, Bradford, Pennsylvania, 16701AbstractFirst-year experience in college is critical and challenging to students from all socioeconomicbackgrounds. It laid the foundation for the coming four years and significantly influenced thequality of students’ academic and social lives. But the fact is that the gaps between high schooland college are so huge that some students struggle in the first year and even the years to come.First-Year Transition Seminar (FYTS) is a one-credit-hour course designed to transition studentsto the university academic setting, introduce students to the general education program, andeducate students about the array of campus activities and professional services available. This first-year experience course aims to help new college
and non-technical people learn and apply design thinking and making processes to their work. He is interested in the intersection of designerly epistemic identities and vocational path- ways. Dr. Lande received his B.S. in Engineering (Product Design), M.A. in Education (Learning, Design and Technology) and Ph.D. in Mechanical Engineering (Design Education) from Stanford University. American c Society for Engineering Education, 2021 Appraising Student Design Learning: Comparing Design Processes of First Year & Senior Year Engineering StudentsIntroductionTraditionally, engineering design is taught as a tool for synthesis and integration of
laboratories, and decision-making framework development for design and manufacturing environments.Dr. Yue Hung, Farmingdale State College Dr. Yue (Jeff) Hung obtained his Ph.D. in Materials Science and Engineering and M.S. degree in Me- chanical Engineering from Stony Brook University and his B.S. degree in Manufacturing Engineering Technology from Farmingdale State College. Currently, he is an associate professor and a Co-Chair of the Mechanical Engineering Technology Department at Farmingdale State College. Dr. Hung has over 20 years of experience in Computer-Aided Design (CAD) applications. His areas of expertise also in- clude Computer-Aided Manufacturing (CAM), Computer Number Control (CNC) machining, new prod- uct
Paper ID #20981PNW GenCyber Summer Camp: Game based Cybersecurity Education forHigh School StudentsDr. Ge Jin, Purdue University Northwest Dr. Ge Jin is currently an associate professor in the Department of Computer Information Technology and Graphics at the Purdue University Northwest. He holds a B.S. in Computer Science from Peking University, China, and an M.S. in Computer Science from Seoul National University, South Korea. He earned his Doctor of Science degree in Computer Science with a concentration in computer graphics from the George Washington University. His research spans the fields of computer graphics
Session 1532 Capstone Design for Education and Industry - The Perspective of Industry Sponsors and Graduates Richard Wall , Kathy Belknap ASAE/University of IdahoINTRODUCTION The ABET guidelines state “Engineering design is the process of devising a system, component, orprocess to meet desired needs. It is a decision-making process (often iterative), in which the basic sciences,mathematics and engineering sciences are applied to convert resources to meet a stated objective.”[1] Guidelinesfor electrical
interdisciplinary teams1, 2. As a result, many engineeringprograms now devote a portion of their curriculum to team experiences and buildingcommunication skills. These activities are designed not only to equip students with theinterpersonal skills that they will need in their career, but to build self-efficacy and helpincrease retention3.The Engage program at the University of Tennessee was designed to be an integratedcurriculum that would “continue to teach essential skills, using techniques that improveproblem-solving ability, teach design methodology, and teach teamwork andcommunication skills,”4. The Engage program is a 12 credit hour, two-semester coursethat all first year students are required to take. The program was piloted in the 1997-1998academic
Paper ID #21252’Is Someone in Your Family an Entrepreneur?’: Examining the Influence ofFamily Role Models on Students’ Entrepreneurial Self-efficacy and its Varia-tion Across GenderDr. Prateek Shekhar, University of Michigan Prateek Shekhar is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the University of Michigan. His research is focused on examining translation of engineering education research into practice and evaluation of dissemination initiatives and educational programs in engineering disciplines. He holds a Ph.D. in Mechanical Engineer- ing from the University of Texas at Austin, M.S. in Electrical Engineering from University of
Paper ID #24862Board 135: Reflecting on 20 Years of the Attracting Women into Engineering(AWE) WorkshopMiss Mahaa Mayeesha Ahmed, Rowan University Mahaa Ahmed is currently a senior at Rowan University in Glassboro, NJ studying Biological Sciences and Philosophy and Religion Studies with a minor in Dance. She is a student worker in the Outreach Office of the Henry M. Rowan College of Engineering and helps coordinate K-12 STEM programs during the academic year as well as STEM camps during the summer. She will be pursuing a MS in Environmental Health at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health upon graduation.Ms. Melanie
Paper ID #15238Science Fiction Literature Crossed with Nanotechnology: How ExperientialLearning Enhances Engineering Education?Dr. Anne-Marie Nickel, Milwaukee School of Engineering Dr. Anne-Marie Nickel is a Professor of Chemistry at the Milwaukee School of Engineering (MSOE). In 2002, she earned her Ph.D. in Inorganic Chemistry from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. She earned her B.A. in Chemistry at Lawrence University in Appleton, Wisconsin in 1997. Dr. Nickel is a member of the ASEE and the American Chemical Society (ACS). e-mail:nickel@msoe.eduDr. Jennifer Kelso Farrell, Milwaukee School of Engineering Jennifer
and Birmingham Alabama, Joplin Missouri, and Moore Oklahoma researching life safety issues after major tornado events.Dr. Audra N. Morse, Texas Tech University Dr. Audra Morse, P.E., is the Associate Dean for Undergraduate Studies in the Whitacre College of Engi- neering and a Professor in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Texas Tech Univer- sity. She leads the Engineering Opportunities Center which provides retention, placement and academic support services to WCOE students. Her professional experience is focused on water and wastewater treatment, specifically water reclamation systems, membrane filtration and the fate of personal products in treatment systems.Dr. Stephen Michael Morse
of California Polytechnic State University in San Luis Obispo. He was a former President and is current Industrial Advisor to the Cal Poly Amateur Radio Club (www.W6BHZ.org). He is very involved in community events and regularly provides communica- tions for bike rides and triathlons, helps at local repeater work days, and assists several testing sessions each year. His Masters Thesis is titled: Radio Direction Finding Network Receiver Design for Low-cost Public Service Applications. Marcel was licensed on Cinco de Mayo in 2008 as KI6QDJ. He received his Extra License in the Summer of 2010 and is now holds the callsign: AI6MS. He is an ARRL Life Member and has used his VE credentials to help license over 673 hams
AC 2007-2161: COMPARISON OF THREE UNIQUE STUDENT POPULATIONS INAN ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY STRENGTH OF MATERIALS COURSEGregory Watkins, University of North Carolina-Charlotte Gregory Watkins received a B.S. in Mechanical Engineering from North Carolina State University, a Master of Engineering Management from Old Dominion University, and a Ph.D. in Mechanical Engineering from UNC Charlotte. He has taught in the Engineering Technology department at UNC Charlotte for the past 4.5 years. He taught in the Engineering Technologies Division at Central Piedmont Community College for 8 years and has 9 years of industrial work experience
ENTERPRISE ARCHITECTURE – BRIDGE THE GAP BETWEEN BUSINESS, IT AND UNIVERSITIES A. Sutharshan, S P Maj, D Veal Department of Computer Science, Edith Cowan University, Perth, Australia Email: anu.sutharshan@dli.wa.gov.au, s.maj@ecu.edu.auIntroductionAdvancing technologies, emergent software development approaches, and economicconditions influencing corporate budgets are creating new challenges for theApplication Services manager [4]. In one of the studies [10], Enterprise Architecture(EA) was ranked near the top of the list of issues considered important by the chiefinformation officers. Enterprise Architecture is a distinct and developing discipline inthe Information
An Advanced Manufacturing Workshop for High-School Teachers and Students Todd Sparks, Vinay Kadekar, Gail Richards, Frank Liou, Venkat Allada, Ming Leu, Faisal Anam, and Siddharth Shinde University of Missouri-Rolla and Ashok Agrawal and Dale Gerstenecker St. Louis Community College at Florissant ValleyAbstractPresented in this paper is an analysis of the experience of teaching advancedmanufacturing technology to groups of teachers at a workshop sponsored by NSFduring the summer of 2004 at the University of Missouri-Rolla. The purpose of theworkshop was to expose teachers to manufacturing technology
support materials by CD-ROMand Internet streaming, to students at the IIIST in Shanghai. All courses are taught inEnglish by PSU faculty, with classroom assistance provided by local faculty drawn fromFudan and Shanghai JiaoTong Universities. IIIST provides classroom and administrativeinfrastructure, and collaborates with Fudan as well as Shanghai JiaoTong for most of thelower division non-technical program for the student. IIIST also provides instruction inEnglish as a Second Language. Students who successfully complete the lower divisionprogram requirements can apply to become fully admitted to PSU at the junior year (upperdivision), and progress toward graduation from Portland State University. The programfosters faculty exchange between the
ExplorationProgram in the 90’s, the School of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering (AME) decided toupdate and modernize its AE course sequence, adding new thrust areas in EE and CS to its awardwinning and ABET accredited conventional AE program.Over the last two years, AME has developed a challenging and exciting modern AE curriculumthat incorporates the growing field of intelligent systems as a major aspect into the mix ofcourses and increases the space-engineering component while preserving a strong aeronauticsprogram. Specifically, the digital aspects of AE technology were added: an embedded real timesystems experience and an expanded controls sequence. The standard modern physics coursewas replaced by our own course in astrodynamics and space science
are computer science, software engineering,networking, and computer engineering. In this curriculum, the students matriculate into the CNSdepartment after successfully completing the requirements of 30 hours of core courses commonto all computer science students. The students continue taking core courses until the firstsemester of their junior year, when they begin choosing their electives from differentspecialization areas.Since our school does not offer a stand alone engineering program, the computer sciencedepartment curriculum contains an area of specialization in computer engineering.In this paper, we elaborate the detail content of the curriculum for our computer engineering areaof specialization. In order to make our computer
Session 3263 Solid Modeling and Reverse Engineering: The Stimulus For Teaching Manufacturing Harry L. Hess The College of New JerseyI. IntroductionEngineering programs must motivate students to participate in the globally important topic ofmanufacturing. Required courses may be the first and only chance to stimulate the students’desire to study the basic concepts of manufacturing processes, organization and productionsystems. Unfortunately, this can be a very labored process and if
Session Number: 3449 How Computer Animations Make Teaching Complex Topics More Effective And More Efficient Stephen J. Kuyath UNC-Charlotte Department of Engineering TechnologyAbstract:Complex or abstract topics are sometimes very difficult for students to understand. Many ofthese topics can be taught in a more efficient and effective manner. Computer animations, bothuser-controlled and free running, with audio or textual clarification, appeal to a number oflearning styles that will help students master the subject. The methods used grew from teachingan introductory
AC 2012-4098: THE ROLE OF CLASSROOM ARTIFACTS IN DEVELOP-MENTAL ENGINEERINGDiana Bairaktarova, Purdue University, West Lafayette Diana Bairaktarova is a doctoral student in engineering education at Purdue University. She obtained her B.S. and M.S. in mechanical engineering from Technical University in Sofia, Bulgaria, and M.B.A. degree from Hamline School of Business, Minnesota. Bairaktarova has more than a decade of engineering design experience, working as a Module design, and MMIC Test Engineer. Her research interest is in the area of developmental engineering, creativity, engineering design, and STEM education, and engineering ethics. Bairaktarova is currently working on a research project to study the ways
-world-focused,customized education. They expect a large number of choices, because theyunderstand the power of simulation. They are very visually focused, becausethis is the video gaming generation. They want personalized, customizedproducts, processes and service, and their education process is not an exception.They look for technical details, and want to see it all; immediately, andvirtually...They look for good quality and low cost and ease of use, andinteractivity, because there is NO time to read traditional manuals and statictextbooks… They like to continuously explore, browse the web, watchinteractive, rather than linear videos, explore multimedia-based publications,versus static textbooks, and always experiment, rather than follow the
AC 2010-2374: EMBEDDED WIRELESS NETWORKS INSTRUCTIONBenjamin Levine, University of North Carolina Ben Levine is an Embedded Systems Engineer in Rock Hill, SC with a Bachelor of Science degree in Electrical Engineering from UNC Charlotte. After studying Optical Science at the graduate level he switched to Embedded Systems engineering and is currently pursing his Master's Degree in Electrical Engineering.James Conrad, University of North Carolina, Charlotte James M. Conrad received his bachelor’s degree in computer science from the University of Illinois, Urbana, and his master’s and doctorate degrees in computer engineering from North Carolina State University. He is currently an associate
Developing an Educational Process for an Engineering Technology Program Henry Kraebber, Nancy Denton, John Hartin Purdue UniversityAbstract The new criteria for engineering technology accreditation by ABET known as TC2Khave been evolving for several years. The TC2K criteria create an outcomes-based assessmentprocess rather than the traditional input-based ABET assessment process. There are fundamentalchanges in the accreditation criteria that make them significantly different. These changeswarrant a new design of the processes used to prepare for accreditation. These new processesmust clearly define and embed quality and self-assessment into engineering
Teaching Graduate Rotorcraft Design Based on Twenty Years of Experience Dr. Daniel P. Schrage Professor and Director Center of Excellence in Rotorcraft Technology School of Aerospace Engineering Georgia Institute of Technology Atlanta, GA 30332-0150IntroductionRotorcraft is a general term for rotary-wing aircraft and includes all aircraft that include anyrotary-wing device for generating lift or propulsion for a portion of the aircraft’s flight envelope.Therefore, rotorcraft includes helicopters
Session 3160 It’s Time to Re-think Engineering Education Conferences Russel C. Jones World Expertise LLC Bethany S. Oberst James Madison University Thomas J. Siller Colorado State UniversityAbstractThe annual meeting of SEFI (The European Society for Engineering Education), held inCopenhagen, Denmark, on September 12 – 14, 2001, provided a model for whatengineering education conferences should be in the future. If engineering education istruly
Session 2002-781 Encouraging High School Students to Learn about Bioremediation Richard O. Mines, Jr.1, Janet Carlson Powell2, Laura W. Lackey1 Mercer University1, Department of Environmental Engineering, 1400 Coleman Avenue, Macon, GA 31210 / BSCS2, 5415 Mark Dabling Blvd. Colorado Springs, CO 808919AbstractThis paper presents a laboratory activity for high school students used to stimulate their interestin environmental engineering and the role of bioremediation in cleaning up the environment.The proposed laboratory activity utilized six, 2
Paper ID #10223Pre-College Engineering Participation Among First-Year Engineering Stu-dentsMr. Noah Salzman, Purdue University, West Lafayette Noah Salzman is a doctoral candidate in engineering education at Purdue University. He received his B.S. in engineering from Swarthmore College, his M.Ed. in secondary science education from University of Massachusetts, Amherst, and his M.S. in Mechanical Engineering from Purdue University. He has work experience as an engineer and taught science, technology, engineering, and mathematics at the high school level. His research focuses on the intersection of pre-college and
Paper ID #10084Toward Broadening Participation: Understanding Students’ Perceptions ofIndustrial EngineeringMs. Valerie Yvette RitoJessica Lynn AschenbrennerDr. Jessica L. Heier Stamm, Kansas State University Jessica L. Heier Stamm holds a Ph.D. in industrial and systems engineering from the Georgia Institute of Technology and a B.S. in industrial engineering from Kansas State University. Her research in en- gineering education centers on broadening the participation of underrepresented students in engineering and introducing students to humanitarian applications of operations research. Dr. Heier Stamm also con- ducts
evaluate the impact of design alternatives to severalsustainability factors including energy efficiency, life cycle analysis, consumption of natural resources, and globalwarming. The design software effectively supplements the general and introductory concepts of sustainabilitytypically presented in texts on the subject. Consistent with the Wentworth Institute of Technology (WIT)experiential model of teaching, design software used in this manner provides an opportunity for students to grasp abetter understanding of the applications and limitations of sustainable design and construction means and methodsbeyond what can be offered in a text book. This paper describes the objectives and general design of the course,offers recommendations for on-line
-world-focused,customized education. They expect a large number of choices, because theyunderstand the power of simulation. They are very visually focused, becausethis is the video gaming generation. They want personalized, customizedproducts, processes and service, and their education process is not an exception.They look for technical details, and want to see it all; immediately, andvirtually...They look for good quality and low cost and ease of use, andinteractivity, because there is NO time to read traditional manuals and statictextbooks… They like to continuously explore, browse the web, watchinteractive, rather than linear videos, explore multimedia-based publications,versus static textbooks, and always experiment, rather than follow the