isolating bodies. Figure 3: Level 03-1 shows car A isolated to find the force between the two bodies (left), and Level 03-2 shows both cars, A and B, included in the system (right).Falling Game for Identifying Support ReactionsAnother important skill when drawing a FBD is replacing environmental connections withequivalent forces and moments. Students often struggle to recall the appropriate substitution fortypical supports, such as pins, rollers, fixed connections, etc., in 2D and 3D. To give studentspractice recalling support reactions, we developed a mini game in which students are given asupport reaction goal they need to match such as “connections with at least one momentreaction”. In the mini game itself, small drawings of
Paper ID #40470WIP: Teaching Physics Through a Medical LensMr. Billal Tamer Gomaa, Penn State University I am a second-year Schreyer scholar at Penn State University majoring in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology. I was born and raised in Lancaster, Pennsylvania and hope to attend medical school in pursuit of becoming a physician. At school, I am involved with research in the Girirajan lab, the American Red Cross and a leader in the Egyptian Student Association as well as the Biochemistry Society. ©American Society for Engineering Education, 2023 Teaching Physics Through a Medical
, 2023].[3] J. Fuller & W. Kerr, “The great resignation didn’t start with the pandemic,” Harvard Business Review, March 23, 2022. [Online]. Available: https://hbr.org/2022/03/the-great- resignation-didnt-start-with-the-pandemic. [Accessed February 7, 2023].[4] W. Lu & B. Zoghi, “Designing a professional master’s program to build life-long successful skills for engineering managers,” In 13th Annual International Conference of Education, Research and Innovation, November 9-10, 2020. [Online]. Available: https://library.iated.org/view/LU2020DES. [Accessed February 7, 2023].[5] “A guide to the Engineering Management Body of Knowledge, 5th edition,” ASEM.org. [Online]. Available: https://www.asem.org/EMBoK. [Accessed
Education Research, A. Johri and B. M. Olds, Eds., 1st ed.Cambridge University Press, 2014, pp. 311–334. doi: 10.1017/CBO9781139013451.021.[13] E. A. Cech, A. Metz, J. L. Smith, and K. deVries, “Epistemological dominance and social inequality: Experiences of Native American science, engineering, and health students,” Sci. Technol. Hum. Values, vol. 42, no. 5, pp. 743–774, Sep. 2017, doi: 10.1177/0162243916687037.[14] C. A. G. Mwangi, B. Thelamour, I. Ezeofor, and A. Carpenter, “‘Black Elephant in the Room’: Black students contextualizing campus racial climate within US Racial Climate,” J. Coll. Stud. Dev., vol. 59, no. 4, pp. 456–474, 2018, doi: 10.1353/csd.2018.0042.[15] D. Tolbert Smith, “‘They are here to support me
the program to include, feedback from faculty, UTAs andundergraduates on their experiences within the engineering classroom, more specifically, theirperceptions of the effectiveness of the embedded UTAs in fostering inclusive instructionalpractices, a sense of belonging and inclusion in the first-year engineering undergraduateclassroom.References[1] Report - S&E indicators 2018 | NSF - national science foundation. Available at:https://www.nsf.gov/statistics/2018/nsb20181/report/sections/higher-education-in-science-and-engineering/highlights (Accessed: 03 June 2023).[2] D. B. Luckie, B. W. Mancini, N. Abdallah, A. K. Kadouh, A. C. P. Ungkuldee, and A. A.Hare, “Undergraduate teaching assistants can provide support for reformed practices to
, 31(1):30–43, 2000.[3] D. Fisher, P. Cornwell and J. Williams, "Teaching dynamics using interactive tablet PC instruction software," 2007 37th Annual Frontiers In Education Conference - Global Engineering: Knowledge Without Borders, Opportunities Without Passports, Milwaukee, WI, 2007, pp. S3J-3-S3J-4, doi: 10.1109/FIE.2007.4417887.[4] DyKnow. http://www.dyknow.com/[5] Swithenbank, S. B., & DeNucci, T. W. (2014, June), “Using a “Flipped Classroom” Model in Undergraduate Newtonian Dynamics,” Proceedings of the 2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Indianapolis, Indiana. 10.18260/1-2—23249[6] Le, X., & Ma, G. G., & Duva, A. W. (2015, June), “Testing the Flipped Classroom Approach in Engineering Dynamics
design competition revealed increasedsatisfaction amongst students, faculty, and industry partners. Following this, the TRUE modelwas adopted as part of the capstone design.In the summer of 2020, only two types of capstone projects were encouraged: (a) TRUEprojects and (b) Student-initiated projects that were reviewed and approved by a facultycommittee through a proposal system. By Spring 2023 (as of the writing of this work-in-progress paper), all capstone design projects in the department of EE have been converted tofit the TRUE project model, which means all capstone projects are real-world projects withindustry/community sponsors/partnerships. While this significant shift has been driven byanecdotal experiences shared by various stakeholders
Paper ID #39941Student-centered design: A capstone design project of a batch vacuumevaporator for food science students by a multidisciplinary team ofengineering seniorsDr. Philip Jackson, University of Florida Dr. Philip B. Jackson earned B.S. degrees in Aerospace Engineering and Mechanical Engineering as well as an M.S. and Ph.D. in Mechanical Engineering, all from the University of Florida. He is currently faculty in the Department of Engineering Education at the University of Florida where he leads the Game-Based Learning and Digital Experiences Laboratory (GLaDE)Emily Hope FordAllison Kathleen PorrasAndrew John MacIntosh
environmental engineering consulting before changing careers to academia at Texas A&M University-Kingsville.Dr. Shannon L. Isovitsch Parks P.E., University of Pittsburgh at Johnstown Dr. Shannon Parks is a registered Professional Engineer with 20 years of broad-based experience in the water resources and environmental engineering fields. She holds a Bachelor of Science Degree in Civil Engineering from the Pennsylvania State UniversitDr. Daniel B Oerther P.E., Missouri University of Science and Technology Professor Daniel B. Oerther, PhD, PE joined the faculty of the Missouri University of Science and Tech- nology in 2010 as the John A. and Susan Mathes Chair of Civil Engineering after serving for ten years on the faculty
2022, three sections taught by two instructors were included in the study(Table 1). Both instructors have more than 8 years of experience in teaching Fluid Mechanicsand related mechanical engineering courses.Table 1. Description of the three student groups participating in the study: the number ofstudents, type of assignments/assessments, and instructors assigned to each group. Groups No. of Students Assignments Instructor Traditional (TRAD) 100 ● No in-class activities A ● Regular homework Active Learning 100 ● In-class activities B (AL
Studies: Methodological Briefs - Impact Evaluation No.9,” UNICEF-IRC, 2014, Accessed: Apr. 07, 2023. [Online]. Available: https://www.unicef-irc.org/publications/754-comparative-case-studies-methodological-briefs-impact-evaluation-no-9.html[19] B. J. Beatty, Z. Merchant, and M. Albert, “Analysis of Student Use of Video in a FlippedClassroom,” TechTrends, vol. 63, no. 4, pp. 376–385, Jul. 2019, doi: 10.1007/s11528-017-0169-1.[20] B. K. Morris and S. Savadatti, “Analysis of Basic Video Metrics in a Flipped StaticsCourse,” in 2018 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, 2018.[21] “ChatGPT.” OpenAI.
) for students, which on some level can beat least partly obtained by the traditional approach of learning by clicking through a program.While that is certainly a part of this course, the use of integrated projects to learn GIS whilereinforcing core civil engineering concepts has shown to be an impactful model, providingstudents context and connections to enhance their learning in multiple areas beyond the software.References[1] V. Bernhäuserová, L. Havelková, K. Hátlová, and M. Hanus, “The limits of GISimplementation in education: A systematic review,” ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information, vol. 11, no. 12, p. 592, 2022.[2] S. Lafia, R. Zhu, B. Regalia, and W. Kuhn, “Reimagining GIS instruction through concept-based learning,” AGILE
Access to Them, and Why They Matter. Washington, D.C.: Association of American Colleges and Universities, 2008. Developing and Assessing College Student Teamwork Skills 63 New Directions for Institutional Research • DOI: 10.1002/ir5. Eddy, E. R., D’Abate, C. P., & Costello, M. (2019). The Impact of Enhanced Teammate Evaluations on Important Individual and Team Outcomes. Journal of Educational and Developmental Psychology, 9(2), 158-158.6. Graupensperger, S., Benson, A. J., Kilmer, J. R., & Evans, M. B. (2020). Social (un) distancing: Teammate interactions, athletic identity, and mental health of student-athletes during the COVID-19 pandemic. Journal of Adolescent Health, 67(5), 662-670.7. Goodwin, C., and Bonadies, M. L
: which involves providingvisual cues to the topic being discussed (b) weeding : involves the removal of any externalstimuli and (c) matching modality to content : essentially describe in words what is seen on ascreen. The next question about the length of the videos was answered by Guo et. al [12] ontheir work that analyzed the student use of video in MOOC’s. They found that videos had themaximum viewing at approximately 6 minutes with a drop off in attention with every minuteafter that. Previous experiences had informed us that it was difficult to get meaningfulinformation into a 6 minute video for us. But while we understood the attention dropoff beyond6 minutes, Roediger and Karpicke’s work (13) helped us understand the value of testing
-test scores can serve as a covariate to eliminate the initialdifference between groups, thereby making pre-tests equivalent across groups. In our study, wecontrolled for the influence of the pre-scores on the writing assessments, which allows us toreduce the effect of draft scores on the difference in post-writing scores between the two groups.We first validated the three assumptions of the MANCOVA: a) homogeneity of the regressionslopes, b) multivariate normality, and c) equality of the covariance matrices. The MANCOVAmet the assumption of homogeneity of regression slopes because the interaction effects were notsignificant. The Shapiro-Wilk test of multivariate normality yielded a low p-value (<0.001), butthe Central Limit Theorem ensured
Century Learning Initiative. Available: http://www.21learn.org/archive/the-three-legged-stool/ 2. Atkinson, T.N. (2008). Using creative writing techniques to enhance the case study method in research integrity and ethics courses. Journal of Academic Ethics 6:33-50. 3. Bammer, G. (2017). Toward a new discipline of integration and implementation science. In In: R. Frodeman (ed.) The Oxford handbook of interdisciplinarity (2nd ed.), 525-529. 4. Barry, B. & Herkert, J.R. (2014). Engineering ethics. In Cambridge handbook of engineering education research. Ed. Johiri, A. and Olds, B. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press, 673-692. 5. Borgmann, A. (2006). Real American Ethics: Taking responsibility for
Committee on Personnel Methods (Eds. C.R. Mann, D.A. Robertson, M.E. Haggerty, J. B. Johnson; American Council on Education) (1930) Federal Relations to Education (American Council on Education) (1930) Manual for Teachers of Classes of Illiterate Adults: Tentative Suggestions (with National Advisory Committee on Illiteracy; American Council on Education) (1938) Living and Learning (American Council on Education)This list of publications and the range of subjects on which Mann published present aformidable challenge to any researcher who seeks to understand Mann’s career, but theyalso reflect the breadth of perspective that equipped Mann to be a systems thinker whograsps the intricacies of what
modeling that accounted fordemographics, achievement scores, academic characteristics, and parent background, researcherscompared eighth-graders who expected to pursue science with those not interested. The modelshowed a statistically significant difference between groups with eighth-grades reporting scienceinterest to be 3.4 times more likely to earn a physical science or engineering degree (b = 1.23, SE= 0.24, p<0.001). These results highlight that early interest in science appears to be a statisticallysignificant predictor for persistence in a STEM pathway.A follow-up investigation in 2010 involved 116 scientists and science graduate students toexplore childhood experiences that may have impacted their persistence in STEM [8]. A majorityof
line data.CS102-“Introduction to Programming I” is the first programming course and also the pre-requisite of many other core course in the computer science curriculum at AAMU.Underperforming students in CS102 are very likely to struggle or fail in other coursesafterwards. Therefore, CS 102 has been considered as a critical gateway course in computerscience. Table 1. Assessment Data vs. Program-Level Learning Outcomes for CS102 with Problem Based Learning Learning Outcomes: a) Design, implement, and evaluate a computing-based solution to meet a given set of computing requirements in the context of the program’s discipline. b) Apply computer science theory and software development fundamentals to produce computing-based solutions
of Kerala, and Chief Technology Officer for Elegance Technologies, Inc.Dr. Patricia B. Campbell, Campbell-Kibler Associates Patricia B. Campbell, PhD, President of Campbell-Kibler Associates, Inc, has been involved in research and evaluation on science, technology, engineering and mathematics education and issues of race/ethnicity, gender and disability for over 30 years. He ©American Society for Engineering Education, 2023 The CS POGIL Activity Writing ProgramAbstractThis evidence-based practice paper describes the CS POGIL Activity Writing Program (AWP),a faculty development program to help computing faculty create classroom activities for ProcessOriented Guided Inquiry
Paper ID #38058Board 327: Investigating Role Identities of Low-Income EngineeringStudents Prior to Their First Semester of CollegeDr. Ryan Scott Hassler, Pennsylvania State University, Berks Associate Teaching Professor of MathematicsDr. Catherine L. Cohan, Pennsylvania State University Catherine Cohan, Ph.D. has been a research psychologist for over 20 years. Her areas of expertise include engineering education, retention of underrepresented students, measurement, and assessment. She is currently an Assistant Research Professor and coorDawn Pfeifer Pfeifer ReitzJanelle B Larson, Pennsylvania State University
. in Mechanical Engineering from the United Military Academy and his M.S.E. and PhD in Mechanical En- gineering from the University of Texas at Austin. His research and teaching interests are in mechatronics, regenerative power, and multidisciplinary engineering.Dr. Christine B. Masters, Pennsylvania State University Christine Masters is the Assistant Dean for Academic Support and Global Programs and a Teaching Professor in the Engineering Science and Mechanics Department at the Pennsylvania State University. In between raising 4 great kids with her husband of 35 years, she taught large enrollment statics and strength of materials courses for 12 years and has been leading the efforts focused on support, global
target 1 hour print time.The files were then printed using PLA filament. Examples of printed images are shown in Figure2 (c), (d) and (e).A page modeling the customer facing portion of zyBooks with a test for the file distribution wasbuilt on our platform. Sections in accordance with zyBooks' pedagogy were written supportingchosen test images, shown in Figures 1(a), (b) and (c). The .STL files of the test images werehosted on an internal file hosting system, and links embedded into the test page.(a)(b) (c)Figure 1:(a-c) Examples of zyBook pages with STL link embedded at the bottom(a)(b)(c) (d
Paper ID #37021Mapping Graduate Student Workshops to Career Readiness FrameworksSeth Vuletich, Colorado School of Mines Seth Vuletich is the Scholarly Communications Librarian the Colorado School of Mines. Seth provides specialized support to graduate students through all stages of the research lifecycle. Prior to entering the field of librarianship, Seth was a professional woodworker and earned a bachelor’s degree in geology from the University of Colorado, Boulder. Seth earned his Master’s in Library and Information Science from the University of Denver in 2021.Ms. Brianna B. Buljung, Colorado School of Mines
. LaPara, “Diversity in Environmental Engineering - Successes and challenges,” Journal of Environmental Engineering, vol 132, no 7, pp. 701-702, 2006.[8] S. Baker, P. Tancred, and S. Whitesides, “Gender and graduate school: Engineering students confront life after the B. Eng.,” Journal of Engineering Education, vol 91, no 1, pp. 41-47, 2002.[9] K. G. Wilkins-Yel, A. Simpson, and P. D. Sparks, “Persisting despite the odds: Resilience and coping among women in engineering,” Journal of Women and Minorities in Science and Engineering, vol 25, no 4, pp.:353-368, 2019.[10] H. Okahana, C. Klein, J. Allum, and R. Sowell, “STEM Doctoral Completion of Underrepresented Minority Students: Challenges and
interview. After participants signed the informed consent form,pseudonyms were assigned for all of them, including names they mentioned during theinterview. We used all reasonable efforts to keep participants’ personal information confidentialas required by law and university policy. However, we should note that, as stated in the informedconsent, identifying information may be seen or copied by: a) The Institutional Review Boardthat approved our research study; b) The Office for Protection of Research Subjects and otheruniversity departments that oversee human subjects research; c) University and state auditorsresponsible for oversight of research; d) Federal regulatory agencies such as the Office of HumanResearch Protections in the Department of
, and B. Leporini, "Book4All: A tool to make an e-book more accessible to students with vision/visual-impairments," HCI and Usability for e-Inclusion. USAB 2009. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, vol. 5889. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer, 2009.[18] E.C. Pender and J.J. Healy, "Accessible circuit diagrams," 33rd Irish Signals and Systems Conference (ISSC), Jul. 2022.[19] B. Zapirain, A. Mendez, I. Oleagordia, and A. Muro, "Accessible schematics content descriptors using image processing techniques for blind students learning," 5th International Symposium On I/V Communications and Mobile Network, Sept. 2010.[20] R.F. Cohen, A. Meacham, and J. Skaff, "Teaching graphs to visually impaired students
: a case study in the central adriatic continental shelf,” Environmental Science and Pollution Research, vol. 22, pp. 6034–6049, 2015.[4] B. J. Tewksbury, C. A. Manduca, D. W. Mogk, R. H. Macdonald, and M. Bickford, “Geoscience education for the anthropocene,” Geological Society of America Special Papers, vol. 501, pp. 189–201, 2013.[5] “Fossilsketch website,” https://fossilsketch.org/.[6] H. A. Armstrong and M. D. Brasier, “Foraminifera,” Microfossils, Second Edition, pp. 142–187, 2005.[7] A. J. Smith, D. J. Horne, K. Martens, and I. Sch¨on, “Class ostracoda,” in Thorp and Covich’s freshwater invertebrates. Elsevier, 2015, pp. 757–780.
: Brian L. Yoder[2] “Freshman Retention Rate Regional Universities Midwest,” US News and World Report.https://www.usnews.com/best-colleges/rankings/regional-universities-midwest/freshmen-least-most-likely-return[3] D. Budny, C. Paul, and B. B. Newborg, “Impact Of Peer Mentoring On FreshmenEngineering Students,” Journal of STEM Education: Innovations and Research, vol. 11, no. 5,Oct. 2010, Accessed: May 30, 2023. [Online].[4] J. Johnson, A. Niemi, M. Green, and L. Gentry, “Management and Assessment of aSuccessful Peer Mentor Program for Increasing Freshmen Retention,” in 2014 ASEE AnnualConference & Exposition Proceedings, Indianapolis, Indiana: ASEE Conferences, Jun. 2014, p.24.882.1-24.882.42. doi: 10.18260/1-2--22815.[5] K. Reid, “Creating
in Engineering Education Symposium, Cape Town, South Africa, 2019, pp. 10-12.[7] L. Ballesteros-Sanchez, I. Ortiz-Marcos, and R. Rodriguez-Rivero, “Investigating the Gap Between Engineering Graduates and Practicing Project Managers,” Int J Eng Educ, vol. 37, no. 1, pp. 31-43, 2021.[8] B. W. Tuckman, “Developmental Sequence in Small-Groups,” Psychol Bull, vol. 63, no. 6, pp. 384-399, 1965.[9] P. Hunsaker, C. Pavett, and J. Hunsaker, “Increasing Student-Learning Team Effectiveness With Team Charters,” J. Educ. Bus., vol. 86, no. 3, pp. 127-139, 2011.[10] J. R. Aaron, W. C. McDowell, and A. O. Herdman, “The Effects of a Team Charter on Student Team Behaviors,” J. Educ. Bus., vol. 89, no. 2, pp. 90