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Displaying results 331 - 360 of 479 in total
Conference Session
Related Engineering Programs
Collection
2003 Annual Conference
Authors
Rick Shoemaker
- ended design projects. 10. Additional in-depth knowledge in a technical area relevant to optical engineering, such as opto-mechanics, optical materials, opto-electronics, or some other specialized area of optics. 11. Appreciation of engineering as a profession, including the need for life-long learning and an appreciation of ethical, legal, societal, environmental, political, and economic issues.These objectives are fully consistent with the mission of the Land Grant University of Arizona,which reflects the need to educate students for an increasingly diverse and technological world.It also is in keeping with the dynamic growth of technologically-based industry in the
Conference Session
ASEE Multimedia Session
Collection
2003 Annual Conference
Authors
Benjamin Flores; Rosa Gomez-Martinez; Joseph Ramos; Lourdes Sanchez-Contreras
employmentopportunities [2].As a concept, ACES is a reflection of systemic change in the preparation of engineeringand science students well into the 21 st Century. It signifies a change in academic culturethat values integration as well as specialization, teamwork, individual achievement,educational innovation as well as research. ACES fosters the building and refinement ofintellectual skills needed by practicing engineers and scientists [3].The motto of ACES is “a center run by students for students,” which indicates thatstudent employees are responsible for the day-to-day operations of the Center as well asfor providing workshops, running a website, manning a tutoring center and publishing amonthly newsletter. For student employees, ACES has provided a
Conference Session
Ethical & Industrial Issues in BME
Collection
2003 Annual Conference
Authors
Rebecca Zambon; Rachael Shevin; Cynthia Paschal; Stacy Klein-Gardner
active hands-on experiences in the classroom and need to see therelationship between theory and reality10. Hispanic students have been shown to learnscience better when the students are expected to actively participate and when theassessments reflect the fact that instruction has different results for different learners11.Because Hispanic cultures value mutual assistance, collaborative work in the classroom iseffective11. Interactivity with concrete manipulative materials assists students inmastering concepts and problem-solving skills 12.The use of actual biomedical imaging equipment for education, while desirable for real-life hands-on learning, is typically not feasible due to safety concerns, high cost, and lackof availability. It is
Conference Session
Energy Programs and Software Tools
Collection
2003 Annual Conference
Authors
Laura Genik; Craig Somerton
. The quality category reflects the writing and graph quality of thereport.Student FeedbackThe students were surveyed regarding their experience with this project and the TeachPistonsoftware. The survey form is provided in Fig. 8. In the two sections of the course a combined66 students were surveyed. When reviewing the student feedback, it should be noted that thiswas the first time that the MATLAB GUI was used in the classroom to create the input file forthe TeachPiston software. In general, the response was positive to the program with emphasis onthe graphical user input preferred to other types of user interfaces, such as a DOS menu driveninterface as was used in an earlier project in the class. The students emphasized that the
Conference Session
ASEE Multimedia Session
Collection
2003 Annual Conference
Authors
Steven Graham; Ronald Bieniek
effective teaching methods, let alone educational theory. In these trying financialtimes, most new faculty members perceive that hiring and tenure decisions are based on thepotential to develop an externally funded research program or a proven research record. Theinstitutional emphasis on research is reflected in a reward structure that values researchaccomplishments over teaching improvement. For new tenure-track faculty, the lack of externalmotivation for change in teaching methodology combined with the lack of formal training, leadsto a “trial by fire” indoctrination into teaching. As a result, most engineering educators tend toteach others as they were taught. Faculty simply emulate the professors that they remember fromtheir own schooling.To
Conference Session
Internet Programming and Applications
Collection
2003 Annual Conference
Authors
Eric Crahen; Bina Ramamurthy
; ExpositionCopyright © 2003, American Society for Engineering EducationAbstractRecently, there have been many advances in technology and infrastructure to meet thechanging needs of the application domains. These changes have resulted in thedevelopment and adoption of a rich set of novel concepts in distributed systems. Forexample, lookup, discovery, custom event and event handling, runtime reflection, callbackand service leasing are just a few of these new ideas. Traditional approaches to teachingDistributed Systems courses do not cover these newer concepts for reasons ranging fromlack of support from the existing framework to the fear sacrificing coverage of somefundamental concepts. Moreover, many of the textbooks used do not cover theseconcepts. In this
Conference Session
Assessment in EM Education
Collection
2003 Annual Conference
Authors
Paul Kauffmann; William Peterson
specific costs for fatality and injury. These costs were developed byestablishing a value that consumers are “willing to pay” (WTP) to reduce the probability of fatalityor injury. Since this WTP cost reflects only the value that a group of individuals places onavoiding injury, the FAA method adds other direct costs to the WTP value such as legal andemergency medical expenditures to develop a total cost. For a fatality, the FAA identifies $2.7Mas the cost benchmark.The WTP values for injuries are based on evaluating the loss of quality or quantity of life incurredby the injury as a fraction of the fatality cost. For example, the WTP cost of a minor injury isevaluated as 0.2% of the loss of life cost and medical and legal costs are then added to
Conference Session
NSF Grantees Poster Session
Collection
2003 Annual Conference
Authors
Timothy Cameron; Rosalyn Hobson; Gary Huvard
class in the Fall of 2001, theSoE now enrolls over 1000 students. The first two of the new school's planned facilities openedin the Fall of 1998 — the main classroom building and the Virginia Microelectronics ResearchCenter. Together, they total 147,000 sq. ft. at a cost of $42 million. Average SAT scores ofincoming freshman are about 1250, which is in the national top 5 to 7 percentile.From the beginning, the development of the School was a collaboration between the universityand the industrial community, which is reflected in its curriculum, in the industrial experiencestudents have available, in the inclusion of business courses in the engineering curriculum, andthe recruitment of faculty with industrial experience. Over 50 companies have
Conference Session
Ethical & Industrial Issues in BME
Collection
2003 Annual Conference
Authors
Emily Mowry
the course are centered around the Legacy learning cycle2 usedby the VaNTH Engineering Research Center, in accord with learning principles addressed in HowPeople Learn3. Students’ awareness of professional and ethical issues are increased through theinvestigation of ten to twelve case studies with in-class discussion, in-class movies with pre andpost discussion, and guest speakers. Investigation of cases include documentation of students’initial thoughts on issues, then systematic reflection on these thoughts through introduction ofmultiple perspectives provided by guest lectures, thought papers and in-class discussions. Casestudies cover a wide variety of application areas, including genetic engineering,xenotransplantation, using animals in
Conference Session
Recruitment & Outreach in CHE
Collection
2003 Annual Conference
Authors
Claudia Morrell; Taryn Bayles; Anne Spence
OpportunityThis program will provide a paid internship experience for 60 students following the completionof thirty credit hours in a mathematics, science, or technology-related field. Internships will beprovided in companies not currently hiring interns from UMBC to increase internship supportand encourage the involvement of more businesses with UMBC and CCBD. UMBC’s ShriverCenter will provide leadership for this portion of the project. The Shriver Center, places over1000 students annually in co-ops and internships at over 300 businesses and organizationsthroughout the Baltimore/Washington area, allowing students to connect theory with practice.This level of involvement reflects the importance of gaining work-based, experiential learning
Conference Session
ET Distance Learning
Collection
2003 Annual Conference
Authors
Susan Sauer; Mark Moore; Amin ul Karim; Ahmed Khan
Page 8.146.12 “Proceedings of the 2003 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition Copyright © 2003, American Society for Engineering Education”Figure 5 (a). ALS Wireless Communication module deals with physical aspects ofwireless communications. It touches upon such problems as fundamentals of radio wavepropagation, reflection, interference and antenna systems.Figure 5 (b). ALS Telephony module assist learners in understanding science andtechnical issues related to the operation and maintenance of conventional and cellularphone systems. Page 8.146.13 “Proceedings of the 2003 American Society
Conference Session
Quality & Accreditation: Outcome Assessment
Collection
2003 Annual Conference
Authors
Tom Thomas; Mohammad Alam
. If the results of a survey or a questionnaire are found to beambiguous or not useful for their intended purpose, they can be changed. Curriculum changes,updates, and modifications are important to maintain the relevance of ECE education. Acontinual process of modernization and accommodation of new technology and techniques must Page 8.165.10 Proceedings of the 2003 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition Copyright  2003, American Society for Engineering Educationbe done. This process must be reflected in the textbooks, course content, and laboratoryexposure
Conference Session
Raising the Bar and Body of Knowledge
Collection
2003 Annual Conference
Authors
Wilfrid Nixon; M. Asghar Bhatti
expressed here goes far beyond the (recently re-accredited) civilengineering undergraduate program at Iowa and (we suspect) at most colleges in the US.Clearly, this needs to be evaluated further and may represent a phenomenon of “surveyinflation” whereby survey respondents are reluctant to give negative responses for fear ofdisappointing the survey takers.Beyond this somewhat worrying aspect, in general the responses are positive. Clearly, thedifferent groups assigned differing degrees of import to different areas (professionals valuedesign and ancillary knowledge more than students, for example) and that is appropriate.The professionals feel that the import of analysis diminishes as an engineer moves intopractice and that too probably reflects
Conference Session
Assessment Issues
Collection
2003 Annual Conference
Authors
Reuben Fan; Sean Brophy
individual takes meticulous recordings on everyaspect of the assessment test environment while another individual only records specific pointsexcluding potentially revealing data? These are real concerns but should not deter the use oftracking documents. It must be reminded the task of improving educational outcomes is not asmall task and there must be ways to reflect on past efforts in order to move forward in the properdirection and this cannot be done without rigorous documentation. Therefore these documentswill be revamped regularly, which will undoubtedly lead to a certain level of change. This allowsthese documents to serve a second purpose of documenting the changes in the classroom from theinstructor’s point of view. It is important that
Conference Session
Engineering Education Research
Collection
2003 Annual Conference
Authors
Russ Pimmel
StudyThe retrospective study includes responses from 48 of the 114 total participants in the fourworkshops. Table 1 shows the number of participants at each of the four workshops and the Page 8.541.3number and percentage who responded to the retrospective survey. These percentages rangedProceedings of the 2003 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition Copyright © 2003, American Society for Engineering Educationfrom 15% to 57%, reflecting a substantial workshop-to-workshop variation in the response rate.This large amount of variability occurred with nearly all the measures
Conference Session
Trends in Mechanical Engineering
Collection
2003 Annual Conference
Authors
Subrata Bhattacharjee, San Diego State University
evaluated first.Ø The system daemons build upon the state daemons. Mass, energy, entropy and exergy balance equations can be solved for closed processes or steady devices. The cycle daemons build upon the system daemons in a similar manner. The particular form of the balance equation used by a daemon is displayed right inside the equation panel of the applet (see Fig. 9).Ø The system schematic that is displayed inside the Analysis Panel is dynamic in that, when states are loaded as inlet, exit, begin or finish states, the diagram is automatically updated to reflect the choices made.Ø Once a solution is obtained, Super-Calculate produces a detailed output and a few lines of codes called the TEST-Code describing the solution algorithm. The
Conference Session
The Use of Technology in Teaching Math
Collection
2003 Annual Conference
Authors
Murat Tanyel
aesthetics in engineering design, particularly inthe choice of computer aided tools for signal processing, which is the area I prefer to teachregularly. In that paper, we reflect on the normative principles on the responsible employment oftechnology and espouse the following principles, after Monsma, et al7: cultural appropriateness,openness and communication, stewardship, delightful harmony, justice, caring anddependability. Of these principles, delightful harmony is the norm that deals with aesthetics.Delightful harmony implies that a) the artifact must be effective, or competent; b) it should be“pleasing and satisfying to use;” c) it must promote harmonious relationships7. We then establisha link between aesthetics and “playfulness” which
Conference Session
Assessment & Quality Assuranc in Engr Ed
Collection
2003 Annual Conference
Authors
Swami Karunamoorthy
of a student in terms of specific knowledge, value, andskills at the time of completion of a course. The course learning outcomes should bemapped with program learning outcomes.A typical course assessment processes normally include homework, quizzes, tests, web-based tests, project reports, final examinations, oral presentations, etc. In addition aCourse Assessment Survey by both students and the course instructor(s) should beperformed. The survey questions should focus on accomplishment of objectives andoutcomes in addition to feedback for continuous improvement of quality of a course.The emphasis on assessment by an instructor should include his/her reflection onpedagogical methods used and satisfaction of accomplishing the course
Conference Session
Assessment of Entrepreneurship Programs
Collection
2003 Annual Conference
Authors
Jack McGourty
‘ were not used toin determining students’ grades. Rather, its purpose was to enable students to better understandtheir individual strengths and weaknesses as viewed by themselves and their peers (teammates).Results indicated that, in general, all the teams were perceived to function well. (See Table 3.)However, in comparing the results of the Team Developer‘ to the final grade in the course therewas a significant, but weak negative correlation between the peer’s score for a teammate and thefinal grade; suggesting that the more critical ratings teams gave to their fellow members, thebetter the project outcome as reflected by the team grade. However, there may have been animpact on the self and group ratings and the size of the team. Members of
Conference Session
Three P's in Introduction to Engineering
Collection
2003 Annual Conference
Authors
Ruben Schwieger
problem solving. In working with technology in engineeringeducation, Mioduser suggested the need for defining an appropriate conceptual frameworksupportive of requisite knowledge, skills and cognitive models for problem solving.9 Thus it willbe important to endeavor to make language supportive of concepts that are critical to problemsolving success and to make sure that the language used reflects the underlying concepts involvedin problem solving in engineering. Suggestions for dealing with the difficulties posed by language usage include thefollowing: § Use correct terminology and urge students to do the same by pointing out to students the difficulties created by poor language concerning problem solving
Conference Session
Technical Issues in Arch Engineering
Collection
2003 Annual Conference
Authors
Daniel Davis
compartmental fashion has never been fully successful; our architecture curriculumis by its nature integrated and connected. We have found that the most important element in good teaching isinvolving students to enable them to think and learn on their own. However, more importantly, our graduates arefinding a flattering reflection of their active-learning educational experience in the integration-rich workplace.Architecture is a multidisciplinary field of study that draws on many areas of study. Architecture education mustsuccessfully involve the integration of art, engineering, business, and other disciplines.References[1] 2000-2001 University of Hartford Bulletin, ARCHITECTURE Program Course Descriptions.[2] Boyer, E., and Mitgang, L., “Building
Conference Session
Pre-College Initiatives in Engineering Education
Collection
2003 Annual Conference
Authors
Lawrence Genalo
buggy go the specified distance and turn 90°; make it drive ina complete square; employ a bump sensor to avoid walls; and employ a light (reflective) sensor tofollow a black line on a white surface. Each challenge has been aligned with national standards(see Table 1) and tested in preservice teacher education courses and with 4th – 6th grade students.All involved parties assess the learning so that modifications for increased efficacy can be made. Asignificant portion of each TWT undergraduate course is a month-long experiential learningproject in a partner school classroom such as the one described. Page 8.494.4 Proceedings of the 2003
Conference Session
Construction Engineering Advances II
Collection
2003 Annual Conference
Authors
Zeena Pinto; Richard Burt
. In 1997, the American Society of TestingMaterials (ASTM) approved this new standard named “Standard Test Method for Measuring theP-Wave Speed and the Thickness of Concrete Plates Using the Impact-Echo Method.” Thismethod is based on the laws of elastic stress wave propagation through material. A stress wave isintroduced into the test object by a mechanical impact. The stress wave consists of compression,shear, and surface waves. The reflections of the compression wave are analyzed to detect theinternal flaws in a concrete member. The most important advantage of the impact echo method is that access is required to onlyone side of the member. It can be used to detect voids and honeycombs in walls and slabs,delaminations and internal cracks
Conference Session
ASEE Multimedia Session
Collection
2003 Annual Conference
Authors
Mireille Battikha
aspects. Construction products or assemblies of aconstruction project (e.g., column, footing, slab) form the core to which associations of digitalvideos are made. The associations include the intermediate products (outputs that have not yetbecome end products, e.g., mix) related to the assemblies, and the activities that shaped them.Figure 2 shows examples of how videos about construction products are associated tointermediate products, and some of their related construction activities.In this organization scheme, the digital knowledge about products captures sections of videos ofthe product from different views. The knowledge about construction activities contains sectionsof videos, which reflect construction changes with time. The set of
Conference Session
Construction Engineering Advances I
Collection
2003 Annual Conference
Authors
Khalid Siddiqi
complexity.Although private owners feel strongly about one of the six factors, all factors scored at least onetime as the most important one in priority ranking. Thus for any particular project, any one of thefactors can be the most important reason for choosing Design-Build delivery. Therefore, ingeneral, private sector’s overpowering consideration for choosing Design-Build is to shortenproject duration. Next most important consideration for the owners is the single point ofresponsibility in the Design-Build delivery. In addition, there are other reasons for choosingDesign-Build such as better Constructability and handle over cost and claims.The importance of shorten duration, over the rest of the factors, is adequately reflected in thefrequency histograms
Conference Session
Experiences with the TTL Turbojet Engine
Collection
2003 Annual Conference
Authors
Horatio Perez-Blanco
), the SR-30 was offered in two versions: a thrustdemonstration unit with minimal instrumentation, or as a version with more completeinstrumentation connected to a PC via a DAS board. The latter unit was deemed as the moreappropriate one, for a “turn-key” operation was likely to be more cost effective than a unitneeding additional on-site work for enabling cycle analysis.The installation and site preparation aspects that follow are site-specific. Consequently, theinformation is not universal, but it offers sufficient generality to warrant a summary presentation.The insightful reader may want to keep in mind that a few years of experience developingteaching stands enables a perspective that the following lines attempt to reflect. The unit
Conference Session
Trends in Mechanical Engineering
Collection
2003 Annual Conference
Authors
Jeff Dalton; Daniel Stutts
a significant amount of learning had occurred. To improve upon the precision of ourresearch design we used the so-called wait-listed control method where each of the two classeswere given a pre-test at the same time, and a post-mini-lab test following the mini-lab experienceof only one of the classes. The other class then conducted the mini-lab, and again, both classeswere tested with a similar quiz. We feel that the difficulties we encountered during the firstimplementation, and the fact that the students were rushed to obtain a fairly large amount of datain a short time contributed to a negative experience for the students. Their negative opinionswere reflected in the survey given following the mini-lab project. We believe that the
Conference Session
NSF Grantees Poster Session
Collection
2003 Annual Conference
Authors
James Moriarty
vehicle and payload across the track, and forpreliminary estimates of potential vehicle mass and approximate completion time. A moredetailed model was then developed which incorporated multiple steps, thus moreaccurately reflecting the actual track contour, as shown in equation (1):  ( Vi + Vw) 2 + ( Vi+1 + Vw) 2 1  2 2 ⋅m⋅ ( Vi+1) − ( Vi)  + We⋅tan θ ⋅∆S + µ ⋅We⋅∆S + ⋅A⋅Cd ( ) 1  2⋅∆S 2  2  2 0
Conference Session
Trends in Mechanical Engineering
Collection
2003 Annual Conference
Authors
ZT DENG; Xiaoqing (Cathy) Qian; Ruben Rojas-Oviedo; Zhengtao Deng
on the keywords requirement of thecourse contents. This new method was implemented in the Fall 2001. This teaching methodensures the teaching quality. It also provides guideline for instructor to evaluate student expectedlearning outcome. As indicated in Figure 1(a), in the fall of 2001, class attendance for the C-averaged student was poor, as a result, their homework performance were poor simply becausehomework reflects and re-iterate contents of the classroom teaching. Realized that, instructor hasscheduled extra study session. It was shown in Figure 1(c) that the C averaged students examperformance was not dropping significantly. In the year 2002, class attendance was reinforced(Figure 1(a)), homework performance was improved (Figure 1(b
Conference Session
Technical Issues in Arch Engineering
Collection
2003 Annual Conference
Authors
Zhili (Jerry) Gao, North Dakota State University; Russell Walters, Iowa State University
, anti- aliasing, volume shadows, bump mapping, motion blur, transparency, reflections, and 3D textures. This can make construction simulations closer to the real world and allow computer graphics become meaningful application in the construction industry. • Compatibility on every platform: since OpenGL is fully platform independent, the application can be easily communicated among Windows, Unix, Linux, and MacOS. This means all sizes of construction companies can use the same software with their own system.An OpenGL project is the combination of C++, OpenGL, and basic computer graphics concepts.The OpenGL Utility Library (GLU) provides many of the modeling features, such