the end of April, students who are about to graduate are emailed a request tocomplete a Senior Survey. At the end of the survey are open-response questions, one of whichasks, “Of the engineering professors at George Fox University, which several were the mostinfluential in your professional development and why?” In light of what a graduate shared at apanel session about the value of the course, not for its content but for its approach to problemsolving (discussed above), responses to the professional development prompt were reviewed.Students typically take HT in their third year, so most students complete the Senior Survey oneyear after taking the course.The following are sample responses, edited for brevity, from 2010–2014: ● 2011 Grad
AC 2011-1117: LIBERAL LEARNING REVISITED: A HISTORICAL EX-AMINATION OF THE UNDERLYING REASONS, FRUSTRATIONS, ANDCONTINUED PROSPECTS FOR ENGINEERING AND LIBERAL ARTSINTEGRATIONAtsushi Akera, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Atsushi Akera is a historian of engineering education and an associate professor in the Department of Science and Technology Studies at Rensselaer. His publications include Calculating a Natural World: Scientists, Engineering, and Computers during the Rise of U.S. Cold War Research (MIT Press, 2006) Page 22.1015.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2011
AC 2011-56: LONG TERM ALUMNUS PERFORMANCE AND EVALUA-TION AFTER GRADUATION FROM A DISTANCE LEARNING HYBRIDWEEKEND MASTER’S DEGREE PROGRAM IN TECHNOLOGYMitchell L Springer, Purdue University, West Lafayette Dr. Mitchell L. Springer, PMP, SPHR Dr. Springer is an Associate Professor in Technology Leadership & Innovation and currently serves as the Director of the Purdue University College of Technology, Academic Center for Professional Studies in Technology and Applied Research (ProSTAR) located in West Lafayette, Indiana. He possesses over 30 years of theoretical and industry-based practical experience from four disciplines: Software Engineer- ing, Systems Engineering, Program Management and Human Resources. He
AC 2011-1012: USING THE EXCEED MODEL FOR DISTANCE EDUCA-TIONRonald W. Welch, University of Texas, Tyler Ron Welch is Professor and Head, Department of Civil Engineering at The University of Texas at Tyler. He is a registered Professional Engineer in Virginia. Until 2 Jan 2007, Ron was an Academy Professor at the United States Military Academy (USMA). Ron received a BS degree in Engineering Mechanics from the USMA in 1982 and MS and Ph.D. degrees in Civil Engineering from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 1990 and 1999, respectively. Ronald Welch@uttyler.edu.Clifton B. Farnsworth, University of Texas, Tyler Clifton B. Farnsworth is an Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering at the University of Texas
AC 2011-660: PHENOMENOGRAPHY AS A TOOL FOR INVESTIGAT-ING UNDERSTANDING OF COMPUTING CONCEPTSGregory Bucks, Ohio Northern University Gregory Bucks recently graduated with his Ph.D. from the school of Engineering Education at Purdue University. He received his BSEE from the Pennsylvania State University and his MSECE from Purdue University. While at Purdue, he has been heavily involved with the EPICS program as well as working with the First-Year Engineering program. He is currently a visiting assistant professor in the Electrical and Computer Engineering and Computer Science department at Ohio Northern University, where he is teaching introductory circuits and a variety of introductory programming courses.William C
AC 2011-2420: TRANSITION FROM UNDERGRADUATE RESEARCH PRO-GRAM PARTICIPANTS TO RESEARCHERS AND OPEN SOURCE COM-MUNITY CONTRIBUTORSMaryPat BeaufaitDuyun Chen, University of Pennsylvania Undergraduate, Junior in Bioengineering at the University of Pennsylvania with interest in Computer and Biomedical Science.Carl B. Dietrich, Jr., Virginia Tech Carl Dietrich is a research faculty member at Virginia Tech, where he completed Ph.D. and M.S. de- grees after graduating from Texas A&M University. He worked with the Defense Information Systems Agency, Arlington, Virginia and Bell Northern Research, Richardson, Texas and conducted research on adaptive and diversity antenna systems and radio wave propagation. His
AC 2011-1407: THE RESEARCH STUDIO: INTEGRATING INFORMA-TION LITERACY INTO A FIRST YEAR ENGINEERING SCIENCE COURSEMichelle Baratta, University of Toronto Michelle Baratta has held positions in academic and public libraries, as well as a corporate setting. Her education includes a Master’s degree in Information Studies (2007) and an Honours Bachelor of Science degree (2004), both from the University of Toronto. She is currently a Reference and Instruction Librarian at the University of Toronto’s Engineering & Computer Science Library.Alan Chong, University of Toronto Alan Chong is a Senior Lecturer in the Engineering Communication Program at the University of Toronto. His pedagogical research is primarily in the
AC 2011-67: RESOURCES FOR ROBOT COMPETITION SUCCESS: AS-SESSING MATH USE IN GRADE-SCHOOL-LEVEL ENGINEERING DE-SIGNEli M Silk, University of Pittsburgh Eli M. Silk is a PhD candidate in the Cognitive Studies in Education program and a Graduate Student Researcher at the Learning Research and Development Center at the University of Pittsburgh. He received his BA in Computer Science at Swarthmore College in 2001. His current research focuses on the role of mathematics in helping K-12 students better understand and design physical systems.Ross Higashi, Carnegie Mellon University Ross Higashi is a Robotics Education Specialist at Carnegie Mellon University’s National Robotics En- gineering Center. He graduated in 2007
AC 2011-426: EXTENDING INFORMATION ON TIME EFFECTIVE STU-DENT INTERACTIONS TO ENGINEERING FACULTYLisa M. Abrams, Ohio State University Lisa Abrams, PE, Ph.D., is an Assistant Professor of Practice in the Engineering Education Innovation Center and the Department of Mechanical Engineering at The Ohio State University. Prior to this position, she worked as the Director of Women in Engineering at Ohio State and as Assistant Dean in the School of Engineering and Applied Science at Miami University. She also has seven years of industry experience. She received her BS and MS in Mechanical Engineering at Ohio State and PhD in Industrial Engineering at Ohio State.Robert J. Gustafson, Ohio State University Robert J
AC 2011-1441: CRITICAL THINKING INSTRUCTION ANDAnnette Mallory Donawa, Ph.D., Independent Consultant Dr. Annette Mallory Donawa resides in Maryland with her husband and two children. She received her Bachelor’s and Doctoral degrees from higher education institutions in Maryland: Towson University and Morgan State University. She received her Master’s degree from Illinois Northern Illinois University. Dr. Donawa has more than 25 years of experience comprising of K-12 and higher education, corporate training, and human resources. Her doctoral research focused on examining the outcomes of critical thinking instruction with minority engineering students. Dr. Donawa’s goal is to continue her research in critical
AC 2011-2353: A PARTICIPATORY INVESTIGATION OF LEARNING ININTERNATIONAL SERVICE PROJECTSRussell Korte, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Russell Korte is an Assistant Professor in Human Resource Development at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He has been a co-investigator for the Collaborative Research Lab at Stanford Univer- sity, a research assistant for the Center for the Advancement of Engineering Education, and is currently a Fellow with the Illinois Foundry for Innovation in Engineering Education. His research investigates how engineering students navigate their education and how engineering graduates transition into the work- placespecifically studying how they learn the social norms of
AC 2011-1179: A STREAMLINED APPROACH TO DEVELOPING ANDASSESSING PROGRAM EDUCATIONAL OBJECTIVES AND PROGRAMOUTCOMESChrista Moll Weisbrook, University of Missouri Dr. Christa M. Weisbrook, P.E., is a Faculty Fellow in the University of Missouri System Office of Aca- demic Affairs, where she is involved in program review and assessment, course redesign, and collabora- tive programs initiatives. Prior to this appointment, she served as the special assistant to the provost and lecturer in engineering management at Missouri University of Science and Technology and the assistant dean for academic programs for the College of Engineering at the University of Missouri. Dr. Weisbrook earned BS and PhD degrees in mechanical and
AC 2011-186: APPLYING KNOWLEDGE FROM EDUCATIONAL PSY-CHOLOGY AND COGNITIVE SCIENCE TO A FIRST COURSE IN THER-MODYNAMICSStephen R. Turns, Pennsylvania State University, University Park Stephen R. Turns, professor of mechanical engineering, joined the faculty of The Pennsylvania State University in 1979. His research interests include combustion-generated air pollution, other combustion- related topics, and engineering education pedagogy. He is the author of three student-centered textbooks in combustion and thermal-sciences. He is a Fellow of the ASME and was the recipient of ASEE’s Mechanical Engineering Division Ralph Coats Roe Award in 2009.Peggy Noel Van Meter, Pennsyvlania State University Dr. Van Meter is an
in Table 1. able 1TParticipant Information Name Gender Identity Race/Ethnic Identity ajor M Claire Female White Aerospace Engineering Skylar Female White Biological Systems Engineering Kiara Female ace - African American / Black R Biomedical Engineering Ethnicity - Hispanic and Caribbean Maria Female Latina
both alternate current (AC) and directcurrent (DC) through an innovation of a rotary converter, maximizing his generator facilityspace, and outputting 4000 kWh 25. However, peaking at 4000 kWh was an issue that led to a Page 23.1149.10partnership with General Electric to build the first turbo generator (i.e., powerful steam turbine),which was smaller and produced 5000 kWh per generator than his current generators 18, 25.Having these engineering improvements allowed Chicago Edison to obtain the transportationmarket as customers by generating electricity for the industry and fund electrical chargingstations for the vehicles 18.Insull
science in the digital age. Running on Empty, 2010. URL https://api.semanticscholar.org/CorpusID:220884923. [8] E. B. Witherspoon, C. D. Schunn, R. M. Higashi, and R. Shoop. Attending to structural programming features predicts differences in learning and motivation. Journal of Computer Assisted Learning, 34(2):115–128, 2018. doi: 10.1111/jcal.12219. URL https://doi.org/10.1111/jcal.12219. [9] S. Marwan, G. Gao, S. Fisk, T. W. Price, and T. Barnes. Adaptive immediate feedback can improve novice programming engagement and intention to persist in computer science. In Proceedings of the 2020 ACM Conference on International Computing Education Research, pages 194–203. ACM, August 2020.[10] Ismaila Temitayo Sanusi and Sunday
content,capturing the essence of the input data to produce novel outputs, such as text, images, audio, andvideo [2]. This innovative capability of generative AI paves the way for applications ranging fromcreative content generation to complex problem-solving, which could apply to engineeringmanagement.The development chronology of generative AI, shown in Figure 1, began with its conceptual rootsin the 1950s with the origin of machine learning and then exploring algorithmic data creation [3],[4], [5]. The 1990s saw the development of neural networks which advanced AI development. Inthe 2010s, deep learning, large datasets, and enhanced computing power further progressedgenerative AI. A landmark moment occurred in 2014 with the introduction of
tetrahedral elements as stated inFigure 3. Each node has three degrees of freedom (DOF) and the mesh has a total of 38,619DOF. The ball bearing end supports are shown in Figure 3. All DOFs were constrained on thecylindrical surfaces of the shaft that make contact with the bearings. These constraints resemblefixed-fixed boundary conditions. The concentrated load was defined as a normal force over a 5mm radiu circle on the top surfa of the shaft in as Figu 3. This was done to eliminate st us t ace ure tressconcentra ations in the vicinity of t concentr e the rated load. A B
, and elected university senate member. He has served as principle investigator on projects in biomimetic micro air vehicles and hydrogen fuel cell propulsion systems. In these research projects (and others) he advised several PhD and MSc postgraduate students to completion. Dr. Ward is also experienced in directing undergraduate student teams competing in the SAE Aero Design and Shell Eco-marathon competitions.He has authored a text book called Aerospace Propulsion Systems (Wiley, 2010) and over 50 journal and conference papers. Prior to 2006, Dr. Ward worked as an aerospace engineer with the US Air Force for 18 years, which included a special 4.5 year assignment to the United Kingdom Ministry of Defence in London
TRANSACTIONS ON SIGNAL PROCESSING from 2008 to 2010, and IEEE JOURNAL OF OCEANIC ENGINEERING from 2010 to 2016.Dr. Qian Yang, University of Connecticut Dr. Qian Yang is an Assistant Professor with the Computer Science & Engineering Department and the Institute for Advanced Systems Engineering at the University of Connecticut. She received her PhD in Computational and Mathematical Engineering from Stanford University and her BA in Applied Mathe- matics with computer science focus from Harvard College. Prior to her academic career, she worked in industry with a startup developing AI-driven diagnostics for fall detection, and an established software company in the healthcare space. At UConn, her lab’s research interests
journals in the field of educational psychology and technology, including Contemporary Educational Psy- chology (2017 – ), Educational Technology Research and Development (2011-2013; 2016-2018), Tech- nology, Knowledge, and Learning (2013 – present), Interdisciplinary Journal of Problem-based Learning (2010 – 2015).Prof. Zahed Siddique, University of Oklahoma Zahed Siddique is a Professor of Mechanical Engineering at the School of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering of University of Oklahoma. His research interest include product family design, advanced material and engineering education. He is interested in motivation of engineering students, peer-to-peer learning, flat learning environments, technology assisted
from the Rensselear Polytechnic Institute, Troy, NY, in 2002, the MS degree in Mathematics and the Ph.D. degree in electrical and computer engineering from Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, in 2010. After completing his Ph.D. studies, he joined the Center of Applied Scientific Computing, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, as a Research Staff Member. From 2012 to 2014, he was a Research Associate at Howard University. Since 2014, he has been an Assistant Professor with the Department of Electrical Engineering, Tuskegee University, Tuskegee, AL. His research interests center on signal/image processing, sensor data analytics, intelligent infrastructure systems and power systems optimization.Dr. Demetris
a recipient of the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC) Early Career Researcher Award as well as several awards at Alfaisal University for distinction in teaching and research.Prof. Kok-Lim Alvin Yau, Sunway University KoK-Lim Alvin Yau received the B.Eng. degree (Hons.) in Electrical and Electronics Engineering from Universiti Teknologi Petronas, Malaysia, in 2005, the M.Sc. degree in Electrical Engineering from the National University of Singapore in 2007, and the Ph.D. degree in Network Engineering from the Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand, in 2010. He is currently a Professor with the Department of Com- puting and Information Systems, Sunway University, Malaysia. He teaches
AC 2012-3246: INTEGRATING WRITING WITH CONTEMPORARY MATH-EMATICS TO DEVELOP CRITICAL THINKING SKILLSMs. N. Jean Hodges, Virginia Commonwealth University, Qatar N. Jean Hodges earned a master’s of science degree in technical communication at North Carolina State University and taught writing and business courses at several colleges. Since 2004, she has been an Assistant Professor of writing at Virginia Commonwealth University’s branch campus in Doha, Qatar (VCUQatar). She has collaborated with Dr. John Schmeelk, professor of mathematics at VCUQatar, in ongoing educational research on contemporary mathematics courses, most recently investigating uses of writing in the mathematics class. In addition to publications and
AC 2012-3274: INVESTIGATION OF THE WORK ENVIRONMENT OFENGINEERING PH.D.S IN THE UNITED STATESDr. Joy Watson, University of South Carolina Joy Watson is currently a STEM education consultant working with private industry, academia and the U.S. Navy to develop a logistics/IT course for low-income, high potential middle and high school students. She completed her Ph.D. in the College of Engineering at the University of South Carolina in Aug. 2011. She obtained her B.S. and M.S. in chemical engineering from the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. Before entering the doctoral program, she worked as a process engineer in the pulp and paper industry and as patent examiner at the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office. At the
AC 2012-5037: LOCATION OF AN ENGINEERING FACULTY IN SRI LANKA:THE UNUSUAL CRITERIA, LESSONS LEARNT, AND ETHICS ISSUESProf. Samuel Ratnajeevan Herbert Hoole P.E., Michigan State University S. Ratnajeevan H. Hoole is a professor of electrical and computer engineering at Michigan State University in East Lansing, Mich. His research interests focus on computational methods, especially computing electromagnetic fields by the finite element method. His ongoing research is in shape optimization in coupled problems, determining the location and shape of objects so as to accomplish design objects in electrothermal problems in electric machinery, eco-friendly buildings, hyperthermia treatment planning in oncology, etc. This