Paper ID #8230Developing Engineering Leaders using Engineering Leadership Capabilitiesand Leadership LabsProf. Simon Pitts, Northeastern University Simon Pitts is the director of Northeastern’s Gordon Engineering Leadership Program and professor of Practice in Engineering Leadership. A graduate of Loughborough University and executive education at INSEAD, Pitts began his career in advanced powertrain development and research at Ford Motor Com- pany. During his time with Ford, his assignments included leading engineering and cross functional teams as Vehicle Line director, director of Manufacturing Operations, and director
environmental processes involve particle transport,deposition and removal. In the last decade, significant research progress in the areas ofnano- and micro-particle transport, deposition and removal has been made. A series ofcourses was developed to make these class of new important research findings availableto seniors and graduate students in engineering through developing and offering ofspecialized curricula. This project involved integration of numerical simulations andexperiments in the developed courses. The course materials were mostly made availableon the web and some courses were taught at University 1 and University 2 campusessimultaneously. Based on the course materials, a series of short courses was also offeredat several countries. The
AC 2010-1458: TEACHING SUSTAINABILITY AND SUSTAINABLEENGINEERING PRACTICE IN THE CIVIL ENGINEERING CURRICULUMSteven Burian, University of Utah Page 15.1188.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2010 Teaching Sustainability in a Civil Engineering CurriculumAbstractThe objectives of this paper are to (1) present the approach used to integrate sustainabilitycontent into the civil engineering curriculum at the University of ____, (2) assess theeffectiveness of the approach, and (3) provide general recommendations to improve theintegration of sustainability into the civil engineering curriculum. The approach beingimplemented at the University of ___ involves brief
A More Effective Sequence for Teaching Statics to Civil Engineering Students by Subhash C. Anand Professor of Civil Engineering Clemson University Clemson, SC 29631IntroductionEngineering Mechanics - Statics is a core course in most of the engineering disciplines,and is generally taught by a civil and/or a mechanical engineering faculty at the nationsABET accredited colleges and universities. The quality of the texts available in themarket for teaching this course has drastically improved during the past ten to fifteenyears. This is due to the fact of including real
achievement, particularly in the fields of science, technology,engineering, and mathematics (STEM). After a number of years of involving higher education invarious ways in targeted and systemic K-12 reform, NSF and the DoE began to promoteuniversity-K-12 “partnerships” as the means to most effectively involve higher education in theprocess. However what this exactly meant in the STEM educational world, or how effectivepartnerships should be created and evaluated, was mostly left undefined, generating confusionamong both educators and evaluators.As part of an NSF-sponsored Research, Evaluation, and Technological Assistance projectdesigned to help clarify the evaluative issues involved with partnerships, we are currentlyexamining how the
. Davis illuminates the nature of professional engineering;“knowing engineering ethics is as much a part of knowing how to engineer as knowing how tocalculate stress or design a circuit is. Indeed, insofar as engineering is a profession, knowing howto calculate stress or design a circuit is in part knowing what the profession allows, forbids, orrequires.”1In this paper we look at ethics across the curriculum and implementing engineering ethicseducation via the case methodology. A brief presentation on the history of engineering educationis followed by a discussion of ethics in engineering education. Case methodology is examinedincluding a look at sources for cases and case research. Finally, the two-stage engineering ethicseducation model used by
institutions.Many of these challenges mirror issues of society-at-large but are sometimes overlooked byprofessionals who deal with these students. To facilitate a student’s personal journey toward enhanced development andtransformation, engineering professionals must keep in mind that many of the experiencesencountered by students create some cognitive dissonance and challenge thought patterns,behaviors, and self-identity. To respond more effectively to their needs, the professional focusmust support a student’s need for a sound identity and awareness of issues that might impacttheir academic performance. Some of their issues might include academic, economic,motivational, family background, societal, diversity, and values challenges. Although
Session 3249 Women in Engineering Technology: Where are they? Timothy Brower, Harriet Cornachione Oregon Institute of TechnologyAbstractDespite substantial increases in the number of women entering law, medicine, and business ³fields previously dominated by men, there is still a scarcity of women in the field of engineering.Women continue to lag behind men in their enrollment into engineering programs and,consequently, in their completion of engineering degrees. At Oregon Institute of Technology(Oregon Tech) the disparity is especially acute in the engineering
professionals, 88 % are White, 6% are Asian and only6% are minority. Studies indicate that both industry and society benefit from diversity;furthermore, teams function at higher levels when there is diversity among colleagues. Thisoptimization enhances competitiveness within companies, enabling them to outperform theircompetitors. However, even though there are many benefits from increasing diversity, the factstill remains that a minority gap exists within engineering.This paper will explore philosophies and provide methods and recommendations to promote anincrease of minority participation within science and technology. The main discussion will focusupon the “minority gap” model, which is a triad. Each side - personal, education, and industry
AC 2012-3775: EFFECTIVE COMMUNITY PARTNERSHIP’S FOR WOMENIN STEMMs. Carrie-Ann Miller LCSW, State University of New York, Stony Brook Carrie-Ann Miller, LCSW, is Director of the Women in Science and Engineering, State University of New York at Stony Brook, Stony Brook, NY 11794-2200. Email: Carrie-Ann.Miller@stonybrook.edu. Phone: 631-632-9648. She has a B.A. (1978), SUNY at Stony Brook, in interdisciplinary social science with minor in women studies, and a M.S.W. (1982), SUNY at Stony Brook, School of Social Welfare, in integrated practice. From 2004- present, she is Director of the Women and Science and Engineer- ing Program, College of Engineering and Applied Sciences, SUNY at Stony Brook. From 2001-2005, she
AC 2012-3215: TEAMS, DESIGN, MENTORING, AND MANAGING FORCOMPUTER SCIENCE UNDERCLASSMENDr. David Wilczynski, University of Southern California David Wilczynski has a long history at USC. He was the first Ph.D. graduate from USC Information Science Institute in 1975, where some of the initial work on Arpanet was done. His research specialty at the time was in Knowledge Representation. In 1984, he left USC for almost 20 years to be an entrepreneur. Most of his work was in manufacturing, both in Detroit and Japan. During that time, he worked on programming real-time systems using an Agent methodology, which he now teach in his CSCI 201 class. He returned to USC in 2002 to teach full time. Mostly, he worries about how to
voltage to lower, that heat mustflow from higher temperature to lower, and that water must flow downhill. If it is explained tothem that higher to lower potentials needed for flow to occur actually expresses the second lawof thermodynamics in another, more general, way, then a very abstruse concept can be mademore real.The analogy can be extended to other physical systems including mechanics (force, velocity)electricity (voltage, electric current), magnetics (magnetomotive force, magnetic flux), andothers not normally taught to undergraduate engineering students as transport processes.The effort and flow variable analog can extend much farther into such disparate areas as thespread of disease, traffic flow, technology transfer, psychological
Extended Abstract with Poster An iPhone Application Developed for Time Study Practice Bonnie Boardman Industrial and Manufacturing Systems Engineering Department University of Texas at Arlington Extended AbstractTools developed for the engineering professional often don’t work well for teaching purposes. The cost/benefit ratio is usually very high considering the limited amount of a semester in whichthe tool would be useful. In learning situations instructors often want students to not onlygather data but also to complete calculations and
An investigation into gender diverse populations in hackathon environments Chris Rennick, Sophie T. Nasato, Samantha T. White, Mary A. Robinson University of WaterlooThis paper presents an investigation into whether there are any barriers to the participation ofgender diverse student populations in engineering hackathons. There has been some research intothe experience of women in hackathons, which has shown that hackathons can be alienating, oreven hostile, towards under-represented groups in engineering.This paper is part of a larger research study to identify whether (or not) STEM environments areproviding safe and inclusive spaces for people of all genders to encourage diversity and
Using Moodle for Algorithmic Grading of Homework Assignments Robert Fithen Arkansas Tech UniversityAbstractThis paper will explore the use of Moodle to grade numerical based homework assignments.Particular interest will be paid to Moodle's ability to supply a different set of numericalparameters for every student in the course. In addition, Moodle's ability to adaptively gradethe homework makes it particularly attractive to faculty interested in reaching an onlineaudience. Implementations in a typical fluid mechanics course will be explored in detail.Moodle is a learning management system used for online or mixed technology type courses.It is freely available as a
of communication skills and thegrowth of their expert-like behaviors is the focus of this paper. It begins with a very brief reviewof literature, continues with an equally brief identification of some critical assumptions and theirimplications for assessment of communication in engineering students, and concludes bysuggesting quantitative and qualitative assessment strategies and one way to ensurepedagogical integrity for the assessment process. data can provide a rich picture of students’communicative competence.Research about engineering communicationResearch in rhetoric establishes a positive relationship between technical knowledge and anability to communicate that knowledge, so students can improve their understanding of
AC 2011-1618: AUDIO-VISUAL LAB TUTORIALS TO DEVELOP INDE-PENDENT LEARNERSDeborah Walter, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology Dr. Deborah Walter is an Assistant Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology. She teaches courses in circuits, electromagnetics, and medical imaging. Before joining academia in 2006, she was at the Computed Tomography Laboratory at GE’s Global Research Center for 8 years. She worked on several technology development projects in the area of X-ray CT for medical and industrial imaging. She is a named inventor on 9 patents. She has been active in the recruitment and retention of women and minorities in engineering and currently PI for an NSF-STEM
Session 3220 Practical Streaming Video on the Internet for Engineering Courses On- and Off-Campus Hai-Shuan Lam, Kurt Gramoll University of OklahomaAbstractOver the last few years, the Internet has been increasingly used for education and researchpurposes. In particular, since the introduction of streaming video technology for the Internet,there has been a large interest in broadcasting engineering courses in part over the Internet. Thispaper discusses topics on how to prepare a streaming video in several inexpensive ways withinan organization for
manufacturingprocess affect carbon footprint, energy consumption, air acidification, and water eutrophication.Learning to compare engineering parameters allows students to be environmentally conscienceabout their designs. Industry can play a vital role in teaching students to integrate LCA intoproduct design. Through different levels of collaboration and participation, three studentactivities are explored that incorporate sustainable engineering with industrial partnering. • Formula Hybrid Competition, Thayer School of Engineering Dartmouth • Envisioning Sustainable Futures 2 Poster Competition, Worcester Polytechnic Institute • Vehicle Design Summit, Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyFormula HybridThe Formula Hybrid [1] competition, founded in
cometo the United States from different parts of the world. A large number of these engineers chooseCalifornia as their permanent home. After arrival, most of these engineers realize that they needadditional preparation to meet the professional standards set by the state government and otheragencies. In the case of immigrant engineers, there is a tremendous amount of hard work and effortrequired by them to prepare for the FE exam, followed by the PE license exam. One of the authorsof this paper recently emigrated from the Middle East and went through this challenging processhimself to get his California PE license. He has developed a training program based on his personalexperience with the intention of helping others to obtain their engineering
Paper ID #46350Conducting an International Med-IoT Project under the Innovation-BasedLearning ModelMr. Victor Tsui, University of North Dakota Victor Tsui is a Professional Chemical Engineer and a multidisciplinary biomedical engineer by train for over 30 years in biotech companies in San Francisco Bay Area. Victor graduated from Hong Kong Polytechnics University and University of Wisconsin with a master’s degree in engineering. He obtained a bachelor’s degree in computer science and certificate in project management. Victor is a co-founder for ”Powder Pharmaceuticals” a needle-free drug delivery device manufacturing in
Paper ID #46862Tinkering Towards Systems Thinking: Integrating Hands-On Design Activitiesin First-Year Engineering EducationDr. Micah Lande, South Dakota School of Mines and Technology Micah Lande, PhD is an Assistant Professor and E.R. Stensaas Chair for Engineering Education in the Leslie A. Rose Department of Mechanical Engineering at the South Dakota School of Mines & Technology. Dr. Lande directs the Holistic Engineering Lab and Observatory. He teaches human-centered engineering design, design thinking, and design innovation courses. Dr. Lande researches how technical and non-technical people learn and apply
Paper ID #37745Evidence of the Benefits of Interdisciplinary EngineeringTeams: Incorporating Systems Engineering into CivilEngineering DesignBrett Rocha CPT Brett Rocha is a first year instructor at the US Military Academy in the Department of Civil and Mechanical Engineering. She received her B.S. in Civil Engineering from USMA in 2012, her M.S. in Engineering Management from Missouri University of Science and Technology in 2016, and her M.S. in Civil Engineering from University of Central Florida in 2021. She teaches mechanics of materials, design of steel structures, and design of concrete structures.Aaron T
AC 2008-1435: THE PENN STATE STUDENT SPACE PROGRAMS LAB:TRAINING THE NEXT GENERATION OF SPACE SYSTEMS ENGINEERSSven Bilen, Pennsylvania State University SVEN G. BILÉN is an Associate Professor of Engineering Design, Electrical Engineering, and Aerospace Engineering at Penn State. He is the Chief Technologist for Penn State's Center for Space Research Programs and Director of the Student Space Programs Lab. He is member of IEEE, AIAA, AGU, ASEE, URSI, and Sigma Xi.Brian Schratz, Pennsylvania State University BRIAN SCHRATZ graduated with a B.S in electrical engineering from The Pennsylvania State University in 2006 and is now pursuing an M.S. in electrical engineering at Penn State as a
AC 2008-1461: MULTIDISCIPLINE TEAM TEACHING APPROACH TOENHANCE PROJECT-BASED LEARNING OF SUSTAINABLE DESIGNSteven Burian, University of UtahWilliam Johnson, University of UtahFred Montague, University of UtahArrin Holt, Cooper Roberts Simonsen AssociatesJim Nielson, Cooper Roberts Simonsen AssociatesRachel David, Cooper Roberts Simonsen Associates Page 13.915.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2008 Multidiscipline Team Teaching Approach to Enhance Project-Based Learning of Sustainable DesignAbstractThis paper describes a multidiscipline team-taught course providing a project-based learningenvironment for students of sustainable design
refereed international conferences and other journals. He received the Ohio Space Grant Consortium Doctoral Fellowship, and has received awards from the IEEE Southeastern Michigan and IEEE Toledo sections. He is a member of IEEE, IEEE Computer Society, and ASEE. At MSOE, he coordinates courses in software quality as- surance, software verication, software engineering practices, real time systems, and operating systems, as well as teaching embedded systems software.Dr. Mark J. Sebern, Milwaukee School of Engineering Mark J. Sebern is a professor in the Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Department at the Milwaukee School of Engineering (MSOE), and founding Program Director for MSOE’s undergraduate software
Session # 2002-1907 AN INTEGRATED DESIGN COMPETITION USING MODEL ROCKETS Martin Morris and David Zietlow Department of Mechanical Engineering College of Engineering and Technology Bradley University Peoria, IL 61625AbstractThe principle objective of this design competition is to provide upper-level students with anopportunity to integrate the use of engineering measurements and analytical modeling techniquesto accurately predict a priori the performance of a miniature rocket system. A
AC 2011-111: DISK BRAKE DESIGN CASE STUDY IMPLEMENTATIONMETHOD AND STUDENT SURVEY RESULTSOscar G Nespoli, University of Waterloo Oscar Nespoli is a Lecturer in Engineering and Mechanical Design and Director of Curriculum Devel- opment in the Department of Mechanical and Mechatronics Engineering at the University of Waterloo (Waterloo). Oscar joined Waterloo following a 23 year career in research, engineering and management practice in industry and government. His teaching and research interests are in the areas of engineering design methodologies, design practice, engineering education and high performance, lightweight, com- posite materials design. Oscar is passionate about teaching engineering and, as part of his
Paper ID #8462The Goldilocks Continuum: Making the case for an optimal balance of in-structional strategy in mechanical engineering collaborative learningChristopher E. Larsen, University of Missouri Christopher Larsen is currently a student in the doctoral program at the University of Missouri’s School of Information Science and Learning Technologies. He has worked for many years with the Department of Defense as an instructional systems designer, and has written several technical manuals on leadership and small unit tactics. Christopher’s interests include problem-based learning and leadership development.Rose M Marra Ph.D
Paper ID #7892National Trends in the Civil Engineering Major Design Experience: PartDeuxDr. Tonya Lynn Nilsson P.E., Santa Clara University Tonya Nilsson is a full-time lecturer in the department of Civil Engineering at Santa Clara University. Previously she was on the faculty at California State University, Chico where she was a tenured associate professor. Dr. Nilsson has her professional license and has worked in industry on structural engineering projects. Dr. Nilsson worked for a number of years with ASCE’s ExCEED Teaching Workshops and served for four years on the national ASCE Committee on Faculty Development. She