worldcan say they have. This is a project that gives students an early opportunity to see what theresearch field is all about.”From Scott Rutledge, Oklahoma State University, graduated in May 2000:“Teamwork, leadership (not just management), loyalty, camaraderie, writing skills, publicspeaking, creative thinking, and problem solving – no grades attached. That is the engineeringstudent I want to hire.”This paper illustrates how student design competitions, such as the concrete canoe competition,closely mirror real-life engineering, hopefully enhancing the education of engineering studentsas it provides them with experiences in project management, design, analysis and testing,construction, as well as collaboration with professionals in the field of
reported on, onlyfive articles reported using the statistical technique as opposed to using the term with some othermeaning. (For example, we saw articles refer to clusters of core classes or clustering studentstogether for collaborative learning; one article also reported the follow-up study to using clusteranalysis and was not included.) Table 1 includes characteristics of these studies using a taxonomyfor reporting cluster analysis informed by Clatworthy, Buick, Hankins, Weinman, and Horne.7Perhaps due to the relatively emergent status of engineering education research as a discipline,9few examples of clustering were identified. The scarce use of cluster analysis suggests the utilityof our methodological introduction and example here.Table 1
Paper ID #12907Is engineering education a professional activity?Dr. John Heywood, Trinity College-Dublin John Heywood is professorial Fellow Emeritus of Trinity College Dublin- The University of Dublin. he is a Fellow of ASEE and Life Sen. member of IEEE. he has special interest in education for the professions and the role of professions in society. he is author of Engineering Education. research and development in Curriculum and Instruction.Dr. R. Alan Cheville, Bucknell University Alan Cheville studied optoelectronics and ultrafast optics at Rice University, followed by fourteen years as a faculty member at
Educating the Aerospace Engineer of 2016 Narayanan Komerath, Mark D. Maughmer Georgia Institute of Technology / The Pennsylvania State UniversityAbstractThe U.S. aerospace industry is changing rapidly, from vertically integrated development andmanufacturing to “large system integration” as their main business. Driven by globalcompetition, the new capabilities also enable the realization of some grand dreams of humanity.This paper lays out two scenarios and argues that leadership will reach or exceed the optimisticscenario. This scenario is used to gauge implications for engineering education. The needs fordepth and breadth must be balanced. Skills in developing business cases
College of Engineering built on the work from this grant in2004 with the creation of the “Environment in Engineering Committee,” an ad hoc committeecharged with developing strategies to enhance research and educational programs related to theenvironment within the College of Engineering. The committee’s final report in 2005recommended the creation of a new academic unit that could serve as a focal point within thecollege for environmental research and learning. In 2007, EEE collaborated with the ABET-accredited Multidisciplinary Engineering (MDE)program at Purdue on the establishment of an EEE Plan of Study within MDE. One of thefunctions of the MDE program is to serve as an “incubator” for developing degree programs,allowing an immediate
focus in engineering and science educa- tion. Founder of the Design Entrepreneuring Studio: Barbara helps teams generate creative environments. Companies that she has worked with renew their commitment to innovation. She also helps students an- swer these questions when she teaches some of these methods to engineering, design, business, medicine, and law students. Her courses use active storytelling and self-reflective observation as one form to help student and industry leaders traverse across the iterative stages of a project- from the early, inspirational stages to prototyping and then to delivery. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2020Implementing Abbreviated Personas into
Session 2460 Engineering Education & International Management Initiatives Arthur Gerstenfeld, Maria F. Flores Worcester Polytechnic Institute - Worcester, MassachusettsAbstractThe purpose of this paper is to describe a project, which has been in work for the past two years,which we believe, has several implications for education. This project has been partially fundedby the Department of Education, Business and International Education Division. While we allagree that the economic and technical world is smaller and closer every day, we do not agree onhow we should handle that in terms of educating
middle school classrooms, and also on advancing the use of knowledge building pedagogy in higher education. His most recent article (2013) is entitled ”Tasks and Talk: The Relationship Between Teachers’ Goals and Student Discourse,” in Social Studies Research and Practice. Al has been spending most of his ”spare” time lately as Co-PI of a multi-year NSF Project designed to introduce and interest middle schoolers to engineering conceptsAnnick Jade Dewald Annick Dewald is a first year at Smith College pursuing a Bachelor of Science degree in engineering. As a STRIDE Scholar, she conducts research on computer-supported collaborative learning environments in the field of engineering.Ms. Anjali Karina Desai, Smith College
AC 2012-4150: THE INTERLACE PROJECT: EXAMINING THE BAR-RIERS TO IMPLEMENTING COLLABORATIVE, INQUIRY-BASED IN-VESTIGATIONSDr. Morgan M. Hynes, Tufts University Morgan Hynes is a Research Assistant Professor in the Tufts University Education Department and Ed- ucation Research Program Director for the Tufts Center of Engineering Education and Outreach. Hynes received his B.S. in Mechanical Engineering in 2001 and his Ph.D. in engineering education in 2009 (both degrees at Tufts University). In his current positions, Hynes serves as PI and Co-PI on a number of funded research projects investigating engineering education in the K-12 and college settings. He is particularly interested in how students and teachers engage
Paper ID #6900Training in Troubleshooting Problem-Solving: Preparing Undergraduate En-gineering Students for IndustryMr. Presentacion Rivera-Reyes, Utah State University - Engineering Education Presentacion Rivera-Reyes is currently a graduate teaching assistant and a PhD student in the Engineering Education Department at Utah State University. He formerly held a position as Professor of Telecommu- nication Engineering at Technological University of Honduras. He received his B.S. in Electrical Engi- neering from the National Autonomous University of Honduras. He has experience in the telecommu- nication industry where
, research and development, supplier management, quality management, logistics management, and various leadership positions. He holds an associate’s degree in drafting technology from North Iowa Area Community College (1967), a B.S. in business administration (1990), and M.S. in management (1992) from Indiana Wesleyan University. Schuver is a member of the American Society for Engineering Education and serves on the Executive Board of the Continuing Professional Development Division. He is also a member of College/Industry Partnerships, Engineering Technology, and Graduate Studies divisions of ASEE. Schuver is a member of the National Collaborative Task Force for Engineering Education Reform and is a Lifetime Certified
Robotics (SLIDER) and a NASA online professional development course for K-12 teacher on Using LEGO Robots to Enhance STEM Learning. Page 22.959.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2011 Introducing K-12 Teachers to LEGO Mindstorm Robotics Through a Collaborative Online Professional Development CourseAbstractIn recent decades, engineering and robotics programs such as First Lego League (FLL) haveallowed children ages 9 to 14 to deeply engage with Science, Technology, Engineering, andMathematics (STEM) disciplines and inspired them to explore careers in STEM fields. In 2009,NASA
Paper ID #48752Front-end design in middle-school using a web-based collaborative platform:A design-based research approachDr. Jutshi Agarwal, University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Dr. Jutshi Agarwal is a Research Scientist at the Department of Engineering Education, University at Buffalo. She received her doctoral degree in Engineering and Computing Education from the University of Cincinnati. She also has a Master’s and Bachelor’s degree in Aerospace Engineering. Her primary research areas of interest is in preparing future engineering faculty or teaching professional development of engineering
Paper ID #48806Pre-college design ”Tech for Good”: As a member of a collaborative team,students believe they can change the world.Dr. Shana Lee McAlexander, Duke University As Associate Director, Shana leads grant operations for the Harnessing AI for Understanding & Designing Materials (aiM Program), a Research Traineeship program supported by the National Science Foundation. She also serves as Associate Director of Duke STEM Academy, an immersive summer high school program featured in this paper. Shana’s research interests revolve around STEM Education; representation in science and engineering careers; access to
AC 2008-1106: ENGINEERING FACULTY BECOMING ENGINEERINGEDUCATORS AND RESEARCHERSWendy James, Oklahoma State University Wendy James is a PhD student in the College of Education at Oklahoma State University. Currently she has a fellowship promoting collaboration between the College of Education and OSU's Electrical and Computer Engineering department on an NSF funded curriculum reform project called Engineering Students for the 21st Century. She has her M.S. in Teaching, Learning, and Leadership from OSU, and her B.B.S. in Mathematics Education from Hardin-Simmons University in Abilene, Texas. She has nine years teaching experience at the high school and college levels with courses in math and
of RWTH Aachen University. Her research focuses on innovations in engineering education as well as learning organizations.Dr. Frank Hees, Cybernetics Lab IMA & IfUProf. Ingrid Isenhardt c American Society for Engineering Education, 2019 Effects of Collaborative Augmented Reality on Communication and Interaction in Learning Contexts – Results of a Qualitative Pre-StudyAbstractModern digital technologies like Augmented Reality (AR) are assumed to foster the learningprocess due to their hands-on nature. AR has the advantage of visualising processes, objectsor data and information that would under regular circumstances not be visible or perceptiblefor the user, since it integrates virtual objects into
Paper ID #16497Student’s Self-Regulation in Managing Their Capstone Senior Design ProjectsDr. Oenardi Lawanto, Utah State University Dr. Oenardi Lawanto is an Associate Professor in the Department of Engineering Education at Utah State University, USA. He received his B.S.E.E. from Iowa State University, his M.S.E.E. from the University of Dayton, and his Ph.D. from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Before coming to Utah State, Dr. Lawanto taught and held several administrative positions at one large private university in In- donesia. He has developed and delivered numerous international workshops on student
at Google—industry experience that underpins her research on data-driven project management and agile methodologies. She is currently leading efforts to incorporate AI into educational curricula and teaching methods. Additionally, Aggrawal mentors students at various levels and is actively seeking collaborative opportunities in her field.Laura Starr, Indiana-Purdue University ©American Society for Engineering Education, 2025Fostering Intercultural Competence Through Team-Based Learning in First- Year STEM Learning CommunityAbstractThis paper is submitted to the 2024 ASEE Annual Conference in the “Complete Paper -Research” category of the First-Year Programs Division (FPD).The paper
Exposition, American Society for Engineering Education, 2021.[17] P. Appiah-Kubi, M. McCabe, V. C. Lewis, R. P. Blust, and J. Brothers, “Experiential Learning as a Tool for Deep Collaboration Between Business and Engineering Majors,” in ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, American Society for Engineering Education, Aug. 2022. [Online]. Available: https://peer.asee.org/40434[18] M. Feeney and J. Martin, “The Business of Science: Cross-Disciplinary Information Literacy in the Applied Sciences and Business,” Issues in Science and Technology Librarianship, vol. Spring, 2003.[19] K. Giles and E. Price, “Hey, you got business in my engineering!: Collaborating to support entrepreneurship research,” in ASEE Annual Conference and
Page 15.60.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2010 A Multinational 1+2+1 Electrical Engineering ProgramAbstractA consortium of American universities and Chinese universities has been formed to make amultinational dual-degree program. All American universities belong to the AmericanAssociation of State Colleges and Universities (AASCU) and the Chinese universities to theChina Center for International Education Exchange (CCIEE). These universities agreed on thepolicies regarding the program, with the basic foundation being that it is a 1+2+1 program.While the program applies to various degrees, for Electrical Engineering the 1+2+1 programimplies that Chinese students who have finished basic math and science requirements
AC 2010-521: EVALUATING UNIVERSITY STUDENTS’ WEBCOMMUNICATION COMPETENCY ON MULTIMEDIA APPLICATIONS ANDINFLUENTIAL FACTORS THROUGH INTERNATIONALINDUSTRY-ACADEMY COLLABORATION BY USING GLOBAL ACACERTIFICATIONHsinPiao Hsu, Kainan UniversityHui-Ying Wu, Ching Yun University Page 15.534.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2010 Evaluating University Students’ Web CommunicationCompetency on Multimedia Applications and Influential Factorsthrough International Industry-Academy Collaboration by Using Global ACA CertificationAbstract Through international industry-academy collaboration with Certiport andAdobe Certified Associate (ACA), using data mining from
-Learning for the Social Entrepreneurship Institute in the College of Busi- ness. She has taught service-learning courses in various disciplines and has collaborated on, and traveled abroad with students participating in, international service-learning projects in engineering. Her profes- sional and research interests are in (international) service-learning, social entrepreneurship, humanitarian engineering, community-engaged scholarship, instructor training and professional development, and the scholarship of teaching and learning.Dr. Laura D Hahn, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Laura Hahn holds a PhD in Educational Psychology and Second Language Acquisition from the Univer- sity of Illinois at Urbana
Field Trials Diffusion & Transfer K-12 and Community Cooperative College ServiceTowards a shared Collaborations Extension Servicesunderstanding of the Continuing Education
Environmental Engineering Department, College of Engineering and Computer Science, 151M Link Hall, Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY 13244-1240; Phone: 1-315-443-3401; Fax: 1-315-443-1243; Email: omsalem@syr.edu. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2016“Construction Regulations and Organizational Management” – A Case Study of a New Course Introduction to the Civil Engineering Curriculum at Syracuse UniversityABSTRACTThrough their careers, the Civil Engineering graduates may become project managers who willbe leading the engineering teams. For such purpose, they will need the outlooks, perspectives,and ways of thinking, knowing, and doing appropriate for professional practice
Session 10-4 Ethical Challenges Affecting Engineers and Engineering Education Pradeep K. Bhattacharya and Jiecai Luo Electrical Engineering Department Southern University and A & M College, P.O. Box 9969, Baton Rouge, LA 70813 bhattach@engr.subr.edu and jluo@engr.subr.edu Phone : (225) -771-5292 Abstract Engineering is a creative field produced by an intelligent mixing of science, practiceand policy (or ethics). Engineers design, create and test
), 2007.5. Duderstadt, J.J., Engineering for a Changing World: A Roadmap to the Future of EngineeringPractice, Research, and Education. Ann Arbor, MI: The Millennium Project, The University ofMichigan, 2008.6. Duderstadt, J.J., Raising the Bar: America's Challenge to Higher Education. The University ofMichigan, 2007. Page 22.166.157. Duderstadt, J.J., The Future of the University: A Perspective from the Oort Cloud, 2007a.8. Greitzner, E., Pertuze, J.A., Calder, E. S., and Lucas, W., “Best Practices for Industry-University Collaboration”, MIT Sloan Management Review, Vol. 51, Number 4, Summer 2010.9. Hersh, A.S., “Is there a future for Manufacturing
COOPERATION BETWEEN UNIVERSITIES AND CORPORATIONS Rusk Masih The University of Connecticut, Avery Point Campus, Groton Email r_masih@yahoo.comAbstract This paper treats the role that can be played by both the universities and the industrytogether in shaping continuous engineering education, nationally and internationally. Itrecommends forming a joint committee from the industry and academia to define the plan toenhance the cooperation between the universities and corporations, and the execution of suchplan. It also treats the interest of each
Paper ID #19780What does an In-Class Meeting Entail? A Characterization and Assessmentof Instructor Actions in an Active, Blended, and Collaborative ClassroomDavid Allen Evenhouse, Purdue University, West Lafayette David Evenhouse is a Graduate Student and Research Assistant in the Purdue School of Engineering Education. He graduated from Calvin College in the Spring of 2015 with a B.S.E. concentrating in Mechanical Engineering. Experiences during his undergraduate years included a semester in Spain, taking classes at the Universidad de Oviedo and the Escuela Polit´ecnica de Ingenieria de Gij´on, as well as multiple
collaboration between the Industrial,Electrical, Mechanical, Computer Science Engineering at Texas A&M University-Kingsville. The curriculum provided two integrated portions (Industrial & ElectricalEngineering) based on design, testing, and manufacturing with respect to the knowledgebase and application requirements of the Maquiladora Engineers.As part of curriculum development, the administration and faculty met with theMaquiladora plant managers and leaders several times over a span of several months.The primary objective was to assess the technical, educational, and administrativesupport required to keep up with the forecasted growth of the twin plants and to establisha long term goal based on the future of manufacturing in the area. This
- based research design. Dr. Olson is an editor of the International Journal of Engineering, Social Justice and Peace and serves as faculty fellow in Drexel’s Office of University and Community Partnerships. She is a co-founder and director of the newly established Peace Engineering program at Drexel, which aims to infuse conflict-sensitivity and peacebuilding into engineering education, research and practice.Dr. Joseph Hughes Dr. Hughes, University Distinguished Professor of Engineering, is a member of the Peace Engineering Faculty at Drexel University. American c Society for Engineering Education, 2021 Peace Engineering: A Partnered Approach to Engineering