Power Supply Feature Distribution Channel 1. provide sufficient power to drive 8 Ohm load to full rail Reliability Feature 2. Low noise 3. Accept input from standard AC/DC wall power supply 4. Power indicator lights Machine Owner Additive Feature 5. Separate power supply for isolated ECG circuits
Computer Science from University of Portsmouth, UK in 2006. Aamir was also a Visiting Scientist at MIT, USA in 2010-11 where he worked on the award-winning Cilk technolgy. Aamir’s research interests include designing and implementing parallel software on high-end computing platforms. Aamir is an architect and the main developer of an MPI-like library called MPJ Express (http://mpjexpress.org).Prof. Ala Al-Fuqaha, Hamad Bin Khalifa University (HBKU) Ala Al-Fuqaha received Ph.D. degree in Computer Engineering and Networking from the University of Missouri-Kansas City, Kansas City. He is Professor at Hamad Bin Khalifa University. His research interests include the use of machine learning in general and deep learning in
design provided anopportunity to see the impact of a controlled intervention on students (in a typical largeuniversity environment) who have had three years of training predominantly under the deductivelearning model where emphasis is often not placed on the application of theory to real worldproblems.The Experiment In the live simulation, the students experienced being an aircraft design engineer for afictitious aircraft company called Ace Aero. The students used a combination of electronic toolsand real world role playing in order to simulate the aircraft designer experience. These realworld industry level design tools included the computer CAD tool CATIA by Dassault Systems,the synthesis tool ModelCenter® by Phoenix Integration, and
AC 2012-4004: A SYMPHONY OF DESIGNIETTES: EXPLORING THEBOUNDARIES OF DESIGN THINKING IN ENGINEERING EDUCATIONProf. Kristin L. Wood, University of Texas, Austin Kristin L. Wood is currently a professor, Head of Pillar, and Co-director of the International Design Center (IDC) at Singapore University of Technology and Design (SUTD). Wood completed his M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in mechanical engineering (Division of Engineering and Applied Science) at the California Institute of Technology, where he was an AT&T Bell Laboratories Ph.D. Scholar. Wood joined the faculty at the University of Texas in Sept. 1989 and established a computational and experimental laboratory for research in engineering design and manufacturing
. sphere.Role of Instructors are expected to explain the materials in Instructors should establish rapport with their stu-instructors lecture and homework assignments. dents and be approachable. Instructors should tailor their explanations to stu- Instructors challenge students to think and apply dents and may articulate fixed ideas of ”how one ideas. learns.” Grades are indicative of acquired knowledge. Grades reflect an ability to apply knowledge.Evaluation Tests are for students to “prove” they have ac- Accounts for individual differences in assessment quired the correct knowledge as evaluated by the
over time at the University of Colorado Boulder. Year Course Identifier Weekly Student enrollment and support Instructional Team 2022 GEEN 2010 1 hr lecture, ~140 students, 1 lecture, 3 co-instructors Engineering Tools 2 hr studio, 6 studio/labs ~30 students max 12 undergraduate and Analysis (3 cr) 2 hr lab course assistants 2021 GEEN 3830 Special 1 hr lecture, 15 students (Fall) 1 instructor Topics: Engineering 2 hr studio, 12 students (Spring) 2 undergraduate course Analysis and Problem 2 hr lab
is an opportunityfor educators to incorporate ST into engineering programs, and engineering entrepreneurshipprograms more specifically, to help students with complex problem solving and enable amultidisciplinary approach.Future research suggestions are to gather more examples of ST in engineering education frombeyond Canada and to create workshops on ST for entrepreneurial engineering teams to assesstheir problem-solving abilities, before and after being exposed to ST. This could be a great steptowards verifying ST and its effects in problem solving in entrepreneurship.References[1] Acs, Z. J., & Szerb, L. (2007). Entrepreneurship, economic growth and public policy. SmallBusiness Economics, 28(2), 109-122
TechnologyTom McKlinMr. Douglas Edwards, Georgia Institute of Technology Douglas Edwards is a K-12 Science Technology Engineering Mathematics (STEM) educational researcher with the Georgia Institute of Technology. His educational experience in the Atlanta area for the past twenty years includes high school mathematics teachiRafael A. Arce-NazarioJoseph Carroll-MirandaIsaris Rebeca Quinones Perez, University of Puerto Rico, Rio PiedrasLilliana Marrero-SolisJason Freeman, Georgia Institute of Technology Jason Freeman is an Associate Professor of Music at Georgia Tech. His artistic practice and scholarly research focus on using technology to engage diverse audiences in collaborative, experimental, and ac- cessible musical
collaboration across various fields, including community engagement,medicine, food science, psychology, environmental science, etc. As such, the contemporaryand future-ready chemical engineer must be able to work effectively in teams with people ofdiverse backgrounds, experiences, perspectives, and specialties. This requirement makesstrong teamwork skills one of the most sought-after abilities by prospective employers andclients. This expectation can also be seen in the accreditation conditions of professionalbodies like Engineers Australia [2] that require graduate engineers have the capability to leadand participate successfully in teams. Further, the Australian Council of Engineering Deans(ACED) and the US National Academies of Sciences, Engineering
functions,such as moving components and rotating instrument knobs. Figure 1: VISIR web interface with the breadboard, digital multimeter, and oscilloscopeThe Emona TIMS netCIRCUITlabs, used for the first time this summer term, offers onlineaccess to multiple students, simultaneously, for controlling and measuring real electronicscircuits. The system is accessible via a web browser and covers a range of experiments suchas AC amplifiers, feedback circuits, and differential amplifiers. The lab equipment comprisesa control unit and several switchable boards for different experiments (see Fig. 2 andYouTube video). Figure 2: netCIRCUTISlabs control unit with experimentation board and exemplary user interfaceFor the implementation of
AC 2007-1409: CHALLENGES FACING THE STUDENT SPACE SYSTEMSFABRICATION LABORATORY AND LESSONS LEARNEDThomas Liu, University of Michigan Graduate Student, Aerospace Engineering, liutm@umich.eduChristopher Deline, University of Michigan Graduate Student, Electrical EngineeringRafael Ramos, University of Michigan Graduate Student, Space SystemsSteven Sandoval, University of Michigan Graduate Student, Aerospace EngineeringAshley Smetana, University of Michigan Undergraduate Student, Aerospace EngineeringYang Li, University of Michigan Graduate Student, Aerospace EngineeringRichard Redick, University of Michigan Undergraduate Student, Aerospace EngineeringJulie Bellerose, University of
AC 2007-1605: PRELIMINARY RESULTS OF A LONGITUDINAL STUDY INTOTHE ACADEMIC SUCCESS OF STUDENTS IN TECHNOLOGY-FOCUSED VS.HUMANITIES PROGRAMSMary Stewart, Ryerson University MARY F. (FRANKIE) STEWART Frankie Stewart, B.A.Sc. (Queen’s U.), M.Eng. (U. of Toronto), is a Professor of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering at Ryerson University. Professor Stewart is a recipient of the FEAS Teaching Excellence Award at Ryerson University (2006), of Honourable Mention in the 2005 province-wide competition for the COU Award for Teaching with Technology, and of the Award for Innovative Excellence in Teaching, Learning and Technology from the Center for the Advancement of Teaching and Learning, Jacksonville
AC 2008-1032: TECHNICAL VOCATIONAL AND ENGINEERING EDUCATIONIN AFGHANISTANZarjon Baha, Purdue University Zarjon Baha is currently professor of Building Construction Management at the College of Technology at Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana. Prof. Z. Baha received his BS degree from Kabul University and Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri, MS degree from Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana, and Ph.D. from North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina. Prof. Z. Baha has been teaching at Purdue University since 1982. Prior to 1982 he was working at the Faculty of Engineering at Kabul University, Kabul, Afghanistan. He served as the head of
AC 2009-768: SPACE-SYSTEMS ENGINEEERING: A NASA-SPONSOREDAPPROACH FOR AEROSPACE UNDERGRADUATESLisa Guerra, NASA Lisa Guerra has 20 years experience in the NASA aerospace community. Currently, Ms. Guerra is on an assignment from NASA Headquarters to establish a systems engineering curriculum at The University of Texas at Austin. Ms. Guerra’s most recent position at NASA Headquarters was Acting Director of the Directorate Integration Office in the Exploration Systems Mission Directorate. Ms. Guerra earned a B.S in Aerospace Engineering and a B.A. in English from the University of Notre Dame. She received a Master of Science degree in Aerospace Engineering from the University of Texas at
AC 2009-1259: TOWARD A DESIGN TAXONOMY AS A PARADIGM IN DESIGNPEDAGOGICSKeelin Leahy, University of Limerick Keelin Leahy is a PhD Researcher with the Department of Manufacturing and Operations Engineering in the University of Limerick. In 2005 she successfully completed a first class honours Bachelor of Technology, Materials and Construction concurrent with Teacher Education at the University of Limerick. On Graduating she won the Advanced Scholar Award. She has also received the IRCSET scholarship for the duration of her PhD completion. She also assists in the teaching of design strategies and design communication at the University of Limerick.William Gaughran, University of Limerick
AC 2009-1281: PUTTING THE 'E' INTO STEM EDUCATION IN THEELEMENTARY SCHOOLMichael Pelletier, Northern Essex Community CollegeLinda Desjardins, Northern Essex Community CollegePaul Chanley, Northern Essex Community CollegeLori Heymans, Northern Essex Community College Page 14.998.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2009 Putting the 'E' into STEM Education in the Elementary SchoolAbstract:During the summer of 2008, in year one of a three-year project funded by theMassachusetts Pipeline Fund and entitled "STEM ROCKS," a cooperative effort began tointroduce Engineering is Elementary into the elementary schools of four public
AC 2009-1680: CREATING A SUSTAINABLE-ENERGY BUSINESS IN RURALHONDURASWilliam Jordan, Baylor University WILLIAM JORDAN is the Mechanical Engineering Department Chair at Baylor University. He has B.S. and M.S. degrees in Metallurgical Engineering from the Colorado School of Mines, an M.A. degree in Theology from Denver Seminary, and a Ph.D. in mechanics and materials from Texas A & M University. He teaches materials related courses and does research concerning appropriate technology in developing countries. He also writes and does research in the areas of engineering ethics and engineering education.Ryan McGhee, Baylor University Ryan McGhee graduated from Baylor University in
AC 2009-693: A RETROSPECTIVE STUDY OF THE ELEMENTARY-SCHOOLEXPERIENCES, INFLUENCES, SKILLS, AND TRAITS OF TALENTEDENGINEERSMichele Strutz, Purdue University Michele L. Strutz is a doctoral student in educational psychology in Gifted and Talented Education with a specialization in Engineering Education at Purdue University. Michele completed Masters Degrees in both Gifted and Talented Education and in Curriculum and Instruction. Prior to her studies in Education, Michele worked in Marketing at Hewlett Packard, in Computer Systems Design at Arthur Andersen, and in Engineering Sulfuric Acid Plants at Monsanto. Her years of work in the high-tech field stemmed from her undergraduate degrees in
epistemology development students.Dr. Nicole P. Pitterson, Oregon State University Nicole is a postdoctoral scholar at Oregon State University. She holds a PhD in Engineering Education from Purdue University and other degrees in Manufacturing Engineering from Western Illinois Univer- sity and a B.Sc. in Electrical and Electronic Engineering from the University of Technology, Jamaica. Her research interest is eliciting conceptual understanding of AC circuit concepts using active learning strategies.Dr. Shane A. Brown P.E., Oregon State University Shane Brown is an associate professor and Associate School Head in the School of Civil and Environmen- tal Engineering at Oregon State University. His research interests include
extended the prototype and connected it to Epplets.org as part of his MSIT graduate practicum in fall 2015 and spring 2016. • Himank Vats contributed to the Docker containerization of the server-side components as part of his MSIT graduate practicum in 2017.Our team gratefully acknowledges the received funding support, as well as the participatingstudents’ dedication and enthusiasm.References [1] Dale Parsons and Patricia Haden. Parson’s programming puzzles: A fun and effective learning tool for first programming courses. In Proceedings of the 8th Australasian Conference on Computing Education - Volume 52, ACE ’06, pages 157–163, Darlinghurst, Australia, Australia, 2006. Australian Computer Society, Inc. ISBN 1-920682-34-1
. [Online]. Available: https://peer.asee.org/7976.[30] R. Freeman et al., "Development And Implementation Of Challenge Based Instruction In Statics And Dynamics," presented at the 2010 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Louisville, Kentucky, June 20-23, 2010. [Online]. Available: https://peer.asee.org/16904.[31] Y. Kim, "Learning statics through in-class demonstration, assignment and evaluation," International Journal of Mechanical Engineering Education, vol. 43, no. 1, pp. 23-37, 2015, doi: 10.1177/0306419015574643.[32] R. Echempati and A.L. Sala, "Experiences of Implementing Blended Teaching and Learning Technique in Mechanics and Design Courses," presented at the 2013 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
has over 30 years’ experience in engineering practice and education, including industrial experience at the Tennessee Valley Authority and the US Army Space and Missile Defense Command. Her research inter- ests include Engineering Ethics, Image and Data Fusion, Automatic Target Recognition, Bioinformatics and issues of under-representation in STEM fields. She is a former member of the ABET Engineering Ac- creditation Commission, and is on the board of the ASEE Ethics Division and the Women in Engineering Division. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2020 Can ABET Assessment Really Be This Simple?AbstractWith the hard roll-out of ABET’s new outcomes 1-7 in the 2019
including eleven years on the faculty at the United States Military Academy.Dr. Tara Hornor , The Citadel Dr. Tara Hornor currently serves as Associate Provost for Planning, Assessment and Evaluation & Dean of Enrollment Management at The Citadel, providing leadership for the institution’s strategic planning, ac- creditation, assessment, institutional research, admissions, financial aid, and graduate college offices. She holds a Ph.D. in Higher Education Administration from the University of Arizona and master’s degrees in counseling, instructional design, and human resource management.Dr. Robert J. Rabb P.E., The Citadel Robert Rabb is an associate professor and the Mechanical Engineering Program Director at The Citadel
languageenvironment to a much harder OOP environment.3.1 Integration of Experiential Learning Stage 4 Stage 1 Ac*ve Concrete Experimenta*on Experience (trying what was learned, tes1ng (observing, implica1ons of learning, concepts in new learning by situa1on) experience) Stage 2 Stage 3 Reflec*ve
/papers-and-publications/publications/college- profiles/15EngineeringbytheNumbersPart1.pdf33. Hill, C., Corbett, C., & St Rose, A. (2010). Why so few? Women in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics. American Association of University Women. 1111 Sixteenth Street NW, Washington, DC 20036.34. Fast Facts: Harvey Mudd College. Retrived from https://www.hmc.edu/about-hmc/fast- facts/35. Trow, M. (1996). Trust, markets and accountability in higher education: A comparative perspective. Higher Education Policy, 9(4), 309-324.36. Monks, J., & Schmidt, R. M. (2011). The impact of class size on outcomes in higher education. The BE Journal of Economic Analysis and Policy, 11(1), 1-17.37. Acs, Z. J., & Audretsch, D. B
. His scholarship focuses on human action, communication, and learning as socio- culturally organized phenomena. A major strand of his research explores the varied trajectories taken by students as they attempt to enter professional disciplines such as engineering, and focuses on the dilem- mas encountered by students as they move through these institutionalized trajectories. He is co-editor of a 2010 National Society for the Study of Education Yearbook, Learning Research as a Human Science. Other work has appeared in Linguistics and Education; Mind, Culture, and Activity; Anthropology & Education Quarterly, the Encyclopedia of Cognitive Science; the Journal of Engineering Education; and the Cambridge Handbook of
and hone this teaching module: Colin Pollard, KeenanLins, Katie Nolan, Piper Stevens, Vaishnathi Thiraviyarajah, Annika Young, and Emma Dean.References[1] E. Hand, “People Power,” Nature, vol. 466, no. August, pp. 685–687, 2010.[2] R. Simpson, K. R. Page, and D. De Roure, “Zooniverse: observing the world’s largest citizen science platform,” Proc. 23rd Int. Conf. World Wide Web, pp. 1049–1054, 2014.[3] S. Cooper et al., “Predicting protein structures with a multiplayer online game,” Nature, vol. 466, no. 7307, pp. 756–760, 2010.[4] Environmental Protection Agency, “Environmental Protection Belongs to the Public A Vision for Citizen Science at EPA National Advisory Council for Environmental Policy,” 2016.[5
industry involvement in multidisciplinary capstone design courses,” International Journal of Engineering Education, 30(1), pp. 6-13, 2014.12. Howe, S., “Where Are We Now? Statistics on Capstone Courses Nationwide,” Advances in Engineering Education, American Society for Engineering Education, Spring 2010.13. Pembridge, J. and Paretti, M., “The Current State of Capstone Design Pedagogy,” Proceedings of the American Society for Engineering Education, 2010, AC 2010–811.14. Drnevich, V., “The Senior Design Process at Purdue University,” Proceedings of the 2005 ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition (Paper Number 2005-2510), 2005.15. O'Bannon, D. and Kimes, T., “Design-to-Build = Civil Engineering Capstone + Municipality.” Proceedings
University while retaining both the current coursecontent and its rigor. As currently constructed, the circuits 1 course at Montana State University,EELE 201, covers basic circuit quantities, node and mesh analysis, basic circuit theorems, idealoperational amplifier circuits, the complete response of first order RC and RL circuits, sinusoidalsteady-state analysis and AC steady-state power. There is a follow-on course that considerstopics such as the complete response of second-order circuits, frequency response, Laplace andFourier techniques, filter circuits and two-port networks. Both four-credit circuits courses havelab components.There is growing literature regarding the teaching of electric circuits with the importance ofconceptual understanding
. Yongpeng Zhang, Prairie View A&M University Yongpeng Zhang received his BS degree in Automatic Control from Xi’an University of Technology in 1994, MS degree in Automation from Tianjin University in 1999, and PhD degree in Electrical Engineer- ing from University of Houston in 2003. After one year post-doctoral research, he was appointed as the Tenure-Track Assistant Professor in Engineering Technology Dept at Prairie View A&M University in 2004 Fall, where he received promotion as the Tenured Associate Professor from 2010 Fall. His research interests include control system, mechatronics, motor drive, power electronics, and real-time embedded system design. As the Principal Investigator, his research has