eachinstitution during this study.Key words: Sustainability, capstone design, mixed methods INTRODUCTION Engineers of the future must be prepared to address the complex, multidisciplinary problemsthat necessitate engineering solutions in sustainable and global contexts. Engineering educationcan provide students with the tools to approach these grand challenges of the 21st century whileconsidering aspects that are key for designing sustainable systems (David Allen et al. 2006, Davidsonet al. 2010). Furthermore, according to the National Academy of Science report, Changing theConversation, youth are seeking careers that make a difference (Sullivan 2011, National Academy ofSciences 2008). Sustainable engineering
.). Learning experiences provide students with hands-on experience in using multiple technologies. (Examples:Quality of Technology computer hardware and software, calculators, probes,Integration scales, microscopes, rulers and hand lenses to name just a few). Page 23.755.5Program Design and ObjectivesIn 2010, UD received an NSF – Research Experience for Teachers (RET) award entitled,Engineering and Innovation Design for STEM Teachers. The overarching goal of the RETprogram, in general, is to develop long-term, collaborative
AC 2011-1328: ISES A LONGITUDINAL STUDY TO MEASURE THE IM-PACTS OF SERVICE ON ENGINEERING STUDENTSChristopher W. Swan, Tufts University Chris Swan is an associate professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering with additional appoint- ments in the Jonathan M. Tisch College of Citizenship and Public Service and the Center for Engineering Education and Outreach at Tufts University. Dr. Swan has also served as chair of Tufts CEE depart- ment (2002-2007) and as an officer in the Environmental Engineering division of ASEE (2001-2005). Dr. Swan’s current interests lie in the areas of waste reuse, and service-based educational efforts in the engineering curriculum. Specific efforts involving engineering education concern
Paper ID #9340Students vs. Professionals in Assisted Requirements Tracing: How Could WeTrain Our Students?Mr. Tanmay Bhowmik, Mississippi State University Tanmay Bhowmik is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Computer Science and Engineering at Mis- sissippi State university. He obtained his M.S. degree in Computer Science from the same department in 2010. He completed his Bachelor’s degree in Computer Science and Engineering from National Institute of Technology, India, in 2007. His research interest is looking at software engineering from a social infor- mation foraging (SIF) perspective. Currently he is exploring
the World Bank (2019) [1], the number of people without access to electricity suppliesdecreased from 1.2 billion in 2010 to 759 million in 2019. Electrification through decentralized solutionsbased on renewable Energy gained momentum. According to the same report, the number of peopleconnected to isolated mini electrical grids (called microgrids) doubled between 2010 and 2019, goingfrom 5 to 11 million people. However, there is still much to do. Through her presentation in TED talks,engineer Rose Mutiso (2019) [2] presents the problem and describes alternative solutions with theintroduction of sustainable electricity production (wind and solar) in the same communities.In Mexico, according to Energía Hoy (Servin, 2021) [3], there are more than
University of Pittsburgh’s Swanson School of Engineering. He graduated with a BS in Computer Engineering and is employed with OneEnergy in Findlay, OH.Dr. Robert J. Kerestes, University of Pittsburgh Robert Kerestes, PhD, is an assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering at the University of Pittsburgh’s Swanson School of Engineering. Robert was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. He got his B.S. (2010), his M.S (2012). and his PhD (2014) from the University of Pittsburgh, all with a concen- tration in electric power systems. Robert’s academic focus is in education as it applies to engineering at the collegiate level. His areas of interest are in electric power systems, in particular, electric machinery
, 2021, doi: 10.30880/jtet.2021.13.01.020.[13] J. F. Binder, T. Baguley, C. Crook, and F. Miller, “The academic value of internships: Benefits across disciplines and student backgrounds,” Contemp Educ Psychol, vol. 41, pp. 73–82, Apr. 2015, doi: 10.1016/j.cedpsych.2014.12.001.[14] A. Yin, “AC 2010-59: UNDERSTANDING COOPERATIVE EDUCATION AND INTERNSHIPS: THE INFLUENCE ON ENGINEERING STUDENTS’ PROBLEM SOLVING SKILLS Understanding Cooperative Education and Internships: The Influence on Engineering Students’ Problem Solving Skills,” 2010.[15] S. C. O. Conceição, A. Samuel, and S. M. Yelich Biniecki, “Using concept mapping as a tool for conducting research: An analysis of three approaches,” Cogent Soc
setting. Through thisquestioning, the specialists, which included representatives from the engineering, engineeringeducation, technology and engineering education, and teacher education communities, wereasked to identify, rate, and then verify core concepts and the corresponding sub-concepts deemedimportant for inclusion in a framework for engineering learning at the pre-college level. Morespecifically, the four rounds consisted of concept discovery, concept prioritization, conceptrating, and then concept verification/refinement. Lastly, a synthesis of relevant literature at thetime (i.e., Carr, Bennett, & Strobel, 2012; Custer & Erekson, 2008; Merrill, et al., 2009; NationalAcademy of Engineering, 2009; 2010; Sneider & Rosen, 2009
, incremental encoders, and quadrature encoding. • Describe the function and operation of accelerometers in your own words. Use appropriate figures, equations, and text. At a minimum, describe types of accelerometers (e.g., AC vs. DC response), accelerometer designs (e.g., compression vs. shear), the effect of mounting types, and IEPE.This portion of the project is aligned with the first sub-outcome of ABET Student Outcome 7:acquire new knowledge using appropriate learning strategies.Students are also provided with a case study on condition monitoring to review. Students areasked to identify stakeholders and explain how each stakeholder benefited or may benefit in thefuture from the application of condition monitoring in the
Otalvaro BS, Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Sede Medelln, Colombia MA, Friedrich Schieller University, ¨ oOptique Graduate School, France PhD, Paris-Saclay Germany MA, Paris-Sud University, Institute dAˆ University, France Dr. Serna received his degree in physics engineering from the National University of Colombia, Sede Medellin, in 2010 and a double masterAˆ ¨ os degree from the Friedrich-Schiller-University Jena, Germany, ¨ oOptique Graduate School Paris, France, in optics, matter and plasmasA` in photonics and the Institute dAˆ ¨u (Erasmus Mundus Master
. 123–143, 1991, doi: 10.1080/10400419109534381.[15] E. W. Taylor, “Transformative learning theory,” New Dir. Adult Contin. Educ., vol. 5–15, no. 119, pp. 5–15, 2008, doi: 10.1002/ace.301.[16] J. M. Dirkx, “Transformative Learning and the Journey of Individuation,” ERIC Dig., vol. No. 223, 2000.[17] C. H. Joslyn and M. M. Hynes, “The humanistic side of engineering: A focus on engineering ‘as’ a person,” 2015.[18] N. D. Fila, J. L. Hess, A. Hira, C. H. Joslyn, D. Tolbert, and M. Hynes, “The people part of engineering: Engineering for, with, and as people,” in Proceedings - Frontiers in Education Conference, FIE, 2014, pp. 727–735, doi: 10.1109/FIE.2014.7044106.[19] M. Hynes and J. Swenson, “The
, Macroethics and the Role of Professional Societies,” Science and Engineering Ethics, vol. 7, no. 3, pp. 403–414, 2001, doi: 10.1007/s11948-001-0062-2.[9] G. R. Miller and K. Brumbelow, “Attitudes of Incoming Civil Engineering Students toward Sustainability as an Engineering Ethic,” Journal of Professional Issues in Engineering Education and Practice, vol. 143, no. 2, pp. 1–7, 2017, doi: 10.1061/(ASCE)EI.1943-5541.0000306.[10] J. M. DuBois, D. A. Schilling, E. Heitman, N. H. Steneck, and A. A. Kon, “Instruction in the responsible conduct of research: An inventory of programs and materials within CTSAs,” Clinical and Translational Science, vol. 3, no. 3, pp. 109–111, 2010, doi: 10.1111/j.1752
Paper ID #33796Development of a Smart Grid Course in an Electrical EngineeringTechnology ProgramDr. Murat Kuzlu, Old Dominion University Murat Kuzlu (Senior Member – IEEE) joined the Department of Engineering Technology, Old Dominion University (ODU) in 2018 as an Assistant Professor. He received his B.Sc., M.Sc., and Ph.D. degrees in Electronics and Telecommunications Engineering from Kocaeli University, Turkey, in 2001, 2004, and 2010, respectively. From 2005 to 2006, he worked as a Global Network Product Support Engineer at Nortel Networks, Turkey. In 2006, he joined the Energy Institute of TUBITAK-MAM (Scientific and
ACADEMIC AND PROFESSIONAL APPOINTMENTS January 2014 – Present Dean, Business + In- novation, Bucks County Community College May 2007-January 2014 – Director, Paralegal Program, Bucks County Community College August 2013-January 2014 –Associate Professor, Law, Bucks County Community College August 2010-August 2013 – Assistant Professor, Law, Bucks County Community College January 2007-August 2010 – Instructor, Law, Bucks County Community College March 2006- January 2014 Managing Partner, TimbyHunt, Attorneys at Law August 2005-January 2007 – Adjunct Professor, Law, Bucks County Community College January 2004-May 2006 – Adjunct Professor, Law, Manor College August 1998-August 2005 – Adjunct Professor Law, Delaware Valley
undergraduate concentration in mechatronics.," Proceedings Frontiers in Education 35th Annual Conference. IEEE, pp. F3F-7, 2005.[3] D. Bradley, "What is mechatronics and why teach it?," International Journal of Electrical Engineering Education, vol. 41, pp. 275-291, 2004.[4] R. B. S. K. A. &. M. D. Roemer, "A spiral learning curriculum in mechanical engineering," American Society for Engineering Education, 2010.[5] T. H. a. M. J. Samuel Yang, "A GENERAL PURPOSE SENSOR BOARD FOR MECHATRONIC EXPERIMENTS," American Society for Engineering Education , no. AC 2007-1438, 2007.[6] J. a. N. S. Riofrio, "Teaching undergraduate introductory course to mechatronics in the mechanical engineering curriculum using Arduino," ASEE Annual
. Nieusma and D. Riley. 2010. “Designs on development: engineering, globalization, and social justice.” Engineering Studies, 2(1), 29-59.[7] D. Nieusma. 2011. “Engineering, social justice, and peace: Strategies for pedagogical, curricular, and institutional reform.” American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition, Paper AC 2011-1495, 12 pp.[8] C. Baillie, A.L. Pawley, D. Riley. 2012. Engineering and Social Justice in the University and Beyond. Purdue University Press, West Lafayette Indiana.[9] J. Lucena, Ed. 2013. Engineering Education for Social Justice: Critical Explorations and Opportunities. Springer.[10] E.A. Cech. 2013. “The (Mis)Framing of Social Justice: Why Ideologies of depoliticization
anintegrated interdisciplinary approach referred to as system engineering [1]. For an aircraft, amajor component is represented by the aircraft health management (AHM), which is aimed atensuring maximum safe operation within affordability constraints [2, 3]. AHM must be consid-ered throughout the entire lifecycle of the system including design, production, operation, andmaintenance. The importance of safety for the aerospace industry and research community isexpected to continue to grow and, consequently, so does the responsibility of the higher educationsystem to ensure proper workforce background in this area [4]. While system operation undernominal design conditions is addressed systematically, operation under abnormal conditions (ACs),when any
RUBRIC and one minor error: stopped instead of triggered, AC (15 pts) Implement a logic circuit in VHDL and simulate all possibilities. 8 instead of DC biased Ind. Pts. Description Shows the full waveform in analog triggered with 0 Nothing provided E 10 correct values for period and voltage 2 Can write VHDL by hand U 3 Can open a program to write VHDL TABLE III 4 Can open
clean soldering job and a working radio. The radio is used in M5 as part of theirbench-top radio station.M2. Introduction to the lab bench equipment. The oscilloscope, digital multimeter (DMM),power supply, function generator and current probe are introduced. By this time in the semester(third week), students have learned about current and voltage dividers in EE 20224. Here, bread-boarding is introduced, and students build simple resistor networks as current and voltagedividers. They use DC and AC sources and measure voltages and currents using the DMM andoscilloscope. A variety of activities allows them to explore the basic functions of each of the corebench tools.M3. Power transmission. Time-wise, this is themost intensive module of the
accepted for publication in Science Scope.4. Daugherty, J., Custer, R. L., Brockway, D., & Spake, D. A. (2012). Engineering Concept Assessment: Design and development (AC 2012-2987). American Society for Engineering Education.5. Greene, B. A. (2015). Measuring cognitive engagement with self-report scales: Reflections from over 20 years of research. Educational Psychologist, 50, 14-30. doi:10.1080/00461520.2014.9892306. Unfried, A., Faber, M., Stanhope, D. S., & Wiebe, E. (2015). The development and validation of a measure of Student Attitudes Toward Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math (S-STEM). Journal of Psychoeducational Assessment, 1-18.7. American Association for the Advancement of Science (2017). Science
Postsand Telecommunications (No. GJJY16-2-07).references [1] L. Cuthbert, Y. Ying, et al, “A Flagship Joint Sino-British Engineering Degree,” Meeting the Growing Demandfor Engineers and Their Educators 2010-2020 International Summit, 2007 IEEE. [2] R. M. Helms, Mapping International Joint and Dual Degrees: U.S. Program Profiles and Perspectives. ACE,CIGE Insights. [3] J. Lee, S. H. Patel, B. Lim, R. D. Geng, and Z. Jiang, “Toward Success of Collaborative Program In School ofEngineering Between the US and China,” ASEE International Forum, New Orleans, LA, 2016. [4] Q. Liu, J. Zhu, and B. Yang, “Impact of International Collaborative Engineering Education upon theEpistemological Development of Chinese Engineering Students,” ASEE Annual Conference
. Holsapple, D. Carpenter, J. Sutkus, C. Finelli, K. Walczak, & T. Harding. “AC 2010- 1615: Understanding the Differences Between Faculty and Administrator Goals and Students’ Experience with Ethics Education.” American Society of Engineering Education, 2010.[4] H. Clarkeburn. How to Teach Science Ethics. University of Glasgow. http://these.gla.ac.uk/2852/, 2000.[5] M.J. Bebeau, & S.J. Thoma. “The Impact of a Dental Ethics Curriculum on Moral Reasoning.” Journal of Dental Education, vol. 58, pp. 684-691, 1996.[6] N.A. Fouad and M.C. Santana. “SCCT and Underrepresented Populations in STEM Fields: Moving the Needle.” Journal of Career Assessment, vol. 25, no. 1, pp. 24-39, 2017.[7] E
AC 2007-2749: OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES FOR MANUFACTURINGENGINEERINGDanny Bee, University of Wisconsin-Stout DANNY J. BEE is an Assistant Professor of Manufacturing Engineering since 1995 and the former Program Director for Manufacturing Engineering at the University of Wisconsin-Stout. He earned a B.S. in Mechanical Engineering at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and a M.S. in Manufacturing Systems Engineering at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He has design/manufacturing experience in the aerospace and computer industries. In addition, he worked as a Quality Specialist in the Janesville/Beloit, WI region at Blackhawk Technical College. He is currently a Ph.D. student in
AC 2007-2771: IMPACT OF NEW FACILITIES ON ENGINEERING STUDENTOUTCOMESJames Helbling, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University JAMES HELBLING, M.S.A.E. Currently an Assistant Professor of Aerospace Engineering where he teaches structural analysis, computer aided design, and aircraft detail design courses. He has 21 years of industry experience with McDonnell Douglas (now Boeing) and Northrop Grumman Corporation where he specialized in structural fatigue loading and served as manager of F-5/T-38 Engineering.David Lanning, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University DAVID B. LANNING, Ph.D. Currently an Associate Professor of Aerospace Engineering at ERAU/Prescott where he teaches courses in structural
AC 2007-670: USING TECHNOLOGY TO ENHANCE THE TRADITIONALLECTUREDoug Carroll, University of Missouri Dr. Douglas R. Carroll, PE is a Professor in the Interdisciplinary Engineering Department at the University of Missouri-Rolla. He is best known for his work with solar powered race cars, winning two national championships and publishing a book on solar car design. He has received many teaching awards in his career. His research interests are composite materials, solar-electric vehicle technology, and educational research.Hong Sheng, University of Missouri Dr. Hong Sheng is an Assistant Professor holding joint position at the Business Administration Department, and Information Science and
is an increasing awareness that equipping students with technical knowledge in theirchosen disciplines is insufficient. Researchers, educators, and industries are beginning torecognize the importance of communication, teamwork, leadership, critical thinking, and manyother skills that enable an individual to perform more effectively and harmoniously in real-worldworking situations [1]. These social-relation interpersonal skills, or soft skills, are increasinglydemanded in today’s competitive global market [2]. For instance, Klaus [3] found 2010). Theimportance of soft skills has been well documented by the literature [4].The development of soft skills is imparted through applications and experience of socialinteractions, which relies on the
AC 2009-997: ROBOTICS ENGINEERING: A NEW DISCIPLINE FOR A NEWCENTURYMichael Ciaraldi, Worcester Polytechnic InstituteEben Cobb, Worcester Polytechnic InstituteDavid Cyganski, Worcester Polytechnic InstituteMichael Demetroiu, Worcester Polytechnic InstituteGreg Fischer, Worcester Polytechnic InstituteMichael Gennert, Worcester Polytechnic InstituteFred Looft, Worcester Polytechnic InstituteWilliam Michalson, Worcester Polytechnic InstituteBradley Miller, Worcester Polytechnic InstituteTaskin Padir, Worcester Polytechnic InstituteYiming Rong, Worcester Polytechnic InstituteKenneth Stafford, Worcester Polytechnic InstituteGretar Tryggvason, Worcester Polytechnic InstituteJames Van de Ven, Worcester Polytechnic Institute
AC 2009-1860: IMPLEMENTING A FACULTY DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY ATTHE NATIONAL MILITARY ACADEMY OF AFGHANISTANEric Crispino, United States Military AcademyAndrew Bellocchio, United States Military AcademyScott Hamilton, United States Military AcademyAaron Hill, United States Military AcademyStephen Ressler, United States Military Academy Page 14.694.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2009 Implementing a Faculty Development Model at the National Military Academy of AfghanistanAbstractNow starting its fifth year of existence, the National Military Academy of Afghanistan (NMAA)in Kabul has recently graduated the first class of cadets with a
Group Project Setting. in 12th Australasian Computing Education Conference (ACE 2010) 73–78 (2010).30. Getzels, J. W. & Csikszentmihalyi, M. The creative vision: A longitudinal study of problem finding in art. (Wiley, 1976).31. Daly, S. R., Mosyjowski, E. a. & Seifert, C. M. Teaching creativity in engineering courses. J. Eng. Educ. 103, 417–449 (2014).32. Mina, M. & Ringholz, D. Integrating design and bridging activities of the engineering and the design college: Merging language cultures, creativities, and perspectives. in Proceedings - Frontiers in Education Conference, FIE 1626–1628 (2013). doi:10.1109/FIE.2013.668511333. Nguyen, L. & Shanks, G. A framework for understanding creativity in
30 years. He has been the six-time elected as the Program Chair of the ASEE International Division for approximately the past 15 years. Three times as the Program Chair for the Graduate Studies Division of ASEE. Nick has had a major role in development and expansion of the ID division. Under his term as the International Division Program Chair the international division expanded, broadened in topics, and the number of sessions increased from a few technical sessions to over eighteen sessions in the recent years. The ASEE International Division by votes, has recognized Nick’s years of service through several awards over the past years. Nick has been the recipient of multiple Service awards (examples: 2013, 2010