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Collection
2008 ASEE Midwest Section Conference
Authors
Christi L. Patton
were used in the design project and allowed opportunities for discussion within smallergroups of students. The remainder of this paper will focus on the self-paced portion of thecourse.All TU students have access to Vista. Most teachers use this as a repository of handouts andcourse supplements, or to post grades throughout the semester. However, it has many additionalcapabilities and is designed to manage entire online courses or as a supplement to moretraditional courses. For ChE 1013, the instructor created 26 modules incorporating (1)videotaped lessons, (2) links to supplemental online materials, (3) online quizzes, and (4)homework assignments. Each lesson had a due date. After the due date, students couldcomplete the work with a 2% per
Collection
2022 CIEC
Authors
Sabah Abro
and Education Collaboration Copyright ©2022, American Society for Engineering Education ETD 445When professional engineers and engineering technology graduates join on-the-job training orprofessional development sessions, it is clear that a considerable portion of them cannot makethe connection between what they studied and what is being discussed in quality trainingprograms. There are few reasons for that:• Related courses are taught in abstract (purely mathematical) way.• Instructors are not engineers, or they do not have enough expertise in the industrial applications of the topics.• Classes are not clustered into
Collection
2011 North Midwest Section
Authors
Daniel N. Pope
with thecapabilities and use of the ANSYS software. Students were expected to perform varioustutorials available on the ANSYS Customer Portal5 and at Cornell Uni e i SimCafe eb i e6and present a summary of the techniques and tools that they learned about in each tutorial. Theywere also prompted to access materials appropriate to their individual project from the ANSYSCustomer Portal5 and Resource Library7. Several lab sessions where used to review meshingincluding structured and unstructured meshes. Figure 1 shows examples used in the lab of anunstructured mesh (Fig. 1a) and a structured mesh (Fig. 1b) for axisymmetric flow over acylinder. Proceedings of the 2011 North Midwest Section ConferenceThe coursework
Collection
2012 St.Lawrence Section Meeting
Authors
Brian Surgenor
afford such courses, given that they are expensive in terms of bothtime and money ?” This paper reviewed the offering of the course in Mechatronics anddiscussed the underlying resource issues. The only recommendation is that both students (andinstructors) need to continue to lobby on behalf of such courses. The effort is worth it.References1. Grose, T.K. “”Hot Courses” What Wows the Facebook Generation ?”, ASEE Prism, Summer, 2011.2. Simcock, A.L., “Making Courses Attractive by the Phased Introduction of Industry Problems”, Proc. European Society for Engineering Education (SEFI), Aalborg, Denmark, June 30-July 1, 2008.3. Goff, R.M., "The Art of Creating an Active Learning Environment", ASEE Annual Conference Proceedings, Session
Collection
2002 ASEE North Midwest Section Conference
Authors
Traci Kelly
; those student have come from all of the engineering disciplines,business, journalism, technical communication, art, sociology, political science, and otherdisciplines. I would like to speak generally about the difference between service learning andvolunteerism first, then speak to the University of Wisconsin (UW) efforts, and finallymove specifically to the segment of the UW program called “Information Systems,”where I am a co-advisor/instructor with Dr. Fred Bradley of Material ScienceEngineering. By using the Information Systems (IS) EPICS teams as examples, I wouldlike to explore some of the complexities of designing a class and project that serves sucha multiplicity of needs, both for students, clients, and instructors.Service
Collection
2017 Gulf Southwest Section Conference
Authors
Ilse Nava-Medina; Angie Hill Price; Mathew Kuttolamadom
thatthey had some hours to spare each week committed to a research project. Regarding research topics,the only trepidation was along the lines of their own technical capabilities/skills pertaining to theresearch project, and especially since this was their generally first experience with research. Oncethe major ‘fears’ were alleviated that included self-competency concerns and the uncertaintiesinvolved, the students were excited to get started and get the major equipment/safety training done. Proceedings of the 2017 ASEE Gulf-Southwest Section Annual Conference Organized by The University of Texas at Dallas Copyright © 2017, American Society for Engineering Education
Collection
2014 Fall ASEE Middle Atlantic Section Conference
Authors
Shanelle M. Harris; LeeRoy Bronner
approach that seeks tovalidate a problem solution, the Alloy Language is presented. Implementation Problem Solution Index Terms— Alloy Language, Object-Oriented Analysis Maintenance(OOA), Object-Oriented Models (OOM), Set Theory,Specification Language, System Development Life Cycle (SDLC), Fig. 1: Standard System Development Life CycleZ-language The planning phase determines the high levels of the projectI. INTRODUCTION used to generate goals. System analysis defines
Collection
2013 Fall ASEE Middle Atlantic Section Conference
Authors
Ralph Belton; Ahmet Zeytinci
students were informed in the field that their findings would have to be summarized andpresented to the community stake holders. The faculty introduced the studio problem statementand that the students will present their solutions and findings. 2The students were forced to compare their problem statement with the reality on the ground.They were asked to consider how the seven area of design consideration related to the actualconditions in the field: 1. Identification of the issues and problems 2. Establishment of the parameters 3. Visual Inspection of the field problems 4. General earthquake design principles 5. Feasibility considerations (Cost and technical) 6
Collection
AEE Journal
Authors
Ryan Solnosky P.E.; Joshua Fairchild
show correlations between theresults and other technical assignments.Key words: Team dynamics, cross-disciplinary Teams, multi-source Feedback INTRODUCTION Many engineering students do not know how to approach large complex systems due to theirexposure to idealistic examples (ASCE 2004). Additionally they not capable of providing criticalFALL 2017 1 ADVANCES IN ENGINEERING EDUCATION Survey Tools for Faculty to Quickly Assess Multidisciplinary Team Dynamics in Capstone
Collection
2018 Gulf Southwest Section Conference
Authors
Vijaya Gopu; Ayman Okeil; Roger Seals
scope and amount of content judged to be necessary for aPanel of SHM experts drawn from academia, state meaningful educational experience, the project adopted adepartments of transportation, and private practice. “flipped classroom” type approach. That is, in advance of aGuidance in assessment of the outcomes was provided by classroom discussion session, students reviewed the contentan external evaluator from a major university. Technical modules online that were provided in both PowerPoint andand
Collection
2005 GSW
Authors
Jim Farison
only the traditional “lecture” format (with 43 fifty-minute sessions per semester).Nonetheless, it seemed best for the course, both for appeal and pedagogy, to have a non-trivial“imaging systems” component as well as the “image processing” component.The textbook selected for the course was Digital Image Processing (Second Edition), 2002, byRafael C. Gonzalez and Richard E. Woods, published by Prentice Hall. It has a number of desirablefeatures, with good on-line help. While it has less directly on imaging systems than desired for thiscourse, it does have quite a strong first chapter that reflects actual imaging applications by theirspectral range of operation. The course was formed around the following textbook chapter outlineand order: 1
Collection
2002 ASEE North Midwest Section Conference
Authors
Steven M. Cramer; Nancy Ciezki; Hussain Bahia; Carole Kraak; Carole Schramm
various types,metals, wood, and plastics to learn the details of standardized laboratory and fieldmeasurement techniques used to evaluate construction materials performance, topractice and improve technical/professional skills such as report writing and teamwork.Note that our objectives were neither to transport the entire course to an on-line formatnor to replace the hands-on laboratory experience. As described above, we proposethat the engineering education and the development of visualization skills would sufferwithout the hands-on interactive capabilities that occur in a physical laboratory setting.While some aspects of training can easily be conveyed using video and other forms ofmedia, in general, we believe the most effective educational
Collection
2018 Gulf Southwest Section Conference
Authors
John R. Clegg; Kenneth R. Diller
independent skill, instruction on student engagement. With student students will transfer it to technical contexts outside disengagement as the response variable, the observation of the domain where they originally developed it; categorical variables and the following numerical variables 3. Challenge-based instruction enhances student were included for control purposes (class number, time). The growth in innovative thinking by increasing in-class entirety of every class session was observed, qualified, and engagement, offering frequent and diverse formative recorded (2130 minutes total). assessment, and promoting metacognition; and 4. Following challenge
Collection
2015 ASEE Zone 3 Conference
Authors
Steve E. Watkins
Science and Technology includes two sessions on professional ethics. The firstsession is a formal overview of ethics as related to engineering work and it is focused on appliedethics as part of a profession. Example case studies related to electrical and computerengineering and general profession life are included. Selected slides from the introduction andsummary of the “Engineering Ethics” presentation is given in Appendix B in Figure 2. Thesecond session is a presentation of case studies for teams of students to analyze. This assignmentis tracked as part the department’s ABET assessment plan that is related to student outcome (f)“an understanding of professional and ethical responsibility [1].”The objectives of the ethics seminar presentation
Collection
2014 ASEE Zone 4 Conference
Authors
Shervin Zoghi; Eric Liguori; Manoochehr Zoghi; Fariborz Tehrani; The Nguyen
entrepreneurship education; (2) early childhood entrepreneurship education; and (3)regional economic development. To that end the LCIE operates a plethora of programs creatingvalue in these spaces. The remainder of this section provides a brief overview of domains 2 and 3for context, and then dives in depth into domain 1 as it’s directly related to the topic of thismanuscript. The LCIE operates programs for students in the K-12 education system bothformally as part of their in-class education (via partnership with local schools) and throughextracurricular camps, events, and sessions. Annually, over 1,000 students spanning 20+ schoolsreceive formal entrepreneurship education through LCIE programs. In addition, multiplerevenue-generating summer camps, the
Collection
2014 ASEE Zone 1 Conference
Authors
Khaled Almgren; Christian Bach
we have seen in the case study, a technical problem indiscussed individually under these three categories. transferring the data from the old system to the new systemThese two effects are shown in Figure 1. The figure shows has put the Water Corporation in a disastrous situation; thethe two main categories of effects that the ERP system could data was simply not available (De Loo, et al.).bring. Another technical problem that can put an organization in a bad place is what happened with CosmeticCo. It is one of the biggest Chinese companies
Collection
2023 IL-IN Section Conference
Authors
Jiaxi Li; Ninghan Zhong; Rob Kooper; Lawrence Angrave
platform, for multiple purposes: 1) Improve the Microsoft Azure Speech-to-Text accuracy by preparing a list of domain- specific terms with high confidence of occurrence in the audio, 2) Provide the input for the glossary tool, another text analytics service in ClassTranscribe that automatically generates the explanation for the domain-specific terms, and, currently in progress, 3) Provide search capability in order to locate the moments in the video when a domain- specific term is visually presented. In this paper, we evaluate the performance and accuracy of the PhraseHinter sys- tem based on a representative corpus of videos from different engineering disciplines with domain-specific terms and phrases correctly pre-identified. We
Collection
2005 GSW
Authors
M. M. Darwish; M. H. Akram; B. Green
methods nor taking the majorresponsibility for their own learning. On the other hand, some, instructors hesitate toapply active learning methods based on the myths of following:1) It won’t be successful in technical courses,2) It won’t leave enough time to cover the important concepts,3) Students won’t like to work together and won’t like to meet outside of the school.4) When students work as groups it is difficult to assess individual work,5) Active learning means no lecturing,6) Preparation of class time will be much longer,7) Student’s learning will not be effected by implementing active learning. In our experience, an important factor in implementing of case studies into a course isthe style or structure of the course itself. In fact that it
Collection
2007 Pacific Southwest Section Meeting
Authors
Nhut Tan Ho
courses–CDIOteam-based projects.A number of outcomes are currently being evaluated to assess the effectiveness of theimplementation and the framework. The first outcome is that participating students whocomplete the CDIO program will perform more effectively in the follow-on ME designcourse than students in the traditional program. The metric for measuring performanceimprovement is the students’ accomplishments in the CDIO skills in the general areas of(a) technical knowledge and reasoning, and (b) conceiving, designing, implementing andoperating systems in the enterprise and societal context.In order to assess this outcome, courses in which the CDIO activities are introduced willbe taught in parallel sessions: one class will use the CDIO
Collection
2010 ASEE Zone 1 Conference
Authors
David Potter
A context for unstructured experimentation: What resources are available to the student tinkerer? David Potter Northeastern University College of Engineering Session 2: Tools, techniques, and best practices of engineering education for the digital generation “What I hear, I forget; What I see, I remember; What I do, I understand.” – Old Chinese proverb Abstract: Education for the digital generation can be thought of as a process of classroom and laboratory learning
Collection
2016 Rocky Mountain Section Conference
Authors
Clifton B. Farnsworth; Evan Bingham; Justin E. Weidman
that the students researched that much more meaningful to them.The travel itinerary for this study abroad course included visiting and seeing sites in sevendifferent cities. With the theme of “mega” being adopted for this trip, the featured sites includedsome of the biggest skyscrapers, bridges, cities, and other engineered works in the world, bothhistoric and modern. Table 1 shows a generic itinerary, including the cities and principal sitesvisited, that was utilized during the travel portion of this course. Some of these site visits © American Society for Engineering Education, 2016 178 2016 ASEE
Collection
2005 GSW
Authors
Kenneth Van Treuren
using laboratory equipment. The current syllabus for thisportion of the course is as follows: Table 1 – First ten weeks of EGR 4334, ME LabWeek Tuesday Lecture Tuesday Lab Thursday Lab1 Introduction Error Analysis Data Reduction2 Pressure Measurement Calibrate Transducer Orifice Lab3 Fluid Flow Calibrate Hot-wire Cylinder Drag Lab Measurement4 Design of Experiments Project Plan Meetings Work Session5 Report Writing Work Session Plan Presentations6 Fluid Flow Boundary Layer IC Engine or Weir Lab Measurement
Collection
2012 ASEE Midwest Section Conference
Authors
Robert M. O'Connell
coursecontent) tends to be hierarchical, meaning that most topics build on previous ones, so that inorder to understand a given topic it is essential to understand most of what came before it. It isvery difficult for most students, working independently, to proceed very far into a body of newhierarchical material before becoming unable to obtain even an introductory level ofcomprehension. Thus, the readiness readings and assignments of Phase 1 are divided into severalshorter segments, consisting of the new material to be applied in group work in the followingclass session or two, e.g., a section or two of a chapter in the textbook. As before, each readinessassignment culminates in a short readiness test, but now those tests, or quizzes, are
Collection
2020 Gulf Southwest Section Conference
Authors
Amir Karimi; Randall Manteufel
general criteria for baccalaureate degree programs and thespecific program criteria required by the program’s lead society (e.g., ASCE, IEEE, ASME,etc.).1 Programs must also meet all the requirements listed in the Accreditation-Policy-and-Procedure-Manual (APPM) of ABET.2 This paper is an extension of the paper presented andpublished in the proceedings of ASEE-Gulf Southwest (GSW) section in March 2017.3 Twosimilar studies were conducted in 2016 and 2017 which were based on the proposed changessubmitted by EAC commission for public comments in 2015 and 2016 respectively. 4,5 The paperpublished in the proceedings of the 2017 ASEE-GSW section conference summarized thecontinuous changes made to the ABET-EAC general criteria from 2000 to March, 2017
Collection
2023 ASEE Midwest Section Conference
Authors
Sanjay Tewari
bright students struggle to pick up the pace and fail to adjust toprofessional environment without proper mentoring and guidance, which they may or may notget.Civil engineering classes often have a laboratory component. These laboratory sessions are agreat opportunity for students to gain hands-on experience of engineering fundamentals. Theauthor has incorporated these opportunities to provide students exposure to latest techniquesbeing used in higher research and professional level [1], [2]. This paper discusses some of thetraditional and non-traditional options that could be included in the civil engineering education to © American Society for Engineering Education, 2023 2023 ASEE Midwest
Collection
2013 GSW
Authors
Eric Haney; Lex Gonzalez; Amen Omoragbon; Amit Oza; Bernd Chudoba
Friday Morning Session 1- Student Integrated Engineering Database: A 21st Century Decision Aid Eric Haney, Lex Gonzalez, Amen Omoragbon, Amit Oza, and Bernd Chudoba Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Department University of Texas at Arlington AbstractThe exponentially increasing amount of information accumulated from past and currentengineering projects has created an environment where retaining and utilizing existingknowledge is paramount. The modern engineer is tasked with leveraging the intellectual andfinancial efforts of legacy projects in order to ensure on-time, on
Collection
2013 ASEE Midwest Section Conference
Authors
Robert M. O'Connell
instructors inlearning to use student-centered learning, including predominantly group-based methods, in theclassroom. Currently, the course consists of five units, each of which culminates in a quiz thatthe instructor-as-student must take successfully before being allowed to move on to the nextsection. The content sections of the course consist of Powerpoint slides plus detailed instructorcommentary for further explanation. Also included are selected illustrative video clips takenduring an exemplary classroom session. Results from an evaluative survey taken of facultyvolunteers who agreed to pilot the course are being used to improve the course.IntroductionResearch has shown that traditional lecturing is a relatively inefficient way to
Collection
2012 Northeast Section Meeting
Authors
James A. Lee; Michael J. D'Agostino
Materials, (ASTM), and American Concrete Institute, (ACI), methods for aggregate andconcrete testing, are included in the course. These sessions emphasize proper testing and quality control. Studentsare also taught the effects of water/cement ratio, temperature and admixtures. In the last lab session students replacecement with Supplemental Cementitious Materials (SCM), to understand the economics of concrete and benefits ofSCM.To perform these labs, as much as two hundred fifty five (255) 1 – ½ cubic foot batches or 14.2 cubic yards ofconcrete per year is mixed. This volume of concrete consumes a great deal of raw materials (i.e., natural resources). 1 James A. Lee, Wentworth Institute of Technology, Boston, MA. 2 Michael J
Collection
2015 ASEE Zone 3 Conference
Authors
James R. Rowland
(1), pp. 85-101.[34] J. C. Chen and J. Chen, “Testing a new approach for learning teamwork knowledge and skills in technical education”, Journal of Industral Technology, Feb 2004, 20(2), pp. 1-10.[35] K. A. Smith, “Strategies for developing engineering students teamwork and project management skills”, 2000, Proc., ASEE Annual Conference, Session 1630.[36] K. S. Kim and L. D. McNair, “Self-managed teaming and team effectiveness in interdisciplinary capstone design”, 2010, Proc., 40th FIE Conference, Washington DC, Session F1F.[37] J. S. Collofello and M. Hart, “Monitoring team progress in a software engineering project class”, 29th FIE Conference, 1999, San Juan, PR, Session 11b4.[38] J. H. Andrews and H. L. Lutfiyya
Collection
2009 Fall ASEE Middle Atlantic Section Conference
Authors
Ti Lin Liu
. The application of these computer skills in dynamics, machine design, vibration and other advances courses are more important for our student to improve their analytical and computer skills. Reference: 1. Ti Lin, Liu, “Developing a New Graduate Course—Computer Aided Engineering” ASME International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition, Nov. 5-11, 2005, Orlando, Florida 2. Ti Lin, Liu, “Modernization of Engineering Mechanics Education with Computer Application”, Presentation for 1995 ASEE Annual Conference, Anaheim, CA, June 26, 1995, Session #1668 Appendix: Appendix A. Frame Analysis in Excel:Fig.1. Frame Analysis in Excel Appendix B. Frame Analysis in MathCAD:Fig.2. Frame Analysis in Mathcad