AC 2010-1157: EFFECT OF PEDAGOGY ON CONCEPTUAL CHANGE INREPAIRING MISCONCEPTIONS OF DIFFERING ORIGINS IN ANINTRODUCTORY MATERIALS COURSEStephen Krause, Arizona State University Stephen Krause is a Professor in the School of Materials in the Fulton School of Engineering arrived at Arizona State University in 1981 after completing his research on polymer deformation at the University of Michigan. Courses he has developed and taught include; Bridging Engineering and Education, Materials Characterization, Polymers and Composites, and Materials Capstone Design,. Innovative learning tools and assessments he has developed include: Materials Mentor Fold Out Notes; Materials Lecture Work Notes
local Community College to improve graduation and transfer rates. Lastly, she is currently the Principal Investigator of the Research-Oriented Learning Experiences Engineering program and the Latinidad STEM Mentoring Program, both funded by the National Science Foundation.Luis Rodolfo Garcia Carrillo, New Mexico State University Luis Rodolfo GARCIA CARRILLO received the PhD. degree in Control Systems from the University of Technology of Compi`egne, France. He was a Postdoctoral Researcher at the Center of Control, Dynamical systems and Computation at UC Santa Barbara, USA. He currently holds an Assistant Professor position with the Klipsch School of Electrical and Computer Engineering at New Mexico State University
AC 2011-1225: ROBOTIC LASER TAG: A CAPSTONE DESIGN EXPERI-ENCEJames K. Archibald, Brigham Young University James K. Archibald received the B.S. degree (summa cum laude) in mathematics from Brigham Young University, Provo, UT, in 1981, and the M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in computer science from the University of Washington, Seattle, in 1983 and 1987, respectively. Since 1987, he has been with the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Brigham Young University. His current research interests include robotics and multiagent systems. Dr. Archibald is a member of the IEEE, ACM, and Phi Kappa Phi.Doran K Wilde, Brigham Young University Dr. Wilde started his career as an electrical engineer in Oregon where he
, which supports students pursuing undergraduate degrees in science, technology, engineering, and math- ematics (STEM). Before coming to SU, Tamara was at the University of Maryland, College Park where she was Assistant Director of the Center for Minorities in Science and Engineering. As Assistant Direc- tor of CMSE, Tamara was responsible for establishing retention programs for underrepresented minority STEM students including directing the NSF LSAMP and Bridge to the Doctorate Graduate Fellowship Programs. In 2012, Tamara and the rest of the members of CMSE were honored by the National Society of Black Engineers and ExxonMobil with the Impact Award for their successful efforts in the retention and graduation of
Paper ID #38724Analysis of Learning Assistants’ Beliefs of Status and Their Role asStatus InterventionistsHarpreet Auby, Tufts University Harpreet is a graduate student in Chemical Engineering and STEM Education. He works with Dr. Milo Koretsky and helps study the role of learning assistants in the classroom as well as machine learning applications within educational research and evaluation. He is also involved in projects studying the uptake of the Concept Warehouse. His research interests include chemical engineering education, learning sciences, and social justice.Dr. Milo Koretsky, Tufts University Milo Koretsky is
2006-2205: WHAT’S SO IMPORTANT ABOUT PEER REVIEW OF TEACHINGPORTFOLIO COMPONENTS? AN EXPLORATORY ANALYSIS OFPEER-REVIEW EPISODES WITHIN ETPPJennifer Turns, University of Washington Jennifer Turns is an assistant professor in the Department of Technical Communication at the University of Washington. She holds a Ph.D. in Industrial Engineering from the Georgia Institute of Technology. Her interests include engineering education, learner-centered design, user-centered design, and audience analysis. Dr. Turns is currently working on multiple NSF grants dealing with engineering education including an NSF Career award exploring the impact of portfolio construction on engineering students
Paper ID #36516Perceived scrum Values, Conflict Resolution Ability, andCultural Self-Awareness in the Context of System Analysisand Design TeamworkAparajita Jaiswal (Graduate Research Assistant)Kaushali PatelDevang Atul PatelAlejandra J. Magana (W.C. Furnas Professor in Enterprise Excellence) Alejandra J. Magana is the W.C. Furnas Professor in Enterprise Excellence in Computer and Information Technology with a courtesy appointment in Engineering Education. She holds a B.E. in Information Systems and an M.S. in Technology, both from Tec de Monterrey; and an M.S. in Educational Technology and a Ph.D. in Engineering Education
Asian and European countries by both governmental and non-governmental organizations. Acharya has a M.Eng. in Computer Technology and a D.Eng. in Computer Science and Information Management with a concentration in knowledge discovery, both from the Asian Institute of Technology in Thailand. His teaching involvement and research interest are in the area of Software Engineering education, Software Verification & Validation, Data Mining, Neural Networks, and Enterprise Resource Planning. He also has interest in Learning Objectives based Education Material Design and Development. Acharya is a co- author of ”Discrete Mathematics Applications for Information Systems Professionals- 2nd Ed., Prentice Hall”. He is a
experience in software engineering, mobile communications, cloud computing, and Internet applications. He currently serves as director of Software Engineering, Cloud and Mobile Computing Lab (SotCom Lab), and guides student research and entrepreneurship projects. At the same time, Dr. Sun is also the founder of Coding Mind, an ©American Society for Engineering Education, 2024 Paper ID #41784 technology educational startup that promotes Computer Science education for K-12 students. Prior to founding Coding Minds, Dr. Sun also co-founded Ziiio, an indoor navigation startup based on mobile technology. Dr
Cities.Dr. Ann C. Gates, The University of Texas at El Paso Dr. Ann Quiroz Gates is the Senior Advisor to the Provost for STEM Initiatives and an AT&T Distinguished Professor in the Computer Science Department at The University of Texas at El Paso. Gates is the Executive Director of the NSF-funded Computing Alliance of Hispanic-Serving Institutions.Lani Nicole Godenzi, The University of Texas at El Paso Lani Godenzi is a Masters student at The University of Texas at El Paso pursuing a MS in Data and Information Science. She received her BS Chemical and Biological Engineering from Tufts University E’16. Her scholarly interests center bridging communication challenges between multidisciplinary teams to enable execution
entry exist against potential competitors; h) the new venture's revenue and profit model; i) the team members and the value they add to the new venture; and j) intellectual property or other assets.3 The Neat Ideas Fair aims to promote creativity and entrepreneurship within the SJSU community and enablestudents, alumni, staff and faculty from different disciplines to interact and form entrepreneurial teams that couldsubsequently work on developing a business plan. It is a venue for participants to showcase and market their ideas toindustry professionals. Students from the Business School, Engineering, Industrial Design and Hotel Managementwill participate in the Fair. The Fair is going to be held at SJSU on November 29th and 30th
Paper ID #42341Scenario-based Emerging Technologies Workshop for Military LeadersDr. Aikaterini Bagiati, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Aikaterini (Katerina) Bagiati, Ph.D.: Having aquired a Diploma in Electrical Engineering and a Masters Degree in Advanced Computer and Communication Systems at the Aristotle University in Greece, and after having worked as a software engineer, and as a CS educator in both formal and informal settings for 10 years, in January 2008 I decided to leave Greece and get enrolled at the Graduate Program in the pioneer School of Engineering Education at Purdue University. In August 2011
AC 2007-1236: DO THEY LIKE WHAT THEY LEARN, DO THEY LEARN WHATTHEY LIKE – AND WHAT DO WE DO ABOUT IT?Beverly Jaeger, Northeastern University Beverly Jaeger, Sue Freeman, and Rich Whalen are members of Northeastern University’s Gateway Team, a selected group of faculty expressly devoted to the first-year Engineering Program at Northeastern University. The focus of this team is on providing a consistent, comprehensive, and constructive educational experience in engineering that endorses the student-centered and professionally-oriented mission of Northeastern University.Susan Freeman, Northeastern UniversityRichard Whalen, Northeastern University
to Innovation program, a network of 50 post-secondary institutions working to embed innovation and entrepreneurship into undergraduate engineering.Surbhi Godsay Lipkin-Moore (Owner, Lead Evaluator)Jeffery M Plumblee (Sr. Program Officer)Pedro E. Arce (Professor)Andrea Arce-trigattiNathalie Lavoine (Assistant professor)Lucian Lucia (Professor)Emre Selvi (Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering) Dr. Emre Selvi has been a faculty member of Jacksonville University Engineering Department since 2015. He received his B.S. (1999) and M.S. (2003) from Middle East Technical University and Ph.D. (2007) from Texas Tech University. Dr. Selvi performed research in robotics, design, and high pressure materials science fields and
research interests include: 1) engineering and entrepreneurship education; 2) the pedagogy of ePortfolios and reflective practice in higher education; and 3) reimagining the traditional academic transcript.Beth Rieken, Stanford University Beth Rieken is a sixth year graduate student at Stanford University. She is currently working on her PhD in Mechanical Engineering with a focus on the relevance of mindfulness to engineers. Beth completed a BS in Aerospace Engineering from the University of Virginia in 2010 and a MS in Mechanical Engineering from Stanford in 2012.Autumn Turpin, Stanford University Autumn Turpin is a junior undergraduate studying Engineering, Product Design at Stanford University. She was born and
Paper ID #41920Board 432: Work in Progress: Immersive, Hands-On, and Interactive QuantumInformation Science and Technology: Empowering Undergraduate Studentsin Quantum ComputingMr. Syed Hassan Tanvir, University of Florida Syed Hassan Tanvir is a doctoral candidate in Engineering Education at the University of Florida. He holds a bachelor’s degree in Computer Science and a Master’s in Software Engineering. His research is focused on investigating the factors that influence engineering undergraduate enrollment, retention, graduation, and dropout. For his Ph.D., he plans to incorporate stealth assessment techniques to foster
AC 2008-2181: MERGING ADA & LEED TO ENHANCE OLDER ADULT LIVING:A CAPSTONE PROJECTDarrell Nickolson, Indiana University-Purdue University-Indianapolis Page 13.889.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2008 Merging ADA & LEED to Enhance Older Adult Living: A Capstone ProjectAbstractAn Interior Design Technology 400 level capstone project set out to develop homes designed toraise the quality of life for seniors. Enhancing the living environment for seniors is shortlybecoming a growing issue for the American public and political system. The US Census Bureau2000 statistics indicate that by the year 2010 the number of
AC 2009-1487: ON-LINE EXAMINATIONS FOR OBJECT-ORIENTEDPROGRAMMINGCordelia Brown, Purdue UniversityYung-Hsiang Lu, Purdue UniversityMelissa Yale, Purdue UniversityDeborah Bennett, Purdue University Page 14.925.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2009 On-Line Examinations for Object-Oriented ProgrammingAbstractOn-line content (such as handouts) have been widely adopted in today's classrooms. On-lineexaminations have yet to be accepted due to several reasons. For example, computers andnetworks may be unavailable during an examination; email and instant messaging maycompromise academic honesty. This paper reports our experience in using on-line examinationsfor a
, and NSF funds participating students. Mutualvisits of key personnel were made during the project. The initial face-to-face meetings wereessential to layout the expectations while smoothening cultural differences. In addition toelectronic emails and phone conversation, web-based meetings have been very effective for liveviewing while discussing of engineering documents (http://agilent.webex.com). Althoughlanguage barrier was a challenge for international collaboration, an open mind for cross-culturalunderstanding, tactfulness, and patience are necessary to overcome the issues. Minutes ofmeeting are essential to keep everyone in focus.The following result is part of the collaborative work of TAMU, CIDETEQ, and Agilent.Literature ReviewMicroECM
overhead projector, computer, anddisplay panel, an increasing number of faculty members will prepare their lectures with these resources in mind. Support services should be available outside of the classroom to assist in preparing lectures. Asminimum each professor should have a computer with the necessary software and facilities for reproducingcourse materials. If it is not possible to provide released time to prepare new course materials, then thesematerials must be developed as the course is being taught. In this case the students should be supplied withcopies of course notes free of charge as they become available. The next time the course is taught these notescould be sold in the same manner textbooks are sold
Web-Based Implementation of Energy Assessment Service Bruce Segee, Ph.D., PE 5708 Barrows Hall Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering University of Maine Orono, ME 04469-5708 segee@eece.maine.edu Tel. No.: (207)581-2212 Janice Duy Emilie Lachance Scott Dunning Evan Chowdhury 5708 Barrows Hall Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering University of
).” Page 5.196.1The goals set forth for the academy may sound daunting. However, if these goals can be met,not only will the profession benefit but also the academic experience for the architecture studentwill improve. Students of architecture have always raised concerns of "how do the pieces fittogether?” Students in Architectural Engineering Technology programs rarely have theeducational opportunity to see a studio project through each of these phases. The goal of DesignHabitat is to help students see the "whole picture" and thereby improve their ability to learn.Affordable Housing in the United StatesThe United States has struggled with issues of housing for all its citizens for many years. In theNortheast we are reminded of these struggles
Session 2432 Creating a “Distributed Learning Environment” using WebCT Yacob Astatke Electrical Engineering Department Morgan State University Email: astatke@eng.morgan.edu ABSTRACTThe “distributed learning environment” as contrasted to the teacher centered classroom, isgrowing at all levels of education. Today, the existing lecture model is changing.Emphasis is on skills needed in today’s workplace, such as collaboration, sharing andgroup activity. The WWW Course
create "mind" images for viewers facilitate understanding of equations and data results be adaptable to a wide audience (fifth grade through college sophomore) To perform the above will require: a programming structure to be on-line linkable, in a short period ( 30 minutes), to match the current audience. capturing of real world visuals (still andmotion) in creative ways. a means for the viewer to play "what if"situations with the experimental apparatus. accompanying music and narrative compatible with the topic being presented. ability to overlay text, photos, video, animation on monitor
changed during their doctoral training. From an initial 45% ofmen and 39 % of women entering a PhD program, who claimed they wanted professor positions atresearch-intensive institutions, percentages dropped to 36% and 27% respectively by the end of theprogram. Reasons behind such changes included not wanting “lifestyles like those of their advisers” (p.2) and women recognizing the lack of role models that could manage work and family successfully [4].Popular media plays a role in changing views or perpetuating existing stereotypes and also creates thespace for difficult dialogues [5], [6]. This has been documented extensively when considering rolemodeling in particular fields, like those in Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM
What are They Thinking? – Assessment and the Questions Students Ask John A. Mirth, Ph.D. Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering University of Wisconsin – Platteville Platteville, WI 53818 608.342.1642 mirth@uwplatt.eduAbstract This paper presents an assessment method whereby an instructor can gain insight into howa student is thinking about a project. The method relies upon the submission of a series ofindividual progress reports during the course of a semester. Each progress report is submittedas the set of questions that the student has
Paper ID #49606PolarBear DSP Digital Effects PedalWesley Cole Hanson, Ohio Northern UniversityCody Beagle, Ohio Northern UniversityAaron Altstaetter, Ohio Northern UniversityAmari Shamar Patterson, Ohio Northern University ©American Society for Engineering Education, 2025 Polarized Sound (DSP Digital Effects Pedal)Introduction:This paper will detail a senior project in which the team design a digital effects pedal formusicians. This effects pedal will give a user the ability to experience a variety of guitareffects that they otherwise would have to purchase individually, all in the
Paper ID #37981Building a model of polymorphism comprehensionJoshua Gross Joshua Gross is an assistant professor of computer science at CSUMB. He spent nearly a decade as a software engineer, earning an MS in software engineering from the University of St. Thomas in St. Paul, Minnesota. He holds a PhD in information sciences and technology from Penn State, where his research focused on the intersection of artificial intelligence and human-computer interaction. His current research is focused on the psychology of programming, with the goal of better understanding factors that support student success in
has a MEd in Higher Education Leadership from Iowa State University, a BA Degree from Buena Vista University and an AA and AAS Degree in Electronics from IHCC. Greg is past President of the Iowa ACTE and IITEA and serves on the ACTE Region III Policy Committee and is a member of the ACTE IAED (Inclusion, Access, Equity, and Diversity) Advisory Group. He is a journeyman electrician with an FCC license and industry experience in semiconductor manufacturing. © American Society for Engineering Education, 2022 Powered by www.slayte.com National Science Foundation Advanced Technological Education Program
Paper ID #34521The SEECRS Scholar Academy at Whatcom Community College: Three Co-hortsof S-STEM Scholarships LaterEric Davishahl, Whatcom Community College Eric Davishahl holds an MS degree in mechanical engineering and serves as associate professor and engineering program coordinator at Whatcom Community College. His teaching and research interests include developing, implementing and assessing active learning instructional strategies and auto-graded online homework. Eric has been a member of ASEE since 2001. He currently serves as awards chair for the Pacific Northwest Section and was the recipient of the 2008 Section