, social responsibility, ethics, and diversity. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2018 Perceived Importance of Leadership in their Future Careers Relative to Other Foundational, Technical and Professional Skills among Senior Civil Engineering StudentsAbstractMany demands are placed on undergraduate students to possess a broad range of foundational,technical, and professional knowledge and skills when they graduate. Expectancy value theory(EVT) indicates that students will be more motivated to learn topics that they believe will beimportant in their future, due to utility value. Self-efficacy beliefs also contribute to learning.Given this framework, the research
five key changes for practice, including:(1) the balance of power, (2) the function of content, (3) the role of the teacher, (4) theresponsibility for learning, and (5) the purpose and process of evaluation. As a source of bestSangster, J. Page 1practices in pedagogy, this book was the first of its kind encountered by the author, andsubsequently has had the greatest impact on practice. The discussion on the balance of power introduces the idea that students should haveagency in what they are learning and how they are learning it. Not that the instructor shouldabdicate authority entirely, but that it is possible to meet the learning needs of more
Innovation Grant, 2003 Distinguished Teacher Award, and 2012 Inaugural Distin- guished Award for Excellence in the category Inspiration through Leadership. Moreover, he is a recipient of 2014-2015 University Distinguished Teaching Award at NYU. His scholarly activities have included 3 edited books, 9 chapters in edited books, 1 book review, 61 journal articles, and 140 conference pa- pers. He has mentored 1 B.S., 26 M.S., and 5 Ph.D. thesis students; 47 undergraduate research students and 11 undergraduate senior design project teams; over 480 K-12 teachers and 115 high school student researchers; and 18 undergraduate GK-12 Fellows and 59 graduate GK-12 Fellows. Moreover, he di- rects K-12 education, training, mentoring
Paper ID #28858Revolutionizing Mechanical Engineering Undergraduate CurriculumShelby Ann McNeilly, Boise State University Shelby McNeilly is a student at Boise State University, graduating in May 2020 with a Bachelor’s Degree in Mechanical Engineering and a Minor in Applied Mathematics. In 2019, she was selected as the Top Junior Mechanical Engineering Student at BSU by the Southwest Chapter of the Idaho Society of Pro- fessional Engineers. Shelby currently works as an Undergraduate Research Assistant under department chair and another professor to co-author two papers for ASEE publication. She is also actively
. [Online]. Available: https://peer.asee.org/impact-of-a- biomedical-engineering-undergraduate-research-program-on-student-and-faculty- perceptions-of-creativity[8] C. S. E. Woodcock, P. Shekhar, and A. Huang-Saad, “Examining Project Based Entrepreneurship and Engineering Design Course Professional Skills Outcomes,” International Journal of Engineering Education, vol. 35, no. 2, pp. 631–644, 2019.[9] E. Seymour, A.-B. Hunter, S. L. Laursen, and T. DeAntoni, “Establishing the benefits of research experiences for undergraduates in the sciences: First findings from a three-year study,” Science Education, vol. 88, no. 4, pp. 493–534, 2004, doi: 10.1002/sce.10131.[10] K. Sutterer, R. Houghtalen, and J. Hanson, “Engineering Reu
Paper ID #41884A Qualitative Analysis of Library Chat Reference Transcripts: ExaminingEngineering Student Queries within the Information Seeking ProcessMr. Eric Prosser, Arizona State University Eric Prosser is the head of the STEM Division and the Engineering & Entrepreneurship Librarian for the Arizona State University Library. Eric is a liaison to the Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering and provides research services for faculty, graduate students, and undergraduate students along with instruction in critical analysis and information literacy, including the legal and ethical use of information. Prior to finding
represent key lessons learned from gender equity, engineering education,and project management research and “best practices” knowledge bases; and b) periodic live eventseither recorded or in real-time have been offered among and between experts, collaboratingorganizations and their members on specific and ad hoc issues. EEES targets teachers and faculty as away to reach students, therefore our outreach primarily focuses on providing them with the tools theyneed to be more effective and engaging instructors.Creating a successful online community is one of the most compelling yet elusive goals for web-basedapplications. Most online communities grow slowly in the beginning due in part to the need to createmotivation for contributing to the community
design and teach a STEM-based unit of work. Robyne’s pedagogical focus is on providing the best learn- ing environment for individual student growth and her current research interest is how learning to teach provides engineering students with the cognitive, conative and metacognitive skills needed for effective problem-solving in the engineering workplace. Page 21.46.1 c American Society for Engineering Education, 2013 Preparing the Global Engineer: How learning to teach in a Service-LearningProject Develops Effective Oral Communication Skills in Engineering Students.AbstractGlobalisation
Paper ID #27426Connecting to the Physical Space through Funds of Knowledge: LessonsLearned from a STEM Summer Enrichment Program (Fundamental, Diver-sity)Dr. Joel Alejandro Mejia, University of San Diego Dr. Joel Alejandro (Alex) Mejia is an assistant professor of Integrated Engineering at the University of San Diego. His current research investigates how the integration of the historically and culturally accumulated wealth of knowledge, skills, and practices - also known as funds of knowledge - and engineering design can serve as a pathway to and through engineering. Dr. Mejia is particularly interested in how Latinx
University Mona Eskandari is a graduate student in mechanical engineering at Stanford University with a focus in biomechanics.Mr. Jackie Liao, Stanford University Jackie Liao is a Master’s student in Mechanical Engineering at Stanford University in the Dynamic Design Lab (DDL) under Professor Chris Gerdes. Jackie is currently designing the sensing systems for vintage race cars with a focus on driver input measurements such as steering wheel angle, throttle, brake and clutch measurements. Jackie has worked with Ford Motor Company and Microsoft Research Asia.Mr. Zubair Ahmed Zubair Ahmed and his family immigrated to the U.S. in 2005, and he is a Master’s Degree candidate in Mechanical Engineering at Stanford. He is a co
[36]. Improvisation peels away layers of self, focuses attention on the body and present moment, and invites people into deep collaboration with each other and the unknown [37].Table 2- Systems thinking is a set of seven skills and corresponding STS concepts used tounderstand the practice and application of science and technology from alternative perspectives.This is not an exhaustive list of potential systems thinking skills. It represents how we approachsystems thinking. Looking for Ethics in Artifacts - Requires an ability to see how the same thing (a product, material, artifact etc.) can have different impacts on different people or be interpreted differently by different people. This
(ISIP), whichreflects key concepts governing the future of electrical and computer engineering as wellas the active research areas of the majority of the ECE faculty.While the redesign encompasses the entire four-year curriculum, a particular emphasis ofthe redesign will be on the students' early years in the core curriculum when retentionissues are the most critical. Specifically, the foundation of the new curriculum will be afreshman-year laboratory-based design experience called “Fundamentals of ECE,” anddenoted ECE 27. This innovative course introduces concepts fundamental to the entireECE curriculum and their practical applications through a tight coupling of courseworkand a real-world design project and laboratory experience. Our project
Paper ID #32931Longitudinal Effects of Team-Based Training on Students’ Peer RatingQualityMr. Siqing Wei, Purdue University at West Lafayette Siqing Wei received BSEE and MSEE from Purdue University. He is currently pursuing a Ph.D. degree in Engineering Education program at Purdue University. After years of experience of serving the peer teacher and a graduate teaching assistant in first-year-engineering courses, he is now a research assistant at CATME research group studying how cultural diversity impacts teamwork and how to help students improve intercultural competency and teamwork competency by interventions
course.Integration of Sustainable Design, System Thinking and CreativityThe integration of sustainable design, systems thinking, and creativity in the MET 300 Principlesof Engineering Design and MET 322 Design for Manufacturing and Assembly courses is atestament to a forward-thinking curriculum designed to prepare engineering students for thecomplexities of modern product development. The detailed curriculum information underscores aholistic approach to engineering education, emphasizing not just the technical aspects of designand manufacturing but also the broader impacts of engineering solutions.[14]MET 300 Principles of Engineering DesignSustainable Design:The course incorporates sustainable design practices, including life cycle assessment (LCA
research faculty with experience in clinical translation.3. Methods3.1 Course overview and study design At the University of Pittsburgh, a course entitled “Controlled Drug Delivery” is offered as a cross-discipline (bioengineering and chemical engineering), upper-division elective for undergraduate students, and an engineering elective for bioengineering graduate students. Upon completing the course, the student should be able to (1) state the constraints on material properties posed by the physiological environment; (2) use the fundamentals of polymers, diffusion, degradation, modeling and pharmacokinetics to solve problems specific to controlled drug delivery; and (3) demonstrate ability to search and summarize
of a Communication Lab (Comm Lab), a co-curricularintervention designed to provide peer-to-peer writing and communication support to engineeringand science students. At its core, the Comm Lab is a STEM-specific writing center wherestudents can meet face-to-face with a peer knowledgeable in their discipline to get feedback onSTEM writing and communication genres. On the organizational level, however, the Comm Labis distinguished by its emphasis on adaptation of structure and services to the desired institutionalcontext. Thus, our research asks which features of the Comm Lab can or should be adapted innew institutional contexts and which features must be retained across contexts to make iteffective. By answering this question for our specific
sustainabilitystrategies and participating in a network of like-minded sustainability peers. A sustainable futuredemands a leader not just immersed in the sustainability issues but also be able to articulate a Page 26.826.3new paradigm that addresses sustainability not in silos but as systems based and have interrelatedfocus.Putting it all together using Learning LabsOne learning structure to help integrate sustainability, leadership and engineering in onecohesive student experience is the use of Learning Labs. Learning Labs are a two part hands oncollaborative learning experience designed for students to apply theories, models and processesinto practice and
methods and in renewable energytechnologies. But by their very nature as electives, technical elective courses should not beteaching material that is expected to be learned by every student graduating from a particularengineering discipline. Requiring students to take several such courses may impact their abilityto take courses from other disciplines which may be beneficial to them in achieving theirpersonal career goals. Therefore, it is important for engineering programs to consider the resultsthey are intending to achieve by requiring students to take technical electives, how these coursesmay be impacting the overall education of the students, and what is an appropriate number oftechnical elective courses to require. It can be noted that ABET
experience teaching mathe- matics at the high school, engineering, and business bachelor levels, He has developed a comprehensive understanding of the needs of diverse student populations. He holds an iSTEAM certificate from the University of Texas at San Antonio and is currently pursuing his Engineering Education Graduate Certifi- cate at the same institution. His research interests lie in creating equal opportunities for all students and developing research and teaching proposals in STEM-integrated education that promote quality, equity, inclusivity, and student-centered instruction. He also brings 18 years of experience in project engineering to his work, specializing in the design of stainless-steel equipment
Adjunct Pro- fessor in the Bioengineering Department in Utah State University. Her multiple roles as an engineer, engineering educator, engineering educational researcher, and professional development mentor for un- derrepresented populations has aided her in the design and integration of educational and physiological technologies to research ’best practices’ for student professional development and training. In addition, she is developing methodologies around affective management of curriculum, instruction, and research mentoring in engineering students. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2017 Who are we? Beyond Monolithic Perspectives of Latinxs in EngineeringLatinxs, a
developing a process and assessing graduate attributes at the department to target areas for improvement in the curriculum. This resulted in several publications in this educational research areas. Dr. Al-Hammoud won the ”Ameet and Meena Chakma award for exceptional teaching by a student” in 2014 and the ”Engineering Society Teaching Award” in 2016 from University of Waterloo. Her students regard her as an innovative teacher who continuously introduces new ideas to the classroom that increases their engagement. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2017 Helping Students to Feel MechanicsAbstractThis paper assesses the use of physical models as teaching tools in
when they know why/what they are learning, when they see applications on how the knowledge is used, when given time to think and share thoughts with others, and when they engage in active learning. Thus, to design the learning experience we have asked course designers to answer the following questions: • How will students learn? • How do we best prepare them for industry practice? • What resources are needed? • When and where will the learning take place? • Who is responsible? Page 26.1354.5 • What experiences will help students learn the knowledge and develop the skills, attitudes and values
,” International Journal of Educational Research, vol.75, pp.76-87, 2016.3. H.F. Yang, (2017), “Practice of Team Guiding Graduation Design for Mechanical Undergraduates,” China Educational Technology & Equipment, no.2, pp.89-90, 2017.4. V. Wilczynski, “Academic Maker Spaces and Engineering Design,” 122nd ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition: Making Value for Society, 2015.5. L.Saorin, “Makerspace teaching-learning environment to enhance creative competence in engineering students,” Thinking Skills and Creativity, vol.23, pp.188-198, 2017.6. L. Alexandra, Y. Brian, G.R. Chavela and T. Rossen, “University makerspaces: Characteristics and impact on student success in engineering and engineering technology education,” 124th
skillsets. As one approach for supporting instructors in theirintegration of socially engaged engineering content in their courses, C-SED partners withinstructors to develop and implement a variety of educational sessions, including sociallyengaged design skills and tools trainings and case study sessions that utilize real-world examplesto highlight the impacts of and on engineering work and make visible inequities embedded inengineering processes and structures. These sessions are tailored to the content and learninggoals for a course and are offered in a variety of virtual and in person formats. Most commonly,the engineering and design skill trainings and case study sessions are held in person and led bytrained graduate student facilitators
ways, if any, do student understandings change between their first and second years?Broader Project BackgroundThis analysis used an existing data set generated as part of a larger project that encompasses sixuniversities across three countries. Member institutions are equally distributed, two each fromthe United States, United Kingdom, and South Africa. The research team for this project includesfaculty and graduate students from all three countries, with direct representation from five of thesix included institutions. The objective of the project is to capture various aspects of the studentexperience over the course of a student’s undergraduate career and is thus a longitudinalundertaking beginning in the first year and ending with the
for the proposed course. The next few paragraphs offer the justification used to gain approval for thecourse and show how this is embedded within a larger (and growing) UAS/aerospace program within UAF.Impact. This course was designed to have minimal negative impact on university resources, requiring noadditional facilities and faculty. The course content builds upon existing graduate course material alreadytaught by UAF faculty (AERO 654, UAS Design, and AERO 656, Aerospace Systems Engineering). In addition, thiscourse leverages other undergraduate courses being developed as part of the proposed UAS OperationsCertificate and Occupational Endorsement Program (OEP). The course was also intended to leverage expertiseand synergy across
technologyrefreshes. Koopman also explained that developing problems that represent the complexity ofCPS is difficult. Projects and problems must be realistic and motivating but also incorporatedomain knowledge that is accessible to students. There is a risk that problems can become overlycomplicated—projects must be designed with the right amount of ‘messy’.”The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) Foundations for Innovation inCyber-Physical Systems report [4] as well as the European ARTEMIS Research agenda [5] pointsout similar needs across many CPS domains. The NIST report identifies 21 barriers andchallenges for CPS reliability, safety, and security. In the top rated category of Metrics and Toolsfor CPS Verification and Validation (V&
schools. He received Polytechnic’s 2002 and 2008 Jacobs Excellence in Education Award and 2003 Distinguished Teacher Award. In 2004, he was selected for a three-year term as a Senior Faculty Fellow of NYU-Poly’s Othmer Institute for Interdisciplinary Studies. His scholarly activities have included 3 edited books, 4 chapters in edited books, 1 book review, 43 journal articles, and 92 conference papers. Moreover, he has mentored 67 high school students, over 170 K-12 teachers, 21 undergraduate summer interns, and 11 undergraduate capstone-design teams, and graduated eight M.S. and four Ph.D. students.Magued G. Iskander, Polytechnic Institute of New York University MAGUED ISKANDER is Associate Professor and Graduate Adviser
help menu available on the WReSTT to assistinstructors during the course set-up and subsequent management. Student View: Students can create a user profile by uploading a profile picture (and gain somevirtual points), browse the testing tutorials, complete assigned learning objects by passing with atleast 80% on assigned quizzes (and gain virtual points), watch tutorial videos on the different testingtools (e.g., JUnit, JDepend, EMMA, CPPU, Cobertura), interact with other students in the class viatesting based discussions (and gain virtual points for relevant discussions), and monitor the activitystream for whole class.3 Empirical Study Design Empirical studies were aimed at investigating the impact the WReSTT had on students'acquisition
Paper ID #17786Developing Real-life Problem-based Learning (PBL) Activities through Part-nership with IndustryDr. John M. Mativo, University of Georgia Dr. John Mativo is Associate Professor at the University of Georgia. His research interest lies in two fields. The first is research focusing on best and effective ways to teaching and learning in STEM K- 16. He is currently researching on best practices in learning Dynamics, a sophomore engineering core course. The second research focus of Dr. Mativo is energy harvesting in particular the design and use of flexible thermoelectric generators. His investigation is both for