analysis wasemployed and generated five factors: community influence, satisfaction, service quality,learnability and technical quality. Repeated measures ANOVA showed communityinfluence as the highest rated by participants, followed by satisfaction, service quality,learnability and technical quality. The findings are discussed providing evidence for theusefulness of implementing Moodle as a free open source course management system forboth teaching and learning.IntroductionMoodle, the most popular free open source course management system (CMS), wasdeveloped from a social constructivist perspective by Martin Dougmias in Australia 1.This free application provides instructors with useful features such as the ability to embedresources, activities
growing shortages of highly skilled workers in multiple areas ofengineering and information technology who have the knowledge to take full advantage ofwhat continually evolving technology has to offer and thus to ensure that their companies willstay competitive on the market. For this reason, Plovdiv University (Bulgaria) and theSpanish University for Distance Education UNED, along with several enterprises are workingin the PAC project, which has been funded with support from the European Commission.1. Introduction Universities, business and the employment world in general face continuous changesand needs of the today’s knowledge-based society, a society based on learning to learn to beable to address emerging developments in an ever
students’ changing epistemologies. Furthermore,these broad surveys focus on generalized knowledge while leaving issues of domain specificityin epistemology largely unaddressed.Purpose The purpose of this paper is to explore a group of sophomore-level civil engineeringstudents’ personal epistemologies as part of the results from the first year of a larger longitudinal,qualitative study. In this way, we can explicitly track changes in personal epistemology andidentify at what stages in students’ academic careers they take place. In this paper, we willexplicitly examine changes in students’ personal epistemologies over the course of theirsophomore year in the civil engineering program. The primary research questions for this paperare: 1
- tion, and computer applications of civil and environmental engineering. She is active in pre-college engi- neering outreach and improving non-motorized transportation infrastructure. Page 23.965.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2013 Physics on the Ropes Course University of Wisconsin-PlattevilleIntroductionThere is still a large gender gap in the science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) fields.In 2009, 17.7% of full-time, first-year engineering undergraduates were women.1 For example,in 2007 women earned
American Society for Engineering Education, 2013 Pilot Study: An Exploration of the Experiences that Influence Women’s Interest, Pursuit, and Continued Involvement in STEM CareersAbstractWhile longitudinal studies that examine the effects of personal and environmental factors onwomen’s career motivation have been reported in the literature [1] [2], none have provideddepth or breadth of biographical interviewing over the time span of the last two decades. Manyintersecting variables have been identified by empirical research to account for women’scontinued underrepresentation in STEM careers, yet persistence, especially in computer scienceand engineering, remains an issue. Recent studies [3] [4
discuss artificial intelligence through computer science usingheuristics. Additionally, the students debate the ethics associated with artificial intelligence andwhen legal rights should apply to artificial beings.Teachers attend a week-long, immersive professional development workshop for Cyber Sciencethe summer prior to teaching the course6. Following the professional development workshopteachers gain access to all curriculum materials including lesson plans, master notes, andsupplemental documents which are found on NICERC’s website. Communication is maintainedthroughout the school year via the website allowing for any questions, concerns, or issues ateacher may experience when teaching the material.Narrative #1 – High School Teachers
instructional videos.III. Real World Training Site (Butler Square)Following the basic introduction to energy benchmarking it was desired to give the studentssome real world exposure. Through industry relations, contact was first made with EnergyPrint.This company does benchmarking and dashboard energy analysis for companies and buildings.They agreed to help provide the students with data on an existing building as a training tool. Figure 1: Butler Square building (http://www.butlersquare.com/photos.htm#).Through them contact was made with the Butler Square building (Figure 1), a warehouse that has Page 23.968.4been converted to an office building
Foundation awarded a three-year grant to the participatinginstitutions of Clemson University, Greenville Technical College and the SC AgricultureEducation Program to design and implement a three-tiered plan to prepare secondary, technicalschool and college students for the growing biomanufacturing/bioprocessing industry. Page 23.969.2Industrial production of biopharmaceuticals, nutraceuticals and biofuel compounds has grownsubstantially worldwide in last 10 years. In the US alone, biofuel production in 2011 had reached15 billion gallons (57 billion liters) per year.1 As this trend continues, the need for skilledtechnicians, engineers and scientists to
treatment phases were compared using McNemar's chi-square test. Results of thistest indicated no overall significant difference in reading patterns between control (no podcast)and treatment (podcast) phases. Students who read during the control phase and listened to thepodcast supplement during the treatment phase had similar reading habits during the treatment(podcast) phase.IntroductionFaculty in higher education institutions frequently complain that college students are not doingthe assigned reading in a course. In a study of student use of textbooks at two universities,Sikorski et al.1 report that the majority of students spent less than 3 hours reading the textbookeven though only a small minority who reported that reading their texts was not
conservation as well asdevelopment of renewable energy resources must be vigorously pursued in order to find asolution to this dilemma. The entire public must be vested towards making a transition from afossil fuel based society to one that utilizes a far greater amount of renewable energy resources.According to Elder (2009) “Higher education has a critical role to play in this transition, much asit did during the space race of the 1960s. Our colleges can - and must - help students understandthe complex connections and interdependencies among our environment, energy sources, andeconomy - all of which underpin the green movement.”[1]The present situation is very similar to the 1960’s when the entire country was unified towardsplacing a man on the moon
some of the ambiguity forstudents producing deliverables for a design challenge and provides the instructor with apractical approach to assessing student work. In addition to offering a new pedagogical approachto engineering design thinking, the following research offers empirical evidence of studentcognition as they go through an engineering design process. Finally, we provide definitions andstudent generated examples of the four modeling artifacts to include; conceptual models,graphical models, mathematical models and working models.The Need The case for infusing engineering ‒ specifically engineering design ‒ into K-12 settings hasbeen made by educators and policy makers 1-3 . Yet determining how engineering design will beoperationalized
: Page 23.973.3 1. What are the engineering design practices that pre-service teachers use when they participate in a collaborative engineering design task based on children’s literature? 2. Over the course of the design task, to what extent are the design practices distributed among pre-service teachers collaborating in the same group? 3. Over the course of the design task, what patterns occur in how the pre-service teachers move from one design practice to another?Study DesignThe study participants were 26 graduate students enrolled in an elementary science teachingmethods course. On three different occasions, these pre-service teachers worked in small groupson engineering design experiences that were based on problems
graphics class at a major university. The questionnaireindicates whether a person prefers one or multi-modal learning methods that include (V)visual,(A)aural, (R)read/write, and (K)kinesthetic. A demographic instrument was employed to gatherdata that assisted in classifying students as being at-risk of leaving college or not at-risk. Theresearchers used the Fisher exact test to analyze the collected data. The Fisher exact test is mostcommonly applied to evaluation of a hypothesis with data framed in a 2x2 contingency tablewhere chi-square assumptions are not individually met.1 The null hypotheses are evaluatedbased on the probability of determining a collection of “observed frequencies even moreextreme” than the set summarized in the contingency
et al.2 shows students of both genders tend to drop out ofengineering primarily for two reasons: 1) the curriculum is too challenging and the quality ofteaching too poor, and 2) students don’t believe they belong.Ohland et al.3 present an extensive analysis of retention measures and student educationalexperiences at the undergraduate level. This paper uses the large, multi-institution datasetMIDFIELD (Multiple-Institution Database for Investigating Engineering LongitudinalDevelopment) which contains records of over 75,000 students in engineering during the years of1988 through 1998. Ohland and his colleagues3,4 determined that eight-semester persistence ishighly predictive of six-year graduation rates. But, using eight-semester persistence
engineering technology baccalaureate program to pursue design careers and professionalengineering licensure compared to their civil engineering counterparts. An assessment of thisissue is made by using a survey to obtain the impressions of employers/supervisors at local civilengineering design firms who have experience with both groups of graduates. The survey isdesigned to ascertain the employers/supervisors impressions of the differences between the civilengineering technology and civil engineering graduates in terms of their (1) positions andresponsibilities within the company, (2) technical skills and knowledge when they are first hired,(3) overall engineering design abilities, (4) ability to develop the skill sets needed to become aprofessional
, the percentage of students who reported anxietyabout studying physics dropped from 61% to 42%. However, an accurate assessment will bedone by comparing the rate of success among physics jam participants to nonparticipants at theend of their first semester physics course.1. Introduction:Several studies show correlations between good high school grades in mathematics, academicpreparation, and success in introductory physics courses in college.1,2 Although our societysupports the model of preparing students for some kind of education after high school, studentsare often not ready to take college level classes once they graduate from high school.3 Manystudies have found that college preparatory courses in high school are associated with
Inka Road research and is NMAI’s primary investigator in the field. Dr. Matoshelped the team leaders identify archeologists, anthropologists, and historians who could join theteam. He was instrumental in identifying local experts and he personally joined the team for afew days. Dr. Jose Barreiro, NMAI’s Assistant Director for Research was also instrumental inhelping the team leaders assemble qualified researchers.Table 1 details the overall diversity of the final team that participated in the workshop and fieldresearch. The team members were from three different continents representing six differentcountries and was a mix of eight university faculty one high school teacher, and two industryprofessionals plus five graduate students, four
amongprogram participants, and in improving persistence and retention among those who have decidedto pursue an engineering degree.1. IntroductionDespite increasingly urgent calls for investment in science and technology education to meetcurrent and future demands for more engineers needed to retain economic competitiveness andinnovation capacity of the United States, trends in engineering enrollment show that, over thelast decade, undergraduate degrees awarded in the fields of engineering have declined from 6.3to 5.4 percent of the total degrees conferred.1 An important strategy for increasing the number offuture engineers is to engage students from traditionally underrepresented groups in engineering,including Latinos and African Americans. Almost
that has been paid to time "t". The symbols used for theseitems are expressed in Table 1. The traditional approach for calculating the various expressions starts with the calculationof the unpaid balance of the loan. However, there are two different approaches, one utilizing apresent worth approach and the other using a future worth approach. Both methods will beconsidered, starting with the present worth approach. Page 23.981.2Table 1. Nomenclature Used in Formulas PresentedSymbol Description of SymbolLV Total initial amount of the loanA Annual end-of-period loan paymentn Number of periods for loan
engineering science courses for all engineering degrees.ABET also allows degree programs to add additional outcomes to further describe the particular Page 23.982.8attributes students will obtain by graduation. We have added two additional outcomes – “l” and“m” – which are:(l) A knowledge of leadership issues and ability to apply leadership principles(m) An understanding that engineers who are leaders build Character, Competence, and Capacityin themselves and others.The degree program course listing is seen in Table 1. The Leadership Course Series (I, II, III)covers foundational leadership skills and progresses through an in-depth understanding
vehicles, the use of modeling and simulation capabilities becomes moreimportant for university programs. Autonomous Unmanned Vehicle (AUV) Workbench wasdeveloped at the Naval Postgraduate School as a modeling and simulation environment to enablephysics based real time simulation of autonomous vehicles, such as unmanned surface vehicles(USV), unmanned underwater vehicles (UUV) and unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV). Vehiclemissions can also be replayed for further study. 1-5At Texas A&M University-Kingsville and Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi, a lab exercisefor multiple vehicles has been created for the students to illustrate waypoint navigation andcontrol for unmanned surface and air vehicles. Two versions were developed, an
student performance.MethodsProblem ComplexityAs problem complexity increases, students’ ability to frame a problem decreases. Therefore, weneed a method for assessing problem complexity so that we can create problems in a controlledfashion that achieve the appropriate level of difficulty. Students and instructors were surveyed onproblem complexity for problem sets based on the following simple survey instrument based ona Likert scale. This provided a means of calibrating our results in terms of the level of difficultythat students will experience during problem framing. Please rate how complex (i.e., difficult) you think this problem is. □ □ □ □ □ 1 2 3 4 5Least complex
the topics that can be potentially covered using PBL in IE, focusingon the two specific IE courses named above. In that section, we also present some examples ofdiscussions that the instructor can have in the classroom in order to extract the greatest advantageof the PBL style. Finally, we conclude with a summary of our discussion and enumerate sometopics that are perhaps best taught via a deductive mechanism.Advantages of PBLA few studies that show PBL to be beneficial are: Pierrakos et al.11, Mergendoller et al.8, Dochyet al.1, Patel et al.10, and Vernon and Blake12. Some studies, however, point in the oppositedirection, e.g., Kirschner et al.6, but these have been far outnumbered by those that show positiveoutcomes with PBL. Some of the
problems by practicing solving problems5.PSLEs were developed by following the design activities proposed by Jonassen3: 1) First weinteracted with the professor of the studied course to identify and articulate problems relevant tothe discipline; 2) We analyzed problems, first by creating a causal model of the problem space;3) Then we conducted an activity theory analysis to identify the historical, cultural, experientialfactors that affect problem solving on the context chosen6; 4) Determined what kind of problemswere each one of them; 5) Constructed case supports and cognitive scaffolds for each problemtype; 6) To then construct each PSLE that included some combination of case components andcognitive strategies; 7) Finally implemented and
to the inability to evaluate them withoutanalyzing a complete digital recording of a student’s solution. While this modified processanalysis lacks the ability to assess some skills that were found to be highly correlated to problemsolving success (namely those associated with erasures), it provides a more time efficient methodthat is more feasible to implement with current classroom resources.The resulting abbreviated process analysis assessment tool classifies problem solutions based on Page 23.987.3the following categories: 1) identify problem and system constraints, 2) represent the problem, 3)organize knowledge about the problem, 4
collaboration software to increase engineering-design orientedinstructional skills of teachers. T2I2 has completed the initial development phase of thefull scale research and development project resulting in a professional development cyberinfrastructure for technology, engineering and design educators – a dynamic, interactiveand collaborative online system for improving the quality of teaching in engineering anddesign education classrooms. Through the use of techniques and protocols, such as Ajax,DHTM, CSS, XML and PHP, the T2I2 project team has constructed a system thatprovides: 1) the content knowledge needed to implement inquiry-based instruction, 2)data analysis tools to evaluate learning needs and monitor inquiry-based learning, and 3)running
the individualcomponents and fabricate the PLC modules themselves.This manuscript discusses the need for including PLCs into the curriculum, and how thePLC modus modules discussed here are used in a course entitled Applied Process ControlEngineering which can briefly be described as a study of the fundamental concepts,devices, and applications of electronic components and controllers utilized on industrialequipment. Laboratory sessions focus on instrumentation, programming, downloading,and wiring discrete input / output devices.Specific Course Competencies of the course include the ability to: 1. Identify major applications of programmable logic controllers in industry, transportation, construction, and environmental
-year Mechanical Engineering majors at the University of Virginia. A fleet of 2Dball-point-pen plotters, called “HooPrints,” were designed and constructed out of plastic partsformed using state-of-the-art 3D printers. Students were then given blank 3 x 5 index cards andtwo design objectives: 1) Develop a manual, fly-by-wire “etch-a-sketch” mode through whicheach member of their team must write out his or her initials as quickly and neatly as possible and2) Program their HooPrint to automatically/autonomously draw something interesting (andsophisticated in terms of programming technique) in under two minutes.Background According to the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) and IEEE,Mechatronics is defined as “the synergistic
“pull” method of education where the project dictatesthe topics learned. The project described in this paper is large enough to encompass the entirequarter and complex enough to cover the majority of topics usually covered in this graduate leveladvanced engineering economy course.In the past this course was taught with an advanced text (Canada, et al, 2005) and topics werepresented sequentially. The redesign incorporates the interrelatedness of the topics into a project.The students work the entire quarter to build an excel based model to predict the stock price of afirm. The integration of topics is illustrated in Figure 1. The topics are contained in the ovals andthe activities performed by the students are contained in the arrows. This
schools in the area of project management.These modules exposed the students to project management concepts and tools that can beapplied in their HUNCH projects. The benefits of the project management modules are: 1) theobtaining of knowledge in project management, 2) timely, cost-effective execution of theHUNCH projects, and most important, 3) the increasing of students’ interest in STEM. Thisarticle discusses the details of Texas A&M University’s design and implementation of theproject management modules. The faculty members involved in the sponsored research projectsdesigned and taught the educational modules. The educational modules were reviewed by theProject Management Institute-Clear Lake (PMI-CL) to ensure consistency with PMI’s