2
, the connectivity is limited by many environmental factors such as distance,noise, objectives, etc. In order to extend the connectivity in wireless network, the relay node iscommonly used in many wireless applications such as cellular network, wireless ad hoc network,wireless sensor network, etc. For example, when two wireless nodes are out of communicationrange each other, relay node can be located between them to connect each other as shown inFigure 1(a). Another common application is Wi-Fi extender, which can extend the coverage areaby relaying the traffic between wireless access point and clients (i.e., PCs, mobile devices, etc.)as in Figure 1(b). (a) Relay node in mobile ad hoc network (b) Wi-Fi extender
). Summer bridge programs: Supporting all students. Educational Research and Improvement Digest ( Series EDO-HE-2000-3).4. Tinto, V., & Love, A. (1995). A longitudinal study of learning communities at Laguardia Community College. Washington, D.C.: Office of Eduational Reserch and Improvement.5. Womack, V., Freeman, A., Watford, B., Roland, M., Bitsie-Baldwin, L., & Dickerson, D. (2016). Establishing a National Pipeline Model for Underrepresented Student Success in Engineering: Best Practices. Conference Proceedings for the Hawaii International Conference on Education. Honolulu, HI.6. Maton, K. I., Hrabowski, F. A., III, & Schmitt, C. (2000). African American college students excelling in the sciences
materials and materialsprocessing technologies on society, and how societal influences have in turn shaped the develop-ment of materials. Through investigation of historical materials, students learn a variety offundamental materials concepts still relevant today, in addition to developing global competency,whether studying at home or abroad.References1. U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics. (2011), Digest of Education Statistics, 2010 (NCES 2011-015), Table 199.2. V. Jovanovic, T.H. DeAgostino, M.B. Thomas, R.T. Trusty, “Educating Engineering Students to Succeed in a Global Workplace,” Paper 2012-3195, Proceedings, 2012 ASEE Annual Conference, June 2012.3. B. Hunter, G.P. White, G. Godbey, “What Does it Mean
engineering’s learning, discovery, engagement and collaboration study.Dr. Jinyuan Zhai, University of Akron Jinyuan Zhai is Ph.D. graduate from the Department of Mechanical Engineering at The University of Akron. She earned a Ph.D. in mechanical engineering from The University of Akron in 2016 specializing in solid mechanics areas. Her dissertation work was on Modeling Ductile Damage of Metallic Materials. She has also worked as a lecturer (assistant professor) of mechanical engineering at University of Science and Technology, Beijing. Dr. Zhai received her B. Eng and M. Eng degrees in Engineering Machinery from Taiyuan University of Science and Technology, formerly known as Taiyuan Heavy Machinery Insti- tute where she
. Rusek, A., D. Stevens, F. Miesterfeld, 1999, “Development of Tests and Modeling of EMC Effects in Automotive Data Busses,” Proc. 2-nd Int. Conf. Inf., Comm.& Sign. Proc., Singapore, (Dec.) 3. A. Rusek, B. Oakley, EASY-TO-DO TRANSMISSION LINE DEMONSTRATIONS OF SINUSOIDAL STANDING WAVES AND TRANSIENT PULSE REFLECTIONS, AC 2007-246 4. Signal Integrity Fundamentals, Tektronix 2007 5. Andrew Rusek and Subramaniam Ganesan, Teaching Time Domain Reflectometry in EMC course, Proceedings of the 2016 ASEE North Central Section Conference Copyright © 2016, American Society for Engineering Education 6. Andrew Rusek, Subra Ganesan, Barbara Oakley, “Improving Student Understanding of Instrumentation and Measurement in
), 139– 149. 2. Chen, X., Weko, T. (2009). Students Who Study Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) in Postsecondary Education. U.S. Department of Education, NCES 2009-161. http://nces.ed.gov/pubs2009/2009161.pdf 3. Casper, J., Khoury, A., Lashbaugh, K., & Ruesch, A. (2011). The sophomore year experience final report to Dr. Laura Coffin Koch, Associate Vice-Provost for Undergraduate Education. University of Minnesota 4. Hunter, M., S., Tobolowsky, B., F., Gardner, J., N., Evenbeck, S., E., Pattengale, J., A., et al (Eds.). (2010) Helping Sophomores Succeed: Understanding and Improving the Second-Year Experience, San Francisco, Jossey-Bass. 5. Holloway, B. and Reed, T. (2015) Extended
all-inclusive studentprograms occurred after girls are becoming disinterested in STEM whereas programs thatspecifically targeted girls made career influence a priority and targeted girls at an age when girlsscience and math scores begin to lag behind boys’ scores. This review of literature demonstratesthe needs to focus all-inclusive programs on career choice at a time that is most advantageous forgirls’ pursuit of engineering as a career option. References1. National Science Foundation, National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics, National Survey of College Graduates, 20152. Beede, D., Julian, T., Langdon, D., McKittrick, G., Khan, B., & Doms, M. (2011). Women in STEM: A Gender
Assessing Students' Entrepreneurial Skills and Mind‐Set." Journal of Engineering Education 94.2 (2005): 233-243. 2. Ochs, John B., Todd A. Watkins, and Berrisford W. Boothe. "Creating a truly multidisciplinary entrepreneurial educational environment." Journal of Engineering Education 90.4 (2001): 577-583. 3. Vickers, Ken, et al. "Creation of an entrepreneurial university culture, the University of Arkansas as a case study." Journal of Engineering Education 90.4 (2001): 617. 4. Erdil, N. O., & Harichandran, R. S., & Nocito-Gobel, J., & Carnasciali, M., & Li, C. Q. (2016, June), Integrating e-Learning Modules into Engineering Courses to Develop an Entrepreneurial Mindset in Students Paper presented
Paper ID #18346Mapping Engineering Outcomes to the Lean Launch Curriculum in the Con-text of DesignDr. Laura Hirshfield, University of Michigan Laura Hirshfield is a lecturer and research fellow at the University of Michigan. She received her B.S. from the University of Michigan and her Ph.D. from Purdue University, both in chemical engineering. She then transitioned into the engineering education field, focusing on the areas of design and entrepreneurship.Dr. Aileen Huang-Saad, University of Michigan Aileen is faculty in Engineering Education and Biomedical Engineering. Previously, Aileen was the Associate Director for