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Displaying results 12931 - 12960 of 36208 in total
Conference Session
Professional Development and Advising for Graduate Students
Collection
2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Katy Luchini-Colbry, Michigan State University; Theresa Lynn Gonzalez
Tagged Divisions
Graduate Studies
andteaching practices, such as providing effective feedback for students; developing a teachingportfolio; and the academic job search. Throughout Spring 2014, we will continue to requestfeedback from students in order to refine our ongoing efforts to support students’ academic,personal and professional success.References 1. Longfield A, Romas J, Irwin JD. The Self-worth, Physical and Social Activities of Graduate Students: A Qualitative Study. Coll Stud J. 2006;40(2):282–92.2. Fogg P. Grad-School Blues. The Chronicle of Higher Education [Internet]. 2009 Feb 20 [cited 2013 Oct 17]; Available from: http://chronicle.com/article/Grad-School-Blues/295663. Patton S. Colleges Struggle to Respond to Graduate Students in Distress. The Chronicle
Conference Session
Computing in the First Year
Collection
2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Sally J. Steadman, University of South Alabama; Gail D. Jefferson, University of South Alabama; Tom G. Thomas, University of South Alabama; Kuang-Ting Hsiao, University of South Alabama
Tagged Divisions
Computers in Education
positive vertical direction is 5 points. If you pass one line more than once, no additional points are givenIdentify Ball  If your robot can identify one blue ball to pass through 10 points. If your robot can identify 2 consecutive blue balls to pass through 20 points.Navigate Maze  If your robot successfully navigates the maze – 20 pointsStop at Edge  The style in which you robot stops at the edge is between 0-20 points.  If your robot falls over the edge – s=0; if your robot stops “short” or has an appendage over the edge – s=0.5; if your robot stops at the edge – s=1  Style*s is the “stop at the edge” scoreTime  You will be assigned a t value, based on the relative speed of
Conference Session
Use of Technology for Education
Collection
2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Derrick Robinson, Virginia State University; Pallant Ramsundar, Virginia State University; Chandan B Samantaray, Virginia State University
Tagged Divisions
Manufacturing
vertical,horizontal, or diagonal edges. Edge detection is a difficult task in noisy images, since both theedges and noise hold high- frequency content. Efforts to reduce the noise result in unclear anddistorted edges. Techniques used on noisy images are typically larger in scope; therefore, theycan gather enough data to discount localized noisy pixels. An example of edge detectionmethodology is given by the function:BW = Edge (I) ………………………. (1)This function takes a gray scale or a binary image I as its input, and returns a binary image BW Page 24.185.7of the same size as I, with 1's where the function finds edges in I and 0
Conference Session
Spatial Ability & Visualization Training II
Collection
2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Mark E. Snyder, Illinois Institute of Technology; Matthew Spenko, Illinois Institute of Technology
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Design Graphics
facilitate the transferability of successfulpractices to other institutions that want to increase student’s spatial visualization skills.1. Carter, C.S., Larussa, M.A., and Bodner, G.M. (1987). A Study of Two Measures of SpatialAbility as Predictors of Success in Different Levels of General Chemistry. Journal of Researchin Science Teaching, 24(7), 645-657.2. Maloney, E.A., Waechter, S., Risko, E.F., and Fugelsand, J.A. (2012). Reducing the SexDifference in Math Anxiety: The Role of Spatial Processing Ability. Learning and IndividualDifferences. 22, 380-384.3. Sorby, S., Casey, B., Veurink, N., and Dulaney, A. (2012). The Role of Spatial Training inImproving Spatial and Calculus Performance in Engineering Students. Learning and IndividualDifferences
Conference Session
Tricks of the Trade
Collection
2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Jumoke Oluwakemi Ladeji-Osias, Morgan State University; Anita M. Wells, Morgan State University
Tagged Divisions
New Engineering Educators
 Managing Challenging Classroom Situations,” Currents in Teaching and Learning, vol. 1, no. 2, pp. 4­18, Spring 2009.7. D. McCabe, “Classroom Cheating Among Natural Science and Engineering Majors,” Science and Engineering Ethics, vol. 3, pp. 433­445 , 1997.8. H. J. Passow, M. J. Mayhew,  C. J. Finelli, T. S. Harding, and D. D. Carpenter, “Factors Influencing Engineering Students’ Decisions to Cheat by Type of Assessment,” Research in Higher Education, vol. 47, no. 6, pp. 643­684, 2006. DOI: 10.1007/s11162­006­9010­y9. C. R. Nordstrom, L. K. Bartels, & J. Bucy, “Predicting and curbing classroom incivility in higher education,” College Student Journal, vol. 43, no. 1, pp. 74­85, 2009.10. M. A. Kitzrow, “The
Conference Session
FPD 11: Culminating Considerations
Collection
2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
John A. Mirth, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology; John P Iselin, University of Wisconsin, Platteville
Tagged Divisions
First-Year Programs
their future studies.References1. Courter, S. S., Millar, S. B. and Lyons, L. (1998), From the Students' Point of View: Experiences in a Freshman Engineering Design Course. Journal of Engineering Education, 87: 283–288. doi: 10.1002/j.2168- 9830.1998.tb00355.x2. Dym, C. L. (1994), Teaching Design to Freshmen: Style and Content. Journal of Engineering Education, 83: 303–310. doi: 10.1002/j.2168-9830.1994.tb00123.x3. Burton, J. D. and White, D. M. (1999), Selecting a Model for Freshman Engineering Design. Journal of Engineering Education, 88: 327–332. doi: 10.1002/j.2168-9830.1999.tb00454.x4. Dally, J. W. and Zhang, G. M. (1993), A Freshman Engineering Design Course. Journal of Engineering Education, 82: 83–91. doi: 10.1002/j.2168
Conference Session
College Industry Partnerships Division Technical Session 2
Collection
2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Karen D Alfrey, Indiana University Purdue University, Indianapolis; Stephen Hundley, Indiana University Purdue University, Indianapolis; Terri L. Talbert-Hatch, Indiana University Purdue University, Indianapolis; David J. Russomanno, Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis
Tagged Divisions
College Industry Partnerships
Scholars in Engineering: Promoting Student Success through Cohort-Building and Industrial EngagementIntroductionThe National Science Foundation (NSF) Scholarships in Science, Technology, Engineering andMathematics (S-STEM) program provides grants to institutions of higher education to supportscholarships for academically well-prepared undergraduate students with demonstrated financialneed. The goal of the program is to contribute to the number of well-prepared scientists andengineers in the workforce by increasing the number of students with financial need who enterthe STEM workforce after completing a degree program in science or engineering1,2.In spring 2012, we received an S-STEM grant to establish the “CLEAR Scholars in Engineering
Conference Session
Embedded Systems and Mobile Computing
Collection
2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Cory Brozina, Virginia Tech; David B. Knight, Virginia Tech Department of Engineering Education
Tagged Divisions
Computing & Information Technology
Paper ID #9264Credentialing MOOCs: A Case StudyMr. S. Cory Brozina, Virginia Tech Cory Brozina is a PhD student in the Engineering Education department at Virginia Tech. His research is in educational technology and data analysis.Dr. David B Knight, Virginia Tech Department of Engineering Education David Knight is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Engineering Education and affiliate faculty with the Higher Education Program at Virginia Tech. His research focuses on student learning outcomes in undergraduate engineering, interdisciplinary teaching and learning, organizational change in colleges and universities
Conference Session
Assessment of Learning in ECE
Collection
2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Rami Jubrail Haddad, Georgia Southern University; Youakim Kalaani, Georgia Southern University
Tagged Divisions
Electrical and Computer
m 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 xa am _0 _0 _0 _0 _0 _0 _0 _0 _0 _1 _1 _1 _1 _1 _1 _1 _1 _1 _1 E Ex ST S T ST ST ST ST S T ST ST ST ST S T ST ST ST ST S T ST ST st- e- Page 24.649.11 Po Pr Figure 10 – Main Effect Plot Illustrating the Effect of Students and
Conference Session
Instrumentation Division Technical Session 1
Collection
2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
James Andrew Smith P.Eng., Ryerson University
Tagged Divisions
Instrumentation
parameter sweep could be performed in any number of software packages, including Matlab or a PSPICE variant. What distinguishes Maple and MapleSim from these other programs is the ability to generate the underlying equations of the system. This is a critically important feature. MapleSim contains an “attach equation” option which populates a Maple worksheet with live interactive hooks to the MapleSim file. Three equations are created by the worksheet which describe the mathematical rules governing the system: ⎧ D _ Goff D _ off (t) ⎫ Vbatt − OutputVolt(t) − D _ s(t)⋅ ⎨ ⎬ − D _ Goff ⋅ D _VKnee = 0
Conference Session
NSF Grantees' Poster Session
Collection
2013 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Palmyra Catravas, Union College; Michael E Hagerman, Union College; Brian D. Cohen, Department of Biological Sciences, Union College; Samuel Amanuel, Union College; Rebecca Cortez, Union College; Kevin Bubriski, Green Mountain College; Amin Meyghani; Seyfollah Maleki, Union College
Tagged Topics
NSF Grantees Poster Session
i) solder (130 um, 1.01 mm).Images were acquired with a Zeiss EVO-50 scanning electron microscope.       Page 23.258.10References: 1. Pelesko, J., Self Assembly: The Science of Things That Put Themselves Together, Chapman & Hall/CRC, 2007. 2. Eaton, P. and West, P., Atomic Force Microscopy, Oxford University Press, 2010. 3. Whitesides, G. and Grzybowski, B. “Self-Assembly at All Scales”, Science, 2002, 295, 2418- 2421. 4. Palmer, L. and Stupp, S. “Molecular Self-Assembly into One-Dimensional Nanostructures”, Accounts of Chemical Research, 2008, 41, 1674-1684. 5. Park, S.; Lim, J. H.; Chung, S. W.; Mirkin
Conference Session
Emerging Trends in Engineering Education Poster Session
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
Rasha Morsi
Girls In Science, Engineering, and Technology (GISET) Rasha Morsi, Ph.D. Norfolk State UniversityAbstractWhile the proportion of women earning bachelor’s degrees in science and engineering (S&E) hasincreased, the proportion remains significantly lower than that of women earning bachelor’sdegrees in non-scientific areas, indicating a critical need for additional retention and recruitingtechniques specifically for minority females. In the last few decades, recruiting of minorityfemales has been a challenge to say the least. At Norfolk State University, the student populationis 88% African American, 64% of this population is female, yet there
Conference Session
Innovations in ChE Labs
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
Brian Lefebvre; Stephanie Farrell
anion exchange chromatography using a set ofcolorful proteins have been described. These educational materials will allow instructors tointroduce important biochemical engineering and physical biochemistry principles into thechemical engineering curriculum. The visual appeal and low cost of supplies will make thedemonstrations an effective teaching tool in core courses focused on separation processes. Thevariety of possible behavior will make the full-scale experiments a robust addition to unitoperations laboratories or biochemical engineering electives. Further developments will makethe modules available for dissemination to other universities.AcknowledgementThe authors thank Elizabeth N. DiPaolo, Richard S. Dominiak, and Amanda E. Rohs
Conference Session
New Endeavors
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
David Ollis
company)Week two: Read entire book.Week three: Summarize the book in a single page (three paragraphs), which explain 1. What were the social and technical settings of the time ? 2. What was the particular technical challenge addressed, and why was it important ? 3. What was discovered/found, and how was it received by competitors, professionals (corporate management, etc), family, friends and society ?Week four: In nine-ten pages, respond to the following questions: 1. What technical challenge did s/he address? 2. Why did the investigator(s) undertake the task(s) of
Conference Session
Teaching Software Engineering Process
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
Stanislaw Maj; Anuradha Sutharshan; D Veal
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
Conference Session
Collaborations Between Engineering/Education
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
John Lehman; David Stone; Mary Raber
impact in the Program Factors: • Content: The extent to which the program(s) successfully transferred information and skills to students. Variables include: teacher abilities, facilities conducive to learning, difficulty of the curriculum, etc. • Comfort: The extent to which the program provided students with a sense of awareness of, familiarity with, and comfort with college life (e.g., course material, peers, instructors, residential hall life, campus facilities). • Career: The extent to which respondents perceived the program(s) as having an impact on their career choice. • College: The effect of the program(s) on respondents’ decisions to attend college in general and, more
Conference Session
Design Experiences in Energy Education
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
Larry Kephart; Robert Weissbach
Session 2433 Hybrid Renewable Energy System Analysis for Off-Grid Great Lakes Residential Housing Robert S. Weissbach, Larry A. Kephart Penn State Erie, The Behrend CollegeAbstractRenewable energy has become an important area of research and development for bothenvironmental as well as economic reasons. At the academic level, it is possible to introducestudents to issues related to renewable energy. This paper discusses the effort two students putin, as part of a thesis, and an independent study, to develop an economically feasible, self-sufficient, renewable energy
Conference Session
Curriculum Development in Manufacturing ET
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
Kenneth Stier
Engineers Education Foundation,Dearborn, MI. 3 McClenahen, J. S. (2003, June). Manufacturing’s global future: Waking up to a new world, IndustryWeek. 252(6), 22-26. 4 McClenahen, J. S. & Panchak, P. (2003, July). Manufacturing’s global future: Unruly trade, IndustryWeek. 252(7), 48-52, 61. 5 McClenahen, J. S. (2003). 6 Weinstein, B., Lewis, J. & Bergeron, L. K. (2003, August 27). Impacts of international trade with China onIllinois manufacturers, Illinois Manufacturing Extension Center, Peoria, IL, 1-15. 7 Campbell, R. M. & Campbell, H. (2002, November). Supply chain management at Motorola Corporation,National Association of Industrial Technology
Conference Session
Computer & Web-Based Instruction
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
Brianno Coller
selling numerical methods textbooks are catalogs of techniques presentedgenerically (independent of any computational platform), followed by a bare-minimumseries of commands or computer code snippets that will implement the recipe justdescribed in a variety of different software packages or programming languages.Whether consciously or unconsciously, the text authors and course instructors aregrooming the students to be able to solve the types of problems one finds at the end of thechapter: small in scope, narrow in focus, again.The approach might be well suited for the 1960's and 1970's, when computing andprogramming became a core component of the undergraduate engineering curriculum,and when computing technology severely limited the size and
Conference Session
Student Teams & Active Learning
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Robert Knecht
W om e n Ob s e r v a t io n s ( % o f t o t a l)observing 181 students (2165 observations), M ennearly 75 percent of the observations, shown 0. 2in Figure 1, were attributed to task functionswith an emphasis on initiating, followed by 0. 1an exchange of information. While only 25percent of the observations represented teamfunctions, emphasis was on compromising. 0. 0First-year men
Conference Session
ECE Capstone and Engineering Practice
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Constantinos Panayiotou; Yu Song; Venkatraman Atti; Andreas Spanias
users to attenuate audio signal components outside a specified frequencyrange. In particular, the peaking filter design introduces users to the concept of a band-pass filter.  1 + kqµ  (z − z 1 ). ( z − z 2 )  H (z) =     (4) pk  1 + kq  (p − p 1 ). ( p − p 2 )  co s(Ω c ) + cos 2 (Ω c ) − k q2 µ 2
Conference Session
Accreditation and Related Issues in ECE
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Pete Hanlon; John Hill; Bryan Goda; Lisa Shay
Session 2532 Outcome Assessment at the U. S. Military Academy Lisa A. Shay, Bryan S. Goda, Peter Hanlon, and John D. Hill Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, U.S. Military Academy, West Point, NY 10996 {lisa.shay/bryan.goda/peter.hanlon/john.hill}@usma.eduAbstract - The United States Military Academy (USMA) recently had seven of its programsfavorably reviewed by the Engineering Accreditation Commission (EAC) and the ComputingAccreditation Commission (CAC) of the Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology(ABET). The favorable comments of the
Conference Session
Emerging Trends in Engineering Education
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Rajan B Gujjarlapudi; Kaushik Hatti; Carl Steidley; Mario Garcia
Carbon, the experiment is demonstrated better defined since acetic acid (C6H4O2)is a carbon-carbon bond. The theory of vitalism, like many other scientific theories, disappearedslowly under the weight of accumulated evidence rather than as a consequence of any onebrilliant and enlightening experiment. Structural theory, which developed in the 1860’s, startedthe second major period of growth in the organic chemistry field. The development of a detailedpicture, by using pure reasoning of both atomic organization and the shapes of molecules standsas a great milestone of the development of human intellect. At almost the same point in time,Kekule in Germany, and Couper of Scotland suggested that atoms in molecules are fusedtogether by bonds. Their
Conference Session
State of the Art in 1st-Year Programs
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
Stephen Silliman; Leo McWilliams; Mark Gunty; Carrie Graf; Catherine Pieronek
population as a whole. As noted in McWilliams et al. [4], such analysescan lead to changes in course structure which dramatically impact both student learning andretention.References1. Brockman, J.B., Fuja, T.E, Batill, S.M., “A Multidisciplinary Course Sequence for First-Year EngineeringStudents,” 2002 ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition, Montreal, Quebec, Canada, June 2002.2. Pieronek, C. , McWilliams, L. H., Silliman, S. E., “Initial Observations on Student Retention and CourseSatisfaction Based on First-Year Engineering Student Survey and Interviews,” 2003 ASEE Annual Conference andExposition, Nashville, Tennessee, June 2003.3. Silliman, S. E., McWilliams, L. H., “Observations on Benefits/Limitations of an Audience Response System,”2004 ASEE
Conference Session
Engineering Education Research and Assessment III
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
Miguel A. Padilla; Timothy J. Anderson; Matthew Ohland; Guili Zhang
Cross-institutional Study,” Proceedings of the American Society of Engineering Education in the Southeast, Gainesville, FL, April 2002, Session 2793.[4] Zhang, G., Thorndyke, B., Carter, R., Ohland, M., and Anderson, T. (2003) “A Comparison of Demographic Factors and Academic Performances Between Students Graduated in Engineering and Other Disciplines.” Proceedings of the American Society of Engineering Education, Nashville, Tennessee, June 2003.[5] Besterfield, M., Mareno, M., Shuman, L. J., & Atman, C. J. (1999). “Comparing Entering Freshman Engineers: Institutional Differences in Student Attitudes,” American Society of Engineering Education Conference Proceedings, Charlotte, NC, June 1999.[6] Donaldson, T. S. (1968
Conference Session
Emerging Trends in Engineering Education Poster Session
Collection
2005 Annual Conference
Authors
Amir Karimi; Dan Dimitriu
theeducation process with a variety of interesting projects to motivate students to continue the studyof engineering towards a Bachelor’s degree have begun to produce the expected results. Thedegree of satisfaction expressed by students enrolled in this course is at an all time high and theattrition rates among freshman engineering students are at an all time low.References1. Karimi, A., Eftekhar, J., and Manteufel, “A Model for Integration of Math, Science, and Engineering Application at the Lower Division," Proceedings of the 1999 Annual Meeting of the Gulf-Southwest Section of ASEE, March 7-9, 1999, Dallas, Texas.2. Karimi, A., Bench, S., and Hodges, Suzan, “Improving Engineering Student Retention in an Urban University,” Presented at
Conference Session
Technology Transfer and Commercialization
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Chintan Parekh; Anthony Warren; Elizabeth Kisenwether
6 Conference & Exposition Copyright © 2004, American Society for Engineering” b) Each license or option agreement should require that the university and researcher are provided results of any market analysis summary related to the invention done by the licensee. This would help everyone “know what the licensee knows” and could help in making decisions on research/product refinements. c) If TTO already has agreement(s) with a corporation and additional licensing or option agreements are being set up, use this opportunity to: - make improvements/revisions to the first agreement(s), if needed - write the new agreement with knowledge of the success or problems
Conference Session
Lab Experiments in Materials Science
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Richard Griffin, Texas A&M University at Qatar
); cold-headed parts; hardware.Other Notes(s)=soft; (1/2 h)=half hard; (h)=hard; (xh)=extra hard; (hr) = hot rolled; (w)=soln heat-trtd; (wh)=soln heat-trtd & work hdnd; (wp)=soln heat-trtd& precip hdnd; (whp)=precip hdnd after cold-wkng; (wph)=work hdnd after precip hdng.Refer ence Sour cesData compiled from multiple sources. See links to the References table.LinksReferenceShapeStructural SectionsSupplierProcessUniverseAssignment 1 The first assignment, shown below, asked the students to select the maximum andminimum properties for a number of attributes. For the specific modulus and strength, thestudents had to use the software included in CES-4 to divide that particular property by thematerial’s density. Additionally, they were
Conference Session
TIME 8: Materials, MEMS, and Nano
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
sudhakar vadiraja; Hector Cervantes
examined by each group of students.Microetching techniques are used to reveal general microstructure in Ni-Ti alloys. Ni-Ti alloy istreated with following three chemical etching reagents to get the best possible results. First, theetchant is prepared by mixing 50 ml HNO3 with 50 ml acetic acid. Ni-Ti alloy (after getting amirror surface finish from standard polishing techniques) is immersed/swabbed for about 30 s. Page 9.1101.6 “Proceedings of the 2004 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition Copyright © 2004, American Society for Engineering"Second reagent was prepared by
Conference Session
Visualization and Computer Graphics
Collection
2004 Annual Conference
Authors
Eric Johnson; Jeffrey Will
, American Society for Engineering EducationConclusions The need for students to be able to visualize in three dimensions is essential. Currentlow-cost visualization systems offer great promise for education in that they are cost-feasible andhold promise for new pedagogical methods. The applications described herein have beensuccessfully applied to undergraduate education and form a basis of future work. Systemcapabilities of visualization systems are driven by the application, and it is found that forclassroom instruction, it is necessary to have a tracked wand interface.References[1] P. C. Wankat, F. S. Oreovicz, Teaching Engineering. New York: McGraw Hill, 1993.[2] C. Dede, M. Salzman, B. Loftin, and K. Ash, “Using virtual reality