acollaborative environment play an important role for students to learn and apply knowledge. Inthis paper, one project sponsored by an industrial company through the Sustainable FuturesInstitute (SFI) at Michigan Technological University serves as an example of how research insustainability can stimulate interdisciplinary collaboration and can improve graduate studentlearning in terms of the system approach, discovery of new knowledge across disciplines, criticalthinking, and overall educational experience. It was also found that the sustainability projectsand interdisciplinary collaboration stimulate high quality scholar articles and continuouscollaboration.IntroductionAs the world faces increasing threats to the long-term health of the environment
initial team building activity. Many of the designs were entered in a competition to raisemoney for Pennies for Peace (an organization that builds schools in Pakistan and Afghanistan).The students completed a basic statistical analysis on the funds collected and summarized theresults. In ENG1101, students were introduced to the engineering design process as theyprogressed through an eight-week, design/construct, team-based project that focused on greenengineering. Design constraints for the project imposed a 50% lower limit on post-consumermaterials used in construction, and the student teams were instructed to keep the environmentalimpact of their design very much in mind from the beginning of the design process and as theymoved through to
2006-306: NASA ADMINISTRATOR’S FELLOWSHIP PROGRAM (NAFP): PANELDISCUSSION AND FELLOW PRESENTATIONSMelissa Green, United Negro College Fund Special Programs Corp Melissa C. Green, Ph.D. Acting Director, Division of Science and Technology Programs United Negro College Fund Special Programs Corporation (UNCFSP) 2750 Prosperity Avenue, Suite 600 Fairfax, VA 22031 Dr. Green currently serves as the Director of the Division of Science and Technology Programs at the UNCFSP. In this position, she provides expert leadership in areas of effective project and grant management, strategic resource development and capacity building. A former research scientist, she has effectively
Paper ID #19543Student Interns Work to Activate First Floor SpacesProf. Charlie Setterfield, Sinclair Community College Charlie Setterfield is a Professor of Architectural Technology at Sinclair Community College in Dayton, Ohio. With more than 20 years experience in the architectural and construction industries, including responsibilities in all aspects of architectural project delivery and construction management, Setterfield brings real-world experience to the classroom. Setterfield’s courses focus on BIM, IPD, materials and means of construction, ”green building”, professional practice and building codes. As a Plans
Paper ID #27704Middle School STEM Teachers’ Understandings of Computational Thinking:ACase Study of Brazil and the USAMrs. Cristina Diordieva, Texas Tech University Cristina Diordieva is the Project Coordinator for the World MOON Project, and at the same time, she is a doctoral candidate majoring in Educational and Instructional Technology and minoring in Bilingual Education programs in the College of Education at Texas Tech University. She earned a BA majoring in French and minoring in Linguistics in the College of Arts and Sciences at Texas Tech University. She is highly interested conducting research within
aspossible while remaining understandable. They must go deep enough into the subject to allowstudents to recognize the ultimate goal of industrial engineering, to increase efficiency, withoutbecoming too technical for a young audience. A practical way to achieve this balance is throughthe modification of successful classroom assignments. This work will discuss several activitiesthat have been successfully used for K-12 student outreach at the University of Arkansas and arebased upon undergraduate class exercises. Each project will be presented in detail along with itscorresponding course assignment in order to motivate the exchange of creative ideas and developa framework for the adaptation of additional outreach activities.1. IntroductionMany
, Arts and Social Sciences and the School of Architecture + Planning beganleading efforts jointly with engineering faculty to develop short modules. There were 25 suchmodules implemented starting Fall 2018, Spring 2019 and Fall 2019, specifically in Ethics,Creative Thinking, Critical Thinking, and Self-learning. We describe how those moduleswere developed and piloted, how their efficacy was assessed, what were the lessons learnedfrom their implementation, and implications for the future. One of the key findings is that theWays of Thinking should be more integrated into the students’ project work in NEET. Weconclude by describing our plans for further integration of the Ways of Thinking into NEET,including their rigorous assessment to optimally
the University of Oklahoma to improve undergraduatemechanical engineering education integrating 3D printing technologies and advanced materials,emphasizing two core topics: (i) design and manufacturing of 3D printing systems and (ii) 3Dprinting and mechanical characterization of nanocomposites. The specific instructional objectivesare to improve students’ understanding of key materials, manufacturing, and mechanics conceptsby 3D modeling and 3D printing of multifunctional polymers and nanocomposites. The integrationof advanced manufacturing and advanced materials is carried out in two consequentialundergraduate projects: (i) development of direct-extrusion based 3D printing system; and (ii) 3Dprinting and characterization of nanoparticles
Martinson Department of Electrical Engineering Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, FL 33431 E-mail: ravivd@fau.edu 561 297 2773Abstract This paper describes an experience of working on a research project at Florida AtlanticUniversity. It is unique in the sense that the working settings are different from an ordinaryresearch project, and the intellectual property agreement is different from a standard universityone. We have been working with a private investor and entrepreneur who came with the originalidea. He has been very involved in the project with some business, humanitarian andenvironmental goals in mind
innovative experiences include modifying course syllabiacross many technical areas, focusing on the individual learning styles that generate interestand enthusiasm in students, overcoming the inertial of established grading processes that donot recognize or reward exceptional teamwork, and linking with funded projects and relatedproposals supporting work up to the graduate level.The way that Cal Poly has been meeting the above challenges has been unique and rewarding,yet still contains risk relative to accreditation. These risks are discussed relative to the nextaccreditation visit where the department hopes to win approval for its innovative approach tocurriculum development.The Educational ChallengeAbout some topics perhaps too much has been
Technology Illinois Technical College Temple No.2 Adult Education Classes Umm Al- Qura, College Of Engineering, School of Islamic Architecture, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia Florida A&M University, College of Engineering, Sciences, Technology and Agriculture Project Area Coordi- nator, Construction Engineering Technology Florida A&M University College of Architecture, Master Thesis Reviewer Academic Administration: Interim Director of Division of Engineering, CESTA 1996-98 Program Area Coordinator, Construction Engineering Technology Page 23.568.1 Related Membership Organizations: American Institute
. Page 23.767.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2013 Integrated Service-Learning: Student PerspectivesAbstractService-Learning (S-L) has been integrated throughout a College of Engineering at theUniversity of Massachusetts Lowell, a mid-size state university, for eight years. The S-Lprogram has been supported by three grants from the National Science Foundation. In this effort,the S-L projects are hands-on experiences in core courses of every engineering department,aimed at responding to community needs. The community partners can be local, national orinternational. Most of the S-L projects require the students to assess the engineering componentsof community needs, to design solutions
Engineering Courses among Institutions in New Mexico AbstractThis paper presents a two-year pilot project involving cross-institutional collaborations amongthe University of New Mexico (UNM), Northern New Mexico College (NNMC), and CentralNew Mexico Community College (CNM). The primary objective of this project is to leveragethe limited resources available in New Mexico (NM) to provide quality STEM undergraduateeducation to a large student population. The immediate goal is to develop a pedagogy that allowsfor demonstrable and repeatable success in this environment using a few targeted courses, withthe longer-term goal of expanding the results of this research across all higher
and a Ph.D. in Mechanical and Aeronautical Engineering from the University of California Davis in 2006. Dr. Schmitz spent four years as a post-doctoral researcher and project scientist at Davis before coming to Penn State. He is an expert in rotary wing aerodynamics with an emphasis on vortical flows. His research program embraces the areas of wind turbine aerodynamics and rotorcraft aeromechanics. Current activities include wind farm wake modeling, icing on wind turbines, rotor hub flows, and rotor active control. Page 23.170.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2013
will trace the evolution of partnership networks at globally engaged engineering programs atfour universities using discourse analysis.2 I reviewed all publicly available documentation thatdetailed the development of partnerships that sprung from assorted signature projects todetermine how discourse models influenced building partnership networks. I will first detail eachof the four programs, describing their philosophies on how engineers should undertakecommunity engagement. Next, I will discuss an early signature project of each program. Then Iwill highlight how the program’s philosophy about community engagement affected how itpursued partnerships. Lastly, I will discuss implications of this research for engineeringeducators seeking to
Paper ID #10897Hoshin Kanri X-Matrix Drives Engineering Leadership Program SuccessDr. Bruce DeRuntz, Southern Illinois University Carbondale Bruce DeRuntz, PhD, is a Professor in the College of Engineering at Southern Illinois University Car- bondale where he teaches classes on project management and leadership. He consults with universities and companies on their leadership development of human resources for six sigma and project manage- ment teams. He is the Director of SIUC’s Leadership Development Program and the former Editor of the ASQ’s Quality Management Forum. He is a Fellow with the American Society for Quality
Nontraditional Learning Environments: Do They Prepare Our Students for Life-Long Learning? D. DiBiasio, Department of Chemical Engineering and S. Jiusto, Interdisciplinary and Global Studies Division Worcester Polytechnic InstituteAbstractRecent research indicates that traditional academic structures may not promote learningconsistent with self-directed learning.1,2 This work investigated whether Worcester PolytechnicInstitute’s (WPI) nontraditional interdisciplinary projects program increased readiness for life-long learning (LLL) and self-directed learning (SDL) using three methods: a calibrated, validatedinstrument called the Self
design and deliver a product over a two-year period. This paper documents one of the pilot DCPD projects conducted by students and facultyat Georgia Tech and the University of Maryland College Park during the spring semester of 2003 toidentify and explore potential issues relating to the “Grand Experiment". We introduce our 2-yearcapstone DCPD project which began in the fall semester of 2003 with Mechanical Engineering studentsfrom Georgia Tech, University of Maryland and University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign collaboratingto design an amphibious utility vehicle for the John Deere Corporation. We also outline our plans forinvolving students from Industrial Design, Manufacturing, Business and other disciplines in the springsemester of 2004 to
toconduct engineering design projects in middle and high school settings. Teachers, researchers orcurriculum developers can use tested and refined projects in the WISEngineering Library, or useauthoring tools to create their own projects. Anyone can take pre-existing projects and customizethem to suit a particular context or need. WISEngineering supports engineering design processeswith technologies such as a shared virtual “Design Wall” where students critique and commenton each other’s’ designs, or digital design journals and portfolios, where students save and sharetheir designs and design process. WISEngineering builds upon the open-source Web-based Inquiry Science Environment(WISE) from the University of California at Berkeley (http
five years. The exercise is based on Goldratt’s theory ofconstraints and serves as a barometer of student preparation and team development in our year-long capstone design course. Results are presented in a graphical “prerequisites tree” that guidescourse sequencing. Prerequisite Trees were found to be quite similar from year to year. Items atthe bottom of the tree, requiring initial attention, are not technical and are not generally project-dependent. These items tend to be personal and inter-personal issues, including self-learningskills, well-founded self-confidence, appreciation for diverse skill sets, and strong oral/writtencommunication. The process of developing a classwide Prerequisites Tree during the first weekof class underscores
Molecular Biology and Genetics, and a PhD in Developmental Neurobiology from Universitat Aut`onoma de Barcelona (UAB). Dr. Mart´ı-Subirana graduated and did postdoctoral work at UAB and later at Northwestern University and the University of Iowa College of Medicine focused on the role of glial cells during neuronal migration, and on genes and transcription factors that specify neuronal fate. As a STEM-CURE (NSF award 1832543) faculty, her responsibilities include introducing research projects in the undergraduate courses she teaches with a focus on improving STEM and STEM-related workforce skills and preparedness. Dr. Mart´ı-Subirana also holds an MA in English and American Literature from Arizona State University; she
San Luis Obispo, CA. Professor Nelson came to Cal Poly with over 25 years of structural design and project management experience. She is a registered Professional Engineer and Structural Engineer in the states of California and Washington. Jill Nelson received a B.S. degree in Civil Engineering from the University of Nevada, Reno and a M.S. degree in Civil Engineering from the University of Washington.Allen C Estes, California Polytechnic State University Allen C. Estes is a Professor and Head for the Architectural Engineering Department at California Poly- technic State University in San Luis Obispo. Until January 2007, Dr. Estes was the Director of the Civil Engineering Program at the United States Military
Session 3353 The Web as a Model Technology in Freshman Design J. Anderson, J. E. Colgate, P. Hirsch, D. Kelso, B. Shwom, C. Yarnoff Northwestern UniversityAbstractThe challenge of teaching design to freshmen is to find projects and technologies that suittheir level of proficiency while allowing them to experience the design process andprepare for upper level courses. In the first quarter of a two-quarter freshman course indesign and communication, students work on web site projects for campus clients. Webtechnology is an effective tool for this purpose because it is widely available, inexpensive,timely, easily
, andsuccessful team by being able to resolve conflicts and incorporate the professional interests ofteam members into projects7-12. Motivating skills of leaders include the incorporation of teammembers’ professional interests, developing team members’ leadership skills and giving teammembers a stake in the problem7, 9-11, 13-15. A professionally stimulating workplace can bedeveloped by the leader through brainstorming and modeling creative problem solving7, 9, 15.Studies have shown that a leader who possesses these interpersonal leadership skills has moresuccessful projects than leaders without these skills3.A leader creates a vision, or change in the status quo. Depth and breadth of knowledge, alongwith problem solving skills, allow a leader to
Texas at Tyler Civil Engineering program uses an industry modelwithin its senior design two course sequence. Every project has a real industry partnerwho plays the role of the client and meets with the students during initial interviews.Thus seniors experience first-hand communication of needs analysis and functionalrequirements and must translate from community desires to technical requirements.These partners also provide additional requirements after each design package submittalat the 10, 35, and 100 percent completion points. The first two projects, new ArtDepartment offices and studios and a University Center expansion, had actual completedplans that the students could see at the completion of their project. The client in oneproject was
behavior of these systems.Currently, in spite of present dynamics and complexities in water distribution systems, fluidmechanics and hydraulic courses are taught to engineering students focusing only on the physicalproperties and dynamics of fluids. There is a significant need for engineering students tounderstand physical, chemical and biological dynamics, and their interrelations, in waterdistribution systems to meet the demand for both a trained work force and the maintenance of anaged water infrastructure [1-7]. This project aims to address the current lack of integrated waterdistribution system education by providing laboratory modules and kits coupled with acomputational modeling tool for hydraulics and water quality simulation in water
. Sven Schmitz joined the faculty of Aerospace Engineering at Penn State University in 2010. He received a diploma degree in Aerospace Engineering from RWTH Aachen in Germany in 2002 and a Ph.D. in Mechanical and Aeronautical Engineering from the University of California Davis in 2006. Sven spent four years as a post-doctoral researcher and project scientist at Davis before coming to Penn State. He is an expert in rotary wing aerodynamics with an emphasis on vortical flows. His research program embraces the areas of wind turbine aerodynamics and rotorcraft aeromechanics. Current activities include wind farm wake modeling, icing on wind turbines, rotor hub flows, and rotor active control.Irene B Mena, Pennsylvania State
&RQIHUHQFH RI WKH $PHULFDQ 6RFLHW\ RI (QJLQHHULQJ (GXFDWLRQ The students and faculty in NA field must be trained in carefully designed programs that considerconstantly shifting demands brought by cloud computing and other emerging technologies. Theseadvanced skill sets demanded by industry are required before the student’s graduation. To gaineffectiveness, students need to work at projects consistent and coherent with present technology.Any breakdown in this system will trigger dissatisfaction with studies, additional failure of theeducational system, and the loss of personnel efficacy. Eventually, it will
traditional classroom and exposing themearly on to research training or hands on project have been proven to be an effective means toprepare them to be engaged learners and sophisticated engineers. Faced with increasingly complexengineering problems that are inextricably intertwined across engineering disciplines, anengineer’s traditional comfort zone of ‘individual discipline’ no longer exists. In present day’scontext, an engineer needs to possess cross-disciplinary skills in order to effectively tacklecomplex engineering problems that are multidisciplinary in nature. For institutes of higherlearning, this makes the task of creating meaningful and educationally relevant cross-disciplinarystudent research projects all the more challenging yet highly
Division of Faculty Success University of Texas at Arlington AbstractThis work-in-process paper presents an overview and early activities of a project recently funded bythe National Science Foundation (NSF) Improving Undergraduate STEM Education: Hispanic-Serving Institutions (HSI) program. This Track 2 project aims to improving the retention andgraduation of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering (MAE) students by developing theirengineering identity in their freshman/sophomore years. Past studies on engineering identityprimarily focus on a single course with design components. This project will study theimplementation of collaborative learning and design thinking (DT) in