current technology. • Students as a CAD master drawings are professional quality. Table 6. Capstone Project Assessment Results - ABET Outcomes h and i. OUTCOMES – h, i Professionalism–An understanding of professional and ethical responsibility, a commitment to on-going professional competence and possession of basic professional and organizational success skills. Level 1 Exhibits professionally appropriate behavior patterns, appreciates engineering as a learned profession and possesses daily success skills. Level 2 Accepts responsibility for their education, understands the major professional and
,” Proceedings ofthe 2012 American Society of Engineering Education Annual Conference, San Antonio, TX,June 10 – 13.[3] Vernaza, K.M., Steinbrink, S.E., Brinkman, B.J. and Vitolo T.M. (2014). “Scholars ofExcellence in Engineering and Computer Science Program, an NSF-Funded S-STEM Grant:Assessment and Lessons Learned – First Award.” International Conference on EngineeringEducation and Research, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, August 24-26.[4] Vitolo, T. M., Brinkman, B. J., Vernaza, K. M., Steinbrink, S. (2016). “Serving withEngineering Skills within 15 Miles of Campus: The Scholars of Excellence in Engineering andComputer Science Program,” Proceedings of Frontiers in Education Conference, Erie, PA,October 13-15.[5] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki
., Seielstad, G., and Wivell, C., “The Airborne Environmental Research Observational Camera (AEROCam): A Multispectral Digital Photography System for Remote Sensing,” Proc. of the National Conference on Undergraduate Research 2002, Whitewater, WI, April 25-27, 2002.[2] Won, C., Sale, D., Schultz, R., Johnson, A., and Semke, W., “Spacecraft Systems Engineering – The Initiation of a Multidisciplinary Design Project at the University of North Dakota,” Proc. 2001 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition, Electrical and Computer Engineering Division, Albuquerque, NM, June 24-27, 2001.[3] Wertz, J., and Larson, W. (editors), Space Mission Analysis and Design, Third Edition, Space Technology
2006-1777: DEVELOPMENT AND INTEGRATION OF A DIGITAL CONTROLLABORATORY WITH A DIGITAL SYSTEM LABORATORY AT YOUNGSTOWNSTATE UNIVERSITYBen Shaw, Youngstown State UniversityFaramarz Mossayebi, Youngstown State University Page 11.452.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2006 FlexARM1: An ARM Based IP Core for the UP3 Education KitIntroduction Today’s embedded solutions require a rapid product development time to meet strictmarket demands1. It is essential for system design engineers to verify complex designs inhardware before final implementation. In order for upper level undergraduate students to gainexposure to this verification process, a system level
, establishing key words, etc. Problems numbered 10, 11, 12 and 13 have roots in the overall upbringing of young people,influence of peers and media, prevailing general culture and social values. Having little influenceover these issues, university education must take advantages brought by the other side of some ofthese problems. Lack of interest in group work and lack of respect for authority do have somepositive notion in them. They are typically associated with principles of western culture, such asindependence, individualism and self-reliance. The overlying challenge for engineering educators ishow to harness these positive personal characteristics into skills of team work, efficientcommunication and high work ethic which are among the skills
Electrical and Computer Engineering at the University of Arizona, where he is responsible for facilitating collaboration across campus tMelika Akbarsharifi, The University of Arizona Melika Akbarsharifi is a PhD candidate in Software Engineering at the University of Arizona, studying under Professor Gregory L. Heileman. Her research at the Curricular Analytics Lab focuses on developing advanced computational methods and machine learning approaches to optimize educational pathways and student success.Roxana Akbarsharifi, The University of Arizona I am a PhD student in Software Engineering at the University of Arizona, where I also work as a graduate research assistant. I conduct research in higher education analytics and
responsibilities, and facilitation of graduate and undergraduate level courses using several, unique online learning platforms and face-to-face delivery methods. Sherion truly enjoys working with adults in the online learning environment. She has facilitated over 100 online graduate level classes and authored or co-authored more than 30 journal articles. Page 24.965.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2014 Outreach Activities as an Integral Part of Promotion and TenureAbstractFaculty members are expected to serve their department, their college, their university, theirdiscipline, and
Louisville Khalid Bello is a graduate student at University of Louisville.Dr. Farid Breidi, Purdue University at West Lafayette (PPI) Dr. Farid Breidi joined the School of Engineering Technology at Purdue University as an Assistant Professor in Aug 2020. Farid received his B.E. in Mechanical Engineering degree from the American University of Beirut in 2010, his M.S. in Mechanical EngineDr. Faisal Aqlan, University of Louisville Dr. Faisal Aqlan is an Associate Professor of Industrial Engineering at The University of Louisville. He received his Ph.D. in Industrial and Systems Engineering form The State University of New York at Binghamton. ©American Society for Engineering Education
.2018.32.1_supplement.506.6.[22] E. I. Medvedskaya and М. Е. Ивановна, “Features of the Attention Span in Adult Internet Users,” RUDN J. Psychol. Pedagog., vol. 19, no. 2, Art. no. 2, Jun. 2022, doi: 10.22363/2313-1683-2022-19-2-304-319.[23] N. P. Pitterson, N. Perova-Mello, and R. A. Streveler, “Engineering Students’ Use of Analogies and Metaphors: Implications for Educators,” 2018.[24] A. Zietsman and J. Clement, “The Role of Extreme Case Reasoning in Instruction for Conceptual Change,” J. Learn. Sci., vol. 6, no. 1, pp. 61–89, 1997.[25] D. G. Goldstein and G. Gigerenzer, “The recognition heuristic: How ignorance makes us smart,” in Simple heuristics that make us smart, in Evolution and cognition. , New York, NY, US: Oxford University Press
AC 2011-2498: OPTIMAL DESIGN OF A PUMP AND PIPING SYSTEMCurtis Brackett, Bradley University I am a senior mechanical engineering major at Bradley University in Peoria, IL. I am originally from Aurora, IL. I am the team captain for Bradley’s Formula SAE senior project. I am very interested and plan on developing my career in the field of energy generation.David Zietlow, Bradley University Professor of Mechanical Engineering at Bradley University The primary author is Curtis Brackett, candidate for BSME May 2011 Page 22.1126.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2011
Paper ID #15425Touching Water: Exploring Thermodynamic Properties with Clausius AppDr. Smitesh Bakrania, Rowan University Dr. Smitesh Bakrania is an associate professor in Mechanical Engineering at Rowan University. He re- ceived his Ph.D. from University of Michigan in 2008 and his B.S. from Union College in 2003. His research interests include combustion synthesis of nanoparticles and combustion catalysis using nanopar- ticles. He is also involved in developing educational apps for instructional and research purposes.Mr. Austin Carrig, Rowan University I am currently a student at Rowan University studying mechanical
Computing I and II range from Level 1 to Level 3. For some sub-objectives, it is reasonable to expect students to achieve Level 3 knowledge in these introductory courses.Strategic Sequencing Gagné describes a system's view of prerequisite knowledge9. In this description, he states thatsuccessful completion of each topic lays a necessary foundation for subsequent topics. In the educationalcontext, a "system" may be viewed as those events organized to enhance the knowledge, understanding, orskills of a student. The result of one system serves as input to the following system. In the educational processwe see this output/input relationship manifested in course prerequisites. A clear and explicit set of systemgoals is required if one hopes to
AmericanChemical Society, Annual meeting of the Fluid Dynamics Division of the AmericanPhysical Society and international meetings such as the "II Encuentro Latinoamericanode Engenieria Quimica" held in Antofagasta, Chile, among other meetings. Many of thestudents have been given awards for excellence in their presentations.Also, several of students have been able to publish articles in peer review journals suchas the I&E Chem. Res., The Proceedings of the International Congress of Rheology, andothers. The majority of the students have continued their careers in the graduate school,and they can be found at the Department of Chemical Engineering at Rice University,Northwestern University, University of Texas-Austin, and the University of Florida,among
Engineers, United Kingdom; a Member of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, UK and a Member of the Institute of Transportation Engineers, USA. Dr. Okhio has many years of administrative experience including Chairmanship of a Mechanical Engineering Department. Dr. Okhio understands that most engineering problems require multi-disciplinary solutions that embrace the new concepts of PLM approach so that the resulting solutions can be sustainable and all encompassing. Dr. Okhio has carried out experimental and numerical investigations of, and developed statistical analysis tools and computer codes, for the calculation of complex fluid flows. Some of this work has been published in international journals. He is currently
), 20133-2014. He is IEEE Education Society Membership Development Chair and Van Valkenburg Early Career Teaching Award Chair. Professor Mousavinezhad received Michigan State University ECE Department’s Distinguished Alumni Award, May 2009, ASEE ECE Division’s 2007 Meritorious Service Award, ASEE/NCS Distinguished Service Award, April 6, 2002, for significant and sustained leadership. In 1994 he received ASEE Zone II Outstanding Campus Representative Award. He is also a Senior Mem- ber of IEEE, has been a reviewer for IEEE Transactions including the Transactions on Education. His teaching and research interests include digital signal processing (DSP) and Bioelectromagnetics. He has been a reviewer for engineering
Engineering at Fairfield University, Fairfield, CT, USA. His Current research interests include Applied machine learning, Bioinformatics, Human-computer interaction, and Computational social science. ©American Society for Engineering Education, 2024Masked Language Modeling for Predicting Missing Words in Damaged AncientGreek TextsAbstract:The ancient Greek texts are valuable for understanding and learning about the history, culture,and nuances of ancient Greek life. The texts come in many forms, including papyri, fragments ofpottery, etc. Due to the nature of these materials and degradation over time, some of these textsare missing words, and even entire phrases. This makes it difficult for historians to interpret
normal.Occasionally a senior project will be run internally, with the school of engineering as the sponsor.These projects are funded and used to develop needed equipment. To date I have supervised threeof these project teams to develop equipment for three different needs. Two of these projects usedmultidisciplinary teams. They are, Page 4.393.1 - keytag maker - a four station keytag production machine that is controlled by PLC to support a controls course. - internet controlled mobile robot - for a K-12 outreach program a mobile robot was devel- oped to allow remote manipulation and video feedback over the web.Both projects were completed
. G., Schoen, M. P., Hura, G., and Korde, U., “Innovative Methods in Teaching Fundamentals of Undergraduate Engineering Courses”, 2006 ASEE Annual Conference Proceedings, Chicago, IL, June, 2006.[6] Kraige, L. G. and Lin, Y. Y., “Motion Simulation and Utility Routine Software for Use in Dynamics Courses; Part II: Upper Undergraduate/Graduate–Level Software”, The International Journal of Engineering Education, Vol. 5, No. 1, 1989, pp. 21-29.[7] Kraige, L. G., Holzer, S. M., et al., “A Multimedia Approach to the Teaching of Statics”, 1992 ASEE Annual Conference Proceedings, Toledo, Ohio, June 1992.[8] Kraige, L. G., Hendricks, S. L., and Morris, D. H., “Unified Lecture Software for Statics, Dynamics, and Mechanics
, his passion for physical sciences led them to pursue a Ph.D. in Chemical Engineering at the University of Maine, Orono. During their doctoral studies, Dr. Kennard researched the synthesis and characterization of mesoporous materials using fluorescent spectroscopic methods. After earning his doctorate, he spent several years as a Research Engineer working for Orono Spectral Solutions, focusing on detection methods for chemical and biological warfare agents. In January 2014, Dr. Kennard transitioned back to his passion for education and began teaching mathematics and physical sciences at both Eastern Maine Community College and Husson University. Where he obtained the rank of Associate Professor and Chair of
, his MS degree in Electrical Engineering from Louisiana State University in 2009, and his BE degree in Electronics and Computer Engineering in 2007 from SCSVMV University (India). He also worked as a research intern at ANDRO Computational Solutions, LLC, Rome, NY in the summers of 2013 and 2014. He received multiple best paper awards as well as grants from multiple funding agencies including National Science Foundation, Army Research Office, National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health and Boeing Inc. His research interests broadly span the field of computational neuroscience, machine learning, game-theory and inference networks.Dr. K Krishnamurthy, Missouri University of Science and Technology Dr. K
Proceedings of 2014 Zone 1 Conference of the American Society for Engineering Education (ASEE Zone 1) Learning ANOVA Concepts Using Simulation Leslie Chandrakantha Abstract: Analysis of Variance (ANOVA) is an City University of New York, New York, NY 10019, USA. (phone:important topic in introductory statistics. Many students 212-237-8835,email:lchandra@jjay.cuny.edu).struggle to understand the ANOVA concepts. Statistical Their evaluation of the simulation suggests that it provided anconcepts are important in engineering education. In this effective supplement to book and lecture based methods ofpaper, we describe
methods and solar engineering technologies at both the graduate and undergraduatelevels.References 1 Ashley, S. 1992. Solar Photovoltaics: Out of the Lab and Onto the Production Line. Mechanical Engineering. 114 (1): 48-55. 2 Bendel, C., Rudolph, I., and M. Vioto. 1994. Experimental PV Façade. Proceedings of the Third International Workshop on Photovoltaics in Buildings. Cambridge, MA. 3 Energy Information Agency. 1994. Commercial Characteristics 1992: Commercial Buildings Energy Consumption Survey. Office of Energy Markets and End Use. Washington, DC: US Department of Energy. 4 King, J. 1996. The Real Problem with Deregulation of the Utility Industry. Electric Light and
on college remediation”, Journal of Higher Education, vol. 77, no. 5, pp. 886–924, 2006, doi: 10.1080/00221546.2006.11778948. 4. P. Kerr, “Adaptive learning:”, ELT journal, vol. 70, no. 1, pp. 88–93, 2016, doi: 10.1093/elt/ccv055. 5. J. Janssen, A. Berlanga, H. Vogten and R. Koper, "Towards a learning path specification", International Journal of Continuing Engineering Education and Life-Long Learning, vol. 18, no. 1, p. 77, 2008. doi: 10.1504/ijceell.2008.016077. 6. J. Portillo, A. Alvarado, and J. Samayoa, “MOSL: An innovative approach to a supplementary course of mathematics in engineering”, 2018. 7. J. Portillo, A. Alvarado, and J. Samayoa, “Guided-lecture team-based learning at work
Paper ID #11106Lessons Learned from Co-Developing and Co-Implementing a Design-BuildCourse with the Construction IndustryDr. Carla Lopez del Puerto, University of Puerto Rico at Mayaguez Carla Lopez del Puerto, PhD Associate Professor Construction Engineering and Management Depart- ment of Civil Engineering University of Puerto Rico at Mayaguez email: Carla.LopezdelPuerto@upr.edu http://cem.uprm.eduKelly Strong Page 26.1084.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2015 Lessons Learned from Co
broadcast industry (digital stereo FM radio and digital television) and power industry. He is a Senior Member of the IEEE and typically teaches courses in digital signal processing, circuits and senior design. Page 14.1131.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2009 Teaching DSP Before Analog Signals – Some Unexpected ConsequencesAbstractFor many years our electrical engineering program’s required analog signal analysis course wastaught before the Digital Signal Processing (DSP) elective. That has been the tradition at manyuniversities. But while students would
State.References[1] T.A. Litzinger, P.N. Van Meter, C.M. Firetto, L.J. Passmore, C.B. Masters, S.R. Turns, G.L. Gray, F. Costanzo,S.E. Zappe (2010) A Cognitive Study of Problem Solving in Statics. Journal of Engineering Education, Vol. 99, No.4, pp. 337-354.[2] T.A. Litzinger, P.N. Van Meter, N. Kapli, S.E. Zappe, and R. Toto (2010) Translating education research intopractice within an engineering education center: Two examples related to problem solving, International Journal ofEngineering Education, Vol. 26, No. 4, pp 860-868.[3] Atkinson, R., Derry, S., Renkl, A., Wortham, D., Learning from Examples: Instructional Principles from theWorked Example Research Summer 2000, Vol 70, No. 2. Pp. 181-214[4] Young, M.F. (1993). Instructional design for situated
Paper ID #11657”Leaning In” by Leaving the Lab: Building Graduate Community throughFacilitated Book DiscussionsDr. Katy Luchini-Colbry, Michigan State University Katy Luchini-Colbry is the Director for Graduate Initiatives at the College of Engineering at Michigan State University, where she completed degrees in political theory and computer science. A recipient of a NSF Graduate Research Fellowship, she earned Ph.D. and M.S.E. in computer science and engineering from the University of Michigan. She has published more than two dozen peer-reviewed works related to her interests in educational technology and enhancing
Paper ID #24578Analysis of Distributed Denial of Service Attacks Detection Using Fisher Sta-tistical MethodMr. Yasser R Salem, Graduate studentDr. Paul Cotae, University of the District of Columbia Dr. Paul Cotae, Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering has more than 25 years of experience in the communication field (research and education). He received a Dipl. Ing. and a M.S. degrees in com- munication and electronic engineering in 1980 from the Technical University of Iassy and a Ph.D. degree in telecommunications from ”Politechnica” University of Bucharest, Romania in 1991, and a Master in Applied Mathematics in
engineering in 1994 from Purdue University. Page 24.1339.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2014 Using Open Source NoSQL technologies in Designing Systems for Delivering Electric Vehicle Data Analytics.AbstractAdvances in scientific research related to electric vehicles have led to generation of largeamounts of data. This data is mainly logger data collected from various sensors in the vehicleand stored as flat files. It is predominantly unstructured and non-relational in nature, alsocalled Big Data. Analysis of such data needs a high performance information
Technological University Dr. Kelly Steelman is an Associate Professor in the Department of Cognitive and Learning Sciences and an Affiliated Associate Professor in Mechanical Engineering and Engineering Mechanics at Michigan Technological University.Dr. Leo C. Ureel II, Michigan Technological University Leo C. Ureel II is an Assistant Professor in Computer Science and in Cognitive and Learning Sciences at Michigan Technological University. He has worked extensively in the field of educational software development. His research interests include intelligent learning environments, computer science education, and Artificial IntelligenceDr. Charles Wallace, Michigan Technological University Dr. Charles Wallace studied