Careers in the Chemical Sciences. She received an associate degree from Yavapai College, a bachelor of science degree in chemistry from New Mexico State University, and a doctoral degree in chemistry from the University of Arizona. She was a staff scientist at the Idaho National Laboratory for twelve years before joining the faculty at Northern Arizona University.Dr. Angelina E. Castagno, Northern Arizona University Angelina E. Castagno, PhD, is the Director of the Din´e Institute for Navajo Nation Educators, and a Pro- fessor of Educational Leadership and Foundations at Northern Arizona University. Her teaching, research, and consulting focus on equity and diversity in U.S. schools, with a focus on Indigenous education
students and communities of color as holders and creators of knowledge. His current work seeks to analyze and describe the tensions, contradictions, and cultural collisions many Latino/a/x students expe- rience in engineering through testimonios. He is particularly interested in approaches that contribute to a more expansive understanding of engineering in sociocultural contexts, the impact of critical conscious- ness in engineering practice, and development and implementation of culturally responsive pedagogies in engineering education.Dr. Diana Chen, University of San Diego Dr. Diana A. Chen is an Assistant Professor of Integrated Engineering at the University of San Diego. She joined the Shiley-Marcos School of
per year, particularly those for first-year students (Cornerstone Design, Engineering Problem Solving, and/or Departmental Classes); • Serve as a resource for students and faculty advisers pertaining to electives, special programs, other degree programs, and more; • Collaborate with the undergraduate engineering office and peer-advisers to assure all students are well-served across all engineering majors; • Facilitate training and education to develop effective academic skills within students.In order to meet these objectives, students are required to have an individual meeting with theadvisers each quarter. During these mandatory quarterly meetings advisers review eachstudent’s course load and standing, work with the
developing and testing educational materials and settings that stimulate serious playPolly Piergiovanni, Lafayette College Polly Piergiovanni is an Associate Professor and Acting Head of Chemical Engineering at Lafayette College. She received a B.S. from Kansas State University and a Ph.D. from the University of Houston, both in Chemical Engineering. Her research interests include cell culture and fermentation , and the LEGO project. Page 12.1085.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2007 Multimodal Process Control Education: Experiment Kits &
student recruitment and retention in Psychology. As a Senior. Research Advisor at AARP Dr. Ledbetter has received the Sustained Excellence Award, a New Ventures in Leadership fellowship, and is the co-founder of the Jerry Florence Memorial Mentoring Program.Dawn Williams, Howard University DAWN G. WILLIAMS is an assistant professor and Master's Program Coordinator in the Department of Educational Administration and Policy at Howard University. Dr. Williams serves as a faculty researcher for the Center for Advancement of Engineering Education. She is also the Co-Principal Investigator of a National Science Foundation grant designed to study the post baccalaureate decisions of high achieving
has authored and co-authored several journal and conference publications in topics related to engineering education and course man- agement, design coordination, change management, site layout planning, constructability, claims and disputes, and simulation of design and construction operations.Miss Sarah Samir Sedra, United Arab Emirates university Sarah S. Sedra, a telecommunication engineer currently working at Etisalat UAE as mobile access plan- ning engineer. Worked previously for two years as an low voltage electrical engineer in AECOM middle east. Graduated in 2013 from Communication & electronics department in faculty of engineering Cairo university. After working for almost 4 years now I just started
materials. Ms. Matin has over 3 years of experience of teaching in architecture and interior design field at Azad Islamic University and Eastern Michigan University. She has been LEED Green Associate since 2016.Dr. Ali Eydgahi, Eastern Michigan University Ali Eydgahi started his career in higher education as a faculty member at the Rensselaer Polytechnic In- stitute in 1985. Since then, he has been with the State University of New York, University of Maryland Eastern Shore, and Eastern Michigan University. During 2006-2010, he was Chair of the Department of Engineering and Aviation Sciences, Founder and Director of the Center for 3-D Visualization and Virtual Reality Applications, and Technical Director of the NASA
taught courses in infrastructure management, planning, transportation and construction management. Dr. Orndoff has more than ten years of engineering field experience. Her application-based engineering research incorporates sustainability, policy, legal issues, economics, decision-making, planning as well as public administration, policy, finance, and their stakeholders. She is active in engineering leadership and management practice issues. She has also served on several professional committees, including the American Society of Civil Engineers, the NSF Transportation Research Board, American Society of En- gineering Educators and economic development initiatives. c American Society for
History and Ethics of Technology).Dr. Karolina Doulougeri, Eindhoven University of Technology Dr. Karolina Doulougeri is a post-doctoral research fellow in the Technological University of Eindhoven. Her research focuses on engineering students’ motivation and deep learning strategies, coaching in design based learning and educational redesign of engineering courses. She received her PhD in Organizational Psychology from the University of Macedonia, in Greece. She has worked in several international research projects focusing on students and employees’ well- being, professional development and performance. Her work has been published in peer reviewed journals and presented in several international conferences
. Geoffrey L. Herman is a teaching assistant professor with the Deprartment of Computer Science at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He also has a courtesy appointment as a research assis- tant professor with the Department of Curriculum & Instruction. He earned his Ph.D. in Electrical and Computer Engineering from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign as a Mavis Future Faculty Fellow and conducted postdoctoral research with Ruth Streveler in the School of Engineering Educa- tion at Purdue University. His research interests include creating systems for sustainable improvement in engineering education, conceptual change and development in engineering students, and change in fac- ulty beliefs
the betterment of humanity[15]. Yet despite the discipline’s continued centralityto the advancement and development of society, and the central role played by engineers associety’s problem-solvers and critical thinkers[16,17,18] , Engineering Faculties in the UK andthe EU continue to experience difficulties attracting suitably qualified candidates ontoundergraduate programmes. Moreover, having struggled to recruit students, manyEngineering Programmes find themselves beset by high levels of student attrition – theculmination of which inevitably results in shortages of young people entering the professionat graduate level[15,19,20,21,22]. Given such shortages it is perhaps surprising to note that acrossmuch of the developed world the
P.E., West Point John V. Farr is currently a Professor of Engineering Management and Director of the Center for Nation Reconstruction and Capacity Development at the United States Military Academy at West Point. He was the founding Director of the Department of Systems Engineering and Engineering Management at Stevens Institute of Technology and former Associated Dean for Academics School of Systems and Enterprises at Stevens. Prior to Stevens he was a Professor at West Point. He is past president and Fellow of the American Society for Engineering Management (ASEM) and a Fellow of American Society of Civil Engineering. He is a former member of the Army Science Board and the Air Force Studies Board of the
Paper ID #13494Sophomore Transfers: Who Are They and What Support Do They Need?Dr. Mary R. Anderson-Rowland, Arizona State University Mary Anderson-Rowland, Arizona State University MARY R.ANDERSON-ROWLAND is the PI of an NSF STEP grant to work with five non-metropolitan community colleges to produce more engineers, especially female and underrepresented minority engineers. She also directs an Academic Success and Professional Development program, with an emphasis on transfer students. An Associate Professor in Computing, Informatics, and Systems Design Engineering, she was the Associate Dean of Student Af- fairs in
Indus- trial Engineering Program, the Endowed Chairs Program in Industrial Engineering, Human Factors and Ergonomics Institute and the Clemson Institute for Supply Chain and Optimization and the Center for Excellence in Quality. For his success, he has been recognized by the NAE through the Frontiers in Engi- neering Program, and he has received the College’s Collaboration Award and the McQueen Quattlebaum Award, which recognizes faculty for their outstanding research. In addition, Dr. Gramopadhye serves as Editor-in-Chief of the International Journal of Industrial Ergonomics and on the editorial board for several other journals. c American Society for Engineering Education
that encompasses both theoretical analysis and experimental investigations such as designing and testing of propulsion systems including design and development of pilot testing facility, mechanical instrumentation, and industrial applications of aircraft engines. Also, in the past 10 years she gained experience in teaching ME and ET courses in both quality control and quality assurance areas as well as in thermal-fluid, energy conversion and mechanical areas from various levels of instruction and addressed to a broad spectrum of students, from freshmen to seniors, from high school graduates to adult learners. She also has extended experience in curriculum development. Dr Husanu developed laboratory activities for
education, sustainability, and applied statistics. In the past, he has implemented several grants from the NSF, NASA and SME-EF. Dr. Srira- man has served as the faculty advisor to the Society of Manufacturing Engineers, the American Foundry Society and the Society of Women Engineers and as the Foundry Educational Foundation Key professor. He has also received several teaching awards at Texas State University. Currently, Dr. Sriraman serves as the Associate Vice President for Academic Affairs at Texas State University.Dr. Araceli Martinez Ortiz, Texas State University Araceli Martinez Ortiz, PhD., is Research Associate Professor of Engineering Education in the College of Education at Texas State University. She leads a
of Connecticut Sarira Motaref is an associate professor in residence in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engi- neering at the University of Connecticut. she serves as Assistant Director of faculty development at the School of Engineering. She has been teaching large classes such as CE 2110 (Applied Mechanics I) and CE 3110 (Mechanics of Materials) which are major requirement across multiple disciplines in the School of Engineering since 2013. She has led the efforts within the Department to develop and deliver flipped sections of undergraduate courses. She is a licensed professional engineer. She has attended several teaching workshops and received certificates from UConn CETL (Center for Excellence in
AC 2008-354: TEACHING BASIC MATERIALS ENGINEERING DESIGN TOENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY STUDENTS USING STRINGED INSTRUMENTTOP DESIGNKathleen Kitto, Western Washington University Kathleen L. Kitto is the Associate Dean for the new College of Sciences and Technology at Western Washington University. Previously, she was Associate Dean for the College of Arts and Sciences and served as Chair of Engineering Technology Department from 1995-2002. Since arriving at Western Washington University in 1988, her primary teaching assignments have been in the Manufacturing Engineering Technology program and in the development of the communication skills of engineering technology students; her research interests
© American Society for Engineering Education, 2006 Engineering a Nationwide Engineering Design ContestAbstractThis paper concerns problems solved and lessons learned while conducting the West PointBridge Design Contest,1 with a focus on the design of technology support and operations behindthe scenes. The contest is a nationwide, Internet-based competition for teams of one or twostudents, age 13 through grade 12, culminating in a final round with large cash prizes. In 2006the contest is in its fifth year. We have previously reported it as a means of engineeringoutreach.2 This work, on the other hand, is technical, concerning the engineering behind thecontest that allows it to be run by a half-time administrator and two college faculty
2006-1476: DESIGN AND IMPLEMENTATION OF AN EDUCATIONAL AXIALFLUX WIND TURBINE/GENERATORRecayi Pecen, University of Northern Iowa Recayi Pecen holds a B.S.E.E. and an M.S. in Controls and Computer Engineering from the Istanbul Technical University, an M.S.E.E. from the University of Colorado at Boulder, and a Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering from the University of Wyoming (UW). He has served as faculty at the UW, and South Dakota State University. He is currently an associate professor and program coordinator of Electrical and Information Engineering Technology program in the Department of Industrial Technology at the University of Northern Iowa. His research interests and publications
), funded by six philanthropic foundations, he has con- ducted significant K-12 education, training, mentoring, and outreach activities to integrate engineering concepts in science classrooms and labs of dozens of New York City public schools. He received NYU- Poly’s 2002, 2008, and 2011 Jacobs Excellence in Education Award, 2002 Jacobs Innovation Grant, 2003 Distinguished Teacher Award, and 2012 Inaugural Distinguished Award for Excellence in the category Inspiration through Leadership. In 2004, he was selected for a three-year term as a Senior Faculty Fel- low of NYU-Poly’s Othmer Institute for Interdisciplinary Studies. His scholarly activities have included three edited books, six chapters in edited books, one book
field notes to capture descriptions ofobservations and verbatim or paraphrased statements. Researchers included faculty members andthe study’s lead researcher, all trained in a range of qualitative methods. Regarding ethics, theinterview protocol for participating practicing engineers included this two-part question set:“Have you ever faced any ethical issues that you would care to describe? What did you learnfrom this situation?”All study data collected has been managed and coded using the coding software package, NVivo.Forty different analytic categories have been developed and analysis of data within thesecategories is ongoing.The Intersections of Codes of EthicsWhen we use the term ethics, we need to define carefully. Necessarily, we must
Paper ID #8863Analysis of Student Perceptions and Behaviors in a Flipped Classroom Un-dergraduate Information Technology CourseMr. Rob Elliott, Purdue University School of Engineering and Technology, Indiana University Purdue Univer-sity at Indianapolis Rob Elliott is a Lecturer of Computer and Information Technology at Indiana University Purdue Univer- sity at Indianapolis. As a web and mobile application developer with nearly two decades of experience, he creates solutions for organizations of all sizes. Rob attempts to integrate his real-world experiences (both good and bad) into the classroom environment whenever
University of Puerto Rico at Mayaguez and a BSEE degree from Polytechnic University. Professor Teixeira is an IEEE Senior Member, a Registered Professional Engineer and a former ASEE-Navy Summer Faculty Fellow.Mr. Reynaldo Lopez-Roig, Polytechnic University of Puerto Rico Mr. Lopez received his B.S. in Computer Engineering from the Polytechnic University of Puerto Rico in 2013. His work as an undergraduate research assistant was related to the implementation and benchmark- ing of parallel signal processing algorithms in clusters and multicore architectures. Mr. Lopez is currently working at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory as a Software Systems Engineer.Prof. Felix Javier Nevarez-Ayala, Polytechnic University of Puerto Rico
, University of Maine John Thompson is an Associate Professor of Physics and Cooperating Associate Professor of STEM Education, and a member of the Maine Center for Research in STEM Education at the University of Maine. He is co-director of the UMaine Physics Education Research Laboratory, a research group of over a dozen faculty, postdoctoral research associates, graduate students, and undergraduates. His research focuses on the learning and teaching of thermodynamics and statistical mechanics at the upper division, and student understanding at the physics-mathematics interface. He is very interested in cross-disciplinary studies of specific topics.Donald B. Mountcastle, University of Maine Donald Mountcastle is an
10.1419.1PBL in various courses. Submitted to 2005 ASEE Annual Conference PBL can be defined as a learning process where the desired course outcomes areachieved through the use of a relatively few (1-5), but well designed, open ended, andreal life problems. Solutions to the problems are developed by the students, usuallyworking together in teams of 3 to 5 students. Compared to homework problems andexamples used in class, PBL problems are more complex, involve more of the students’reasoning and evaluation skills, and are more open ended. The students first must definewhat needs to be done, find a solution to the problem scenario, and finally report theirfindings to the instructor for critical comment and grading. All
, and extrapolation – with failures notunknown, and on subjective evaluation. Experience is valuable only if it leads to and isaccompanied by insight, understanding, judgment and intuition – qualities that some individualsseem to inherently have more than do others. These attributes can be somewhat developed in theclassroom, and they are certainly enhanced by on-the-job experiences. Our tasks in engineeringeducation include helping our graduates to develop that elusive quality of experience in thisbroad sense of it including understanding, intuition and an ability to visualize and critique.Improved analysis techniques, whether moment distribution in the early 1900’s or computer-based matrix structural analysis techniques more recently, have
towardstructuring the solution of very large systems of equations. Due to the limitations of earlycomputing, it was only possible to calculate automatically the values for system variables bymeans of solution procedures that were not merely effective, but also highly efficient.Researchers like Parter19, Harary12, and Steward33 developed partitioning techniques andalternative representations, which rendered such mathematics tractable. To determine if a verylarge system of equations was well posed, Friedman and Leondes 5 developed a formalmathematical basis for what they coined constraint theory. Work in this area enabled computersto calculate solutions to problems involving n equations in n unknowns, making possible thecomputer-based simulation and analysis
controls. Due to a recent curriculum reform at Kettering University (KU),the number of credits for graduation was reduced from 180 to 160 credits. A careful andsystematic approach has been taken by the mechanical engineering department at KU to maintainthe quality of education of the graduating students while reducing the total number of credits tograduate. This effort took more than two years and the details of such (horizontal and vertical)integration of basic courses were carried out with help from faculty belonging to the Science andMathematics department. This has been by far the toughest task undertaken by the curriculum Page 7.1060.1
, Biomedical Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, CivilEngineering, Biology, Chemistry, Physics, and Math. CSULA faculty train fellows through apreparation course and workshops in order to improve communication, collaboration, andteaching skills. Furthermore, a strong partnership between CSULA, LAUSD, local industry, andminority serving organizations such as Great Minds in STEM and MESA has been established inorder to achieve program goals. Broader impacts include increasing the number ofunderrepresented minority students who pursue college degrees and careers in STEM and tostrengthen the research and teaching skills of the graduate fellows. At the time these demonstrations and activities were performed, the program consisted ofeight fellows