the authority (f) Evaluate student understanding (g) Make appropriate use of technology (h) Begin with the specific and move to the generalWhile prevalent in the physics educational community, inquiry-based activities have only justbegun to be used in engineering education. Steif and Dollár 18 have had teams of students usephysical demonstrations to investigate statics (see example in Figure 2) but did not follow all ofthe guidelines set forth in Table 2. The work of Prince and Vigeant has shown great promise inthe fields of heat transfer and thermodynamics, as can be seen in Figure 3. Our goal is to achievesimilar gains in the field of dynamics. Figure 2. Physical demonstrations showing the idea
Holdhusen is an Associate Professor of Engineering at the University of Wisconsin, Marathon County. He began at UWMC in Jan. 2005 after completing his Ph.D. in mechanical engineering at the Georgia Institute of Technology. Holdhusen received a bachelor’s in mechanical engineering from the University of Minnesota in August of 1999. He currently lives in Wausau, Wis., with his wife (Elona), son (Milo), and daughter (Odelia). Page 23.433.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2013 Development of Low-Cost, Hands-On Lab Experiments for an Online Mechanics of
Paper ID #42143A Framework for Students’ Professional Development When Meeting withEmployers in a Microelectronics Workforce Development ProgramBenjamin L Burson, Michigan State UniversityProf. Eric Holloway, Purdue University at West Lafayette (COE) Prof. Eric Holloway currently serves as a Professor of Engineering Practice in the School of Mechanical Engineering at Purdue University. He also holds a courtesy faculty appointment in the School of Engineering Education. His research focuses on assessment development and the professional formation of students. ©American Society for Engineering Education
Paper ID #42429Different Teaching Styles and the Impacts on Test Design for DynamicsDr. Amie Baisley, University of Florida I am an Instructional Assistant Professor at the University of Florida teaching primarily 2nd year mechanics courses. My teaching and research interests are alternative pedagogies, mastery-based learning and assessment, student persistence in their first two years, and faculty development.Dr. Julian Ly Davis, University of Southern Indiana Jul Davis is an Associate Professor of Engineering at the University of Southern Indiana in Evansville, Indiana. He received his PhD in 2007 from Virginia Tech in
Intelligence, vol. 2, p. 100006, 2021. doi: 10.1016/j.caeai.2020.100006.[12] V. Srinivasan and H. Murthy, “Improving reading and comprehension in K-12: Evidence from a large-scale AI technology intervention in India,” Computers and Education: Artificial Intelligence, vol. 2, p. 100019, 2021. doi: 10.1016/j.caeai.2021.100019.[13] B. Ansaf and N. Jaksic, “Teaching Mechanical Design for Mechatronics Engineering Students Using a Project-based Sequential Learning Approach,” In Proceedings of the 2018 ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition, 2018. Paper ID #21296.[14] B. Ansaf and N. Jaksic, “Teaching Undergraduate Manufacturing Course using a Design-based Teaching Approach,” In Proceedings of the 2019 ASEE Annual Conference &
Paper ID #38538Board 384: Setting the Stage for Co-Creation: Using Workshops toScaffold Interdisciplinary Research, Collaboration, and CommunityBuildingDr. Trina C. Kershaw, University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth Trina Kershaw earned her PhD in Psychology from the University of Illinois at Chicago in 2006. She is a Professor of Psychology at the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth. She conducts multidisciplinary research in education and creativity under the broad umbrella of cognitive science. Recent work includes using co-creation to develop curricular materials in graduate engineering education; devising training to
Engineering & Technology, an M. Phil. in Architecture from the Universityof Newcastle-upon-Tyne in England, and a Ph.D. in Architecture from Texas A&M University. Dr.Choudhury has extensive experience as a consulting architect working on projects funded by the WorldBank, Asian Development Bank, and some other Multilateral Development Banks. His areas of emphasisinclude housing, alternative technology, issues related to international construction, and constructioneducation. He teaches Environmental Control Systems at an undergraduate level and InternationalConstruction at a graduate level.RICARDO E. ROCHARicardo Rocha is a Project Manger for Clark Construction in Washington, DC. Mr. Rocha holds a Masterof Science in Construction Management
competition by NASAto have their microfluidic device 3D-printed aboard the International Space Station.7 In the samemanner, students begin to use the lab for start-up ventures. This trend initially started with asenior design project that spun into a company which made use of microfluidic technology in anovel way.8 As word spread, a second student, who was not in engineering, asked to use the labto test out an idea, which also spun into a new company. She wished to design electronics tomeasure certain chemical reactions in biologics.9 During this time, we gained clarity onintellectual property rules for the university, and its application to both students and lab spacedesigned for educational use. In general, all work done in the lab, materials used
Paper ID #12664Analysis of STEM Majors’ Calculus Knowledge by Using APOS Theory on aQuotient Function Graphing ProblemDr. Emre Tokgoz, Quinnipiac University Emre Tokgoz is currently an Assistant Professor of Industrial Engineering at Quinnipiac University. He completed a Ph.D. in Mathematics and a Ph.D. in Industrial and Systems Engineering at the University of Oklahoma. His pedagogical research interest includes technology and calculus education of STEM majors. He worked on an IRB approved pedagogical study to observe undergraduate and graduate mathe- matics and engineering students’ calculus and technology knowledge in
. Special thanksto Jim Byrnes for his help with the detail design of the hardware interface board.References Page 15.1157.131. Evaluating and Improving Undergraduate Teaching in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics, M. Fox and N. Hackerman, Editors, National Research Council, The National Academies Press, Washington, DC, 2003.2. T. Scott, ‘Two “take home” experiments in fluid mechanics,” In Proceedings of the 2000 ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition, St. Louis, MO, 2000, pp. 6451-6458.3. W. Berg, and M. Boughton, “Enhanced suitcases for upper division electronics laboratories,” In Proceedings of the
creative work in a truly open-ended problem. Page 4.164.1The Rose-Hulman Aerial Robotics ClubThe Rose-Hulman Aerial Robotics Club began in 1995 and took a vehicle to the competition forthe first time in 1997. The club is composed of between 10 and 20 active students, with 5 or 6students usually forming a core group that does the majority of the work. The makeup of theteam is surprisingly diverse in terms of both age and major. The team has operated usingenthusiastic students from freshmen to graduate students, and has been led by sophomores inapplied optics and chemical engineering. Although the students near graduation are moretechnically
Award, and the NSF Career Award. He received the Outstanding Reviewer Award from the ASME Journal of Heat Transfer, for which he served as an Associate Editor, as well as the Golden Reviewer Award from IEEE. He was a JSPS Visiting Professor at The Tokyo Institute of Technology and is Editor-in-Chief of Nanoscale and Microscale Thermophysical Engineering. His research has been recognized through keynote lectures at INTERPACK, ITHERM, SEMI-THERM, and Therminic as well as best paper awards at SEMI-THERM, SRC TECHCON, and the IEDM. Goodson is a founder and former CTO of Cooligy, which built micro- coolers for computers (including the Apple G5) and was acquired in 2005 by Emerson
State University. His interests include digital and solid-state circuits and computer programming. He is a member of the Society of Hispanic Professional Engineers and the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers.John M Quick, Arizona State University John M. Quick is an Educational Technology doctoral candidate at Arizona State University who is in- terested in the design, research, and use of educational innovations. He has been active in the creation of both entertainment and serious games. His current research explores the intersections of individual characteristics, enjoyment, learning, and video games.Prof. Robert Kenneth Atkinson, Arizona State University Dr. Robert Atkinson is an associate professor
Editorial Committee. He is IEEE Senior Member, Past Chairman of the Spanish Chapter and, as member of the Board of Governors Committee of the IEEE Education Society, he is currently chair of the Distinguished Lectures Program for the IEEE Education Society and vice chair of the Standards committee.Mr. Jorge A. Lopez-Vargas, Universidad T´ecnica Particular de Loja Engineer and Computer Systems at the Technical University of Loja, Jorge Lopez-Vargas is currently a Ph.D. student in Advanced Technologies in Software Engineering, Distributed Environments and Intel- ligent Systems at the University of Madrid. He earned his diploma in Advanced Studies - DEA (June 2009). Currently Lopez-Vargas is teaching at the School of
Asian and European countries by both governmental and non-governmental organizations. Acharya has a M.Eng. in Computer Technology and a D.Eng. in Computer Science and Information Management with a concentration in knowledge discovery, both from the Asian Institute of Technology in Thailand. His teaching involvement and research interest are in the area of Software Engineering education, Software Verification & Validation, Data Mining, Neural Networks, and Enterprise Resource Planning. He also has interest in Learning Objectives based Education Material Design and Development. Acharya is a co- author of ”Discrete Mathematics Applications for Information Systems Professionals- 2nd Ed., Prentice Hall”. He is a
stratification in education and the workforce. She was awarded the 2020 WEPAN Founders Award.Dr. Gretchen Achenbach, University of Virginia Gretchen Achenbach is a research scientist in the Department of Engineering and Society at the Uni- versity of Virginia, and at the National Center for Women and Information Technology (NCWIT). She earned her Ph.D. in Psychology from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Her interests focus on science communication and gender issues in computing and technology.Prof. Nancy Binowski, County College of Morris Nancy Binowski is a Professor of Computer Science at the County College of Morris in Randolph, NJ. Prior to joining the faculty ranks, she was a Distinguished Member of Technical Staff
Creating a Community of Scholars for Large Applied Research Contracts in an Academic Infrastructure Douglas S. Cairns1*, Roberta Amendola1, Dilpreet Bajwa,1 Cambrie Monfort, Jared Nelson2, and Cecily Ryan11 Mechanical & Industrial Engineering, Montana State University, Bozeman, MT, USA, 2 Sustainable Product Design & Innovation, Keene State College, Keene, NH, USA. *Author of CorrespondenceAbstractLarge applied research contracts are attractive to universities. They increase the researchexpenditures and research portfolio, leading to substantial external funding, and to higherresearch rankings via peer comparisons. These external resources
Paper ID #33589A Call to Create an Open-source Project Initiative for CybersecurityVirtual LabsDr. Radana Dvorak, City University of Seattle Dr. Dvorak received her Ph.D. in computer science from the University of London, Queen Mary College and Master’s in AI from the University of Sussex. Dr. Dvorak has been working in IT, higher education, academic industry and program development for over 25 years. She has served as a researcher, university professor and Dean in the US, UK, and the Cayman Islands. Currently, Dr. Dvorak is an associate professor and program manager at the School of Technology & Computing at City
Session 1630 Quantitatively Analyzing the Use and Usefulness of the Design Learning Simulator Jennifer Turns, Farrokh Mistree, Janet K. Allen Georgia Institute of TechnologyAbstract: Current trends in engineering design education, which promote teams of studentssolving open ended problems, often result in classes which create a wide variety of logistical,cognitive, and motivational problems for students. Software resources can help students but onlyif students perceive them to be useful and make use of them. Our Design-Learning Simulator atthe Georgia Institute of
Intelligence within the ever-evolving landscape of computer science. ©American Society for Engineering Education, 2023Augmenting Critical Thinking Skills in Programming Education through Leveraging Chat GPT: Analysis of its Opportunities and Consequences Christian Jay. St. Francis Clarke Information Sciences and Technology Penn State Berks Abdullah Konak Penn State Berks Division of Engineering, Business, and ComputingAugmenting Critical Thinking Skills in Programming Education through Leveraging Chat GPT: Analysis of its Opportunities and ConsequencesAbstractThis
Paper ID #38304Mentoring to Build the NSF ATE CommunityKaren Wosczyna-birch (Director) © American Society for Engineering Education, 2022 Powered by www.slayte.com Mentoring to Build the NSF ATE CommunityThe Mentor Up Program, funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF) AdvancedTechnological Education (ATE) program through Grant #2032835, supports a mentoringprogram to guide prospective principal investigators in crafting and submitting a proposal to theNSF ATE program. This project aligns with the NSF ATE program objective to provideleadership opportunities for faculty at two-year institutions and
has co-authored three popular textbooks, most recently Digital Design and Computer Architecture: RISC-V Edition in 2021.Daniel Chaver Martinez, University Complutense of Madrid, Spain ˜Luis PinuelOlof KindgrenRobert C.W. Owen ©American Society for Engineering Education, 2023RVfpga: Computer Architecture Course and MOOC using a RISC-V SoC Targeted to an FPGA and Simulation Sarah L. Harris1, Daniel Chaver2, Luis Piñuel2, Olof Kindgren3, Robert Owen4 1 University of Nevada, Las Vegas, University Complutense of Madrid, 3Qamcom Research & 2 Technology, 4Imagination
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 Note that College costs increasing significantly faster than inflation Materials Research Science & Engineering Centers (MRSECs)• 1972 NSF established DMR with MRLs• MRSECs must have 2 or more Interdisciplinary Groups (IRGs)• Flexibility to develop new areas, support for ‘Seeds’• Education and REU• Shared experimental facilities• Competition every 3 years – 6 year awardsPO: Dan Finotello MRSEC FY14 CompetitionØ 12 awardsØ Columbia – new MRSEC – one IRG assembling materials from molecular clusters and another on 2D materialsØ Three 1 IRG MRSECs went to 2 IRGs Ø Brandeis – new IRG materials for artificial muscles, self-pumping fluids
The Science Budget in 2018: An UpdateMatt HourihanMarch 14, 2018 (Happy Pi Day!)For the ASEE Engineering Research CouncilAAAS R&D Budget and Policy Programhttp://www.aaas.org/program/rd-budget-and-policy-program Copyright © 2015 American Association for the Advancement of Science 1 Elements in recent play: The Budget Deal (the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018). Which leads into… FY 2018 Appropriations (briefly lapsed twice, five CRs, but negotiations now underway – resolved soon?) The new White House budget for FY 2019, released in early February Copyright © 2015 American Association for the Advancement of Science 2
package to simulate different types of electronic circuits. The benefits of using simulationsoftware before the actual connection of the circuit, and signal measurement is substantial. Students will have agood understanding of how the circuit will operate, and what the signals should look like. For further informationon Electronic Workbench the reader needs to contact the Interactive Image Technologies Ltd., at 1-800-203-8007.Reference:1. Electronic Workbench for Windows 4.0, Interactive Image Technologies Ltd., 700 King Street W, Suite 815, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5V2Y6.Massoud Rabiee received his Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering, from University of Kentucky, in 1987. He ispresently an associate professor at Eastern Kentucky University. Dr
Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering Technology at Northern Kentucky University. Dr. Sadat-Hossieny is actively involved in consulting and research in different areas of Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering Technology fields such as CADD, Automation, and technology transfer mechanisms. He regularly publishes papers in different proceedings and journals.Paul Cooper, Northern Kentucky University Paul Cooper is the interim chair of Department of Technology and an Associate Professor of Construction Management at Northern Kentucky University. He obtained his B.S. from Southwest Missouri State University; M.S. from Murray State University and his Doctoral candidacy in Adult and
for a traditional 50 to 75 minutes in the lecture hall and havingthem listen passively to their lecturer is not realistic. Page 24.391.3Currently in the U.S. only six percent of the 24-year-olds attain a first degree in a Science,Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM) field. The U.S. is ranked in the bottomquartile, (20th out of 24) among comparative nations. Unless we find new breakthroughs tosignificantly improve the success of students, especially in gateway courses, we will not be ableto increase the number of STEM graduates that are needed to maintain our economic vibrancy.Our experiment at SJSU bears a lot of hope as an effective
University, Berks Campus Sadan Kulturel-Konak is a professor of Management Information Systems and the director of the Flem- ming Creativity, Entrepreneurship and Economic Development (CEED) Center at Penn State Berks. She received her Ph.D.in Industrial and Systems Engineering (Auburn Univ.)Dr. Abdullah Konak, Pennsylvania State University, Berks Campus Dr. Abdullah Konak is a Distinguished Professor of Information Sciences and Technology at the Penn- sylvania State University, Berks. Dr. Konak also teaches graduate courses in the Master of Science in Cybersecurity Analytics and Operations program at the College of Information Sciences and Technology, Penn State World Campus. Dr. Konak’s primary research interest focuses
Technology Educational Leadership Award, 2006 NCA&T Rookie Researcher of the Year, in 2007 she became the first African American female faculty member to achieve patent pending status at A&T for her technology invention, in 2008 she received the NCA&T Junior Teaching Faculty of the Year Award, and in 2010 became a Department of Homeland Security Summer Research Fellow, and most recently in 2011 was named one of the 40 leaders under 40 by the Triad Business Journal. Page 23.1095.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2013Student Case Study Creation for the Sustainable
Proceedings of 2014 Zone 1 Conference of the American Society for Engineering Education (ASEE Zone 1) A Model to Build, Assess, and Reflect on Students’ Metacognition through the Classroom Debate of Controversial Environmental Issues Matthew P. Baideme, Cristian A. Robbins, and Jeffrey A. Starke described as the process of considering multiple viewpoints Abstract— Debates have been used as a tool to promote and arriving at a judgment that can be applied by individualsactive learning in the classroom. Role-play debates have or groups to convince others to agree with