70Sociological Considerations 90Engineering Considerations a. Alternative Selection Criteria 80 b. Design Considerations 80Economic Analysis a. Capital Costs or Amortized Costs 90 b. Operation and Maintenance Costs 90Presentation of Action Plan 85Plan Achieves Objectives 95Final Report a. Formatting & Editing 80 b. Figures & Tables 80 c. Referencing of Materials
Paper ID #11623Learning Management Systems: What more can we know?Mr. Cory Brozina, Virginia Tech Cory Brozina is a PhD Candidate in Engineering Education at Virginia Tech. He has his B.S. and M.S. in Industrial & Systems Engineering also from Virginia Tech. His research interests are in Learning Analytics, Engineering Education Assessment, and Educational Technology.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, Center for Human-Computer Interaction, and Human
Paper ID #15530Dimensions of Experienced Responsive Teaching in EngineeringDr. Aaron W. Johnson, Tufts University Aaron W. Johnson is a postdoctoral research associate at the Tufts University Center for Engineering Education and Outreach. He received his Ph.D. in Aeronautics and Astronautics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 2014, where his research focused on human-automation interaction in complex aerospace vehicles. Aaron also obtained a master’s degree from MIT in 2010 and a bachelor’s degree from the University of Michigan in 2008, both in aerospace engineering.Kristen B. Wendell, Tufts University
Paper ID #7306Promoting Conceptual Understanding in Engineering Statics Through theUse of Adaptive Concept MapsJacob P. Moore, Virginia Tech Jacob Moore is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Engineering Education at Virginia Tech.Dr. Christopher B. Williams, Virginia TechChris North, Virginia TechDr. Aditya Johri, Virginia Tech Dr. Johri is an assistant professor of Engineering Education, Computer Science (courtesy), and Industrial and Systems Engineering (courtesy) at Virginia Tech. He studies the use of information and commu- nication technologies (ICT) for learning and knowledge sharing, with a focus on cognition in
educator, he brings professional experience as an engineer and project management from industry and government settings.Dr. Christian B. Miller, Wake Forest University A.C. Reid Professor of PhilosophyDr. Olga Pierrakos, Wake Forest University Dr. Olga Pierrakos is a rotating STEM Education Program Director in the Division of Undergraduate Education at the National Science Foundation (a second stint). Olga is also the Founding Chair (2017-2022) and a Professor of Wake Forest Engineering. With a unique vision to Educate the Whole Engineer and a commitment to Human Flourishing, Olga led Wake Forest Engineering to be ranked as one of the top (14th) ”Best Undergraduate Engineering Programs” by US News Report (2023). With
., & Rudenstine, N. L. (1992). In pursuit of the Ph.D. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.9 Weimer, D. J., Prieto, L. R., & Meyers, S. A. (2004). To train or not to train: That is the question. In W. Buskist, B. C. Beins, & V. W. Hevern (Eds.), Preparing for the new psychology professoriate: Helping graduate students become competent teachers, (pp. 2-9). Syracuse, NY: Society for the Teaching of Psychology.10 Heppner, M. J. (1994). An empirical investigation of the effects of a teaching practicum on prospective faculty. Journal of Counseling and Development, 72, 500-507.11 Girves, J.E., & Wemmerus, V. (1988). Developing models of graduate student degree progress. The Journal of Higher
AC 2011-1012: USING THE EXCEED MODEL FOR DISTANCE EDUCA-TIONRonald W. Welch, University of Texas, Tyler Ron Welch is Professor and Head, Department of Civil Engineering at The University of Texas at Tyler. He is a registered Professional Engineer in Virginia. Until 2 Jan 2007, Ron was an Academy Professor at the United States Military Academy (USMA). Ron received a BS degree in Engineering Mechanics from the USMA in 1982 and MS and Ph.D. degrees in Civil Engineering from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 1990 and 1999, respectively. Ronald Welch@uttyler.edu.Clifton B. Farnsworth, University of Texas, Tyler Clifton B. Farnsworth is an Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering at the University of Texas
Paper ID #9063Developing engineers who lead: Are student, faculty and administrator per-spectives aligned?Lt. Col. Brian J Novoselich P.E., Virginia Tech Brian Novoselich is an active duty Lieutenant Colonel in the United States Army and currently a Ph.D. student in the Department of Engineering Education at Virginia Tech. His is a former assistant professor at the United States Military Academy. His dissertation research interest is undergraduate student leadership development in capstone design teams.Dr. David B Knight, Virginia Tech Department of Engineering Education David Knight is an Assistant Professor in the
Paper ID #18251Material Testing as an Opportunity for International Collaboration and Un-dergraduate ResearchDr. James B. Pocock, U.S. Air Force Academy James Pocock is a professor in the Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering at the United States Air Force Academy. He spent the 2016-2017 academic year on sabbatical with Engineering Ministries International as a research specialist in their Uganda field office. His paper is based on some of his research collaborations during his sabbatical.Lt. Col. Anthony Barrett, U.S. Air Force Academy Lt Col Barrett is the Deputy Department Head and Senior Military Faculty in
staff and teachers, and served as museum liaison to UT Austin’s Science and Engineering departments and the local STEM professional community. She received training in inquiry-based learning from the Institute for Inquiry at the Exploratorium in San Francisco, CA. She is currently the Education Director for Phoenix Arising Aviation Academy and the Program Director for STEM Education programs with iFLY.Mr. Stuart B Wallock Stuart Wallock has spent the last 20 years involved with the convergence of technology, ecommerce, media and entertainment industries in various online and retail capacities. He holds a BA in Liberal Arts from UT Austin. Stuart joined SkyVenture/iFLY Indoor Skydiving from Dell, Inc., in October of
Chart The flow chart of the design and method is shown in Figure 3. Sign a = Control Control Image W = Test Test Image Compare Two Recognition Image filter Image Filter Images End b = Grayscale r = Grayscale c = correlation Conversion Conversion of b and r BW = Black/ BW = Black/ c1 = correlation White
Army and currently a Ph.D. Candidate in the Department of Engineering Education at Virginia Tech. His is a former assistant profes- sor at the United States Military Academy. His research interests include capstone design teaching and assessment, undergraduate engineering student leadership development, and social network 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, Center for Human-Computer Interaction, and Human-Centered De- sign Program. His research focuses on student learning outcomes in undergraduate engineering, learning analytics
for the four main scales, in a very good range,and from .70 to .80 for the nine subscales. For test-retest reliability, the Pearson correlations runfrom .78 to .92 for the scales and the subscales.2With regard to validity, a concurrent validity study with 1,050 participants, who took both theKGI measurement and the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator assessment, produced very significantcorrelations between the two instruments' scales, which followed the theoretical designs of themeasurements. In a smaller concurrent validity study with the KGI measurement and theFundamental Interpersonal Relations Orientation-B (FIRO-B) assessment, again there weresignificant correlations between the two sets of scales, as would be expected based on theirtheoretical
the individual, leadership curriculaoften utilizes one or more instruments, such as MBTI, True Colors, or DISC, to provide studentswith insights to their own personality and/or behaviors in groups or teams. Recently, the KleinGroup Instrument for Effective Leadership and Participation in Teams (KGI)®, which providesan individual with a set of skills to promote social growth, has shown initial success withengineering students.12 A new assessment tool to “measure leadership, change, and synthesisabilities” has been proposed in the work of Ahn, B., Cox, M.F., London, J., Cekic, O., and Zhu,J.13 Developed on a holistic set of leadership skills, their instrument, the Personal Leadershipprofile, “helps each student to focus on what courses will be
Paper ID #40735Designing an open course to highlight the work of underrepresented STEMscholarsBrianna B Buljung, Colorado School of Mines Brianna is the Teaching and Learning librarian at the Colorado School of Mines. She collaborates with faculty to design and implement information literacy throughout the curriculum. Prior to her work at the School of Mines, she was the Engineering and Computer Science Librarian at the US Naval Academy and a contract Reference Librarian assigned to the National Defense University. She earned her MLIS at the University of Denver in 2011.Seth Vuletich, Colorado School of Mines Seth
Paper ID #27268Board 53: WIP: Learning Assistant ”Noticing” in Undergraduate Engineer-ing Science CoursesDr. Kristen B Wendell, Tufts University Kristen Wendell is Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering and Adjunct Assistant Professor of Ed- ucation at Tufts University. Her research efforts at at the Center for Engineering Education and Outreach focus on supporting discourse and design practices during K-12, teacher education, and college-level en- gineering learning experiences, and increasing access to engineering in the elementary school experience, especially in under-resourced schools. In 2016 she was a
. Carla B. Zoltowski, Purdue University Carla B. Zoltowski is an associate professor of engineering practice in the Elmore Family School of Electrical and Computer Engineering (ECE) and (by courtesy) the School of Engineering Education, and Director of the Vertically Integrated Projects (VIP) Program within the College of Engineering at Purdue. She holds a B.S. and M.S. in Electrical Engineering and a Ph.D. in Engineering Education, all from Purdue. Dr. Zoltowski’s research interests include the professional formation of engineers, diversity, inclusion, and equity in engineering, human-centered design, and engineering ethics.Dr. William ”Bill” C. Oakes, Purdue University William (Bill) Oakes is the Assistant Dean for
social and personality psychology from the University of Wisconsin–Madison in 2007. Prior to his career in psychology, he spent six years as a teacher, coach, and social worker. Chris is a second generation educator whose grandparents were tenant farmers in Iowa and Nebraska. He tries to emulate their hard work and persistence in the pursuit of social justice. One of his favorite childhood memories is eating his paternal grandmother’s homemade fruit pies with plenty of ice cream.Dr. Dustin B. Thoman, San Diego State University Dr. Dustin Thoman is a Professor in the Department of Psychology and the Center for Research in Mathematics and Science Education at San Diego State University. He also serves as California
Paper ID #17677Turbocharge General Education Requirements with Science of External andInternal ExcellenceDr. Pradeep B. Deshpande, University of Louisville and President, Six Sigma and Advanced Controls, Inc. Pradeep B. Deshpande is Professor Emeritus and a Former Chair of the Chemical Engineering Department at the University of Louisville. He served on the ChE faculty there for thirty-three years (1975 – 2008). Post retirement, he has continued his research into the pursuit of perfection in human endeavors and teaching and consulting in advanced process control and six sigma. He is an author or co-author of more than
featured pre-defined inquiry questions and design problems,pre-planned investigations, did not ask for model generation, and did not call for mathematizingbeyond very simple linear measurement. Though Practice 8 was demonstrated in Classroom B,there was little opportunity for it in Classroom A, so it was not included in the analysis.This review informed the decision to focus on practices 4, 6, and 7, which involve working withdata, explaining phenomena, designing solutions, and engaging in argument from evidence. Toanalyze the student data for these three practices, we broke them down into sub-practicesaccording to NGSS Appendix F [1] for grade band 3 to 5 (see Table 1).For each classroom, we coded for sub-practices first with the richer data
for the College of Technology, a seamless pathway in technology and engineering from all 12 public community colleges to 8 public and private universities. Dr. Wosczyna-Birch has expertise with both the recruitment and persistence of under represented populations, especially women, to pursue ca- reers in engineering and technological disciplines. She has presented at numerous conferences throughout the United States and was an invited speaker at the international Gender Summit in Belgium in 2016.Mrs. Charlotte B. Forrest, Charlotte B. Forrest currently serves as Project Manager and Co-Principal Investigator for the National Science Foundation (NSF), Advanced Technological Education (ATE) funded program-Mentor-Connect
AC 2011-507: CERTIFICATE/CONCENTRATION IN ENGINEERING FORP-12 EDUCATORSAnnMarie Thomas, University of Saint Thomas AnnMarie Thomas is an assistant professor of Engineering at the University of St. Thomas, and co- director of the UST Center for Pre-Collegiate Engineering Education. Her teaching and research focus on Engineering Design and K-12 Engineering Education. Prior to her appointment at UST, she was a faculty member at Art Center College of Design.Jan B. Hansen, Ph.D., University of Saint Thomas Jan B. Hansen is co-director of the Center for Pre-Collegiate Engineering Education at the University of St. Thomas. Her current interests as an educational psychologist focus on outreach through the nonprofit
research focuses on the cognitive and pedagogical underpinnings of learning with computer-based multimedia re- sources; knowledge representation through interactive concept maps; meta-analysis of empirical research, and investigation of instructional principles and assessments in STEM. He is currently a Senior Associate Editor of the Journal of Engineering Education.Jacqueline Gartner Ph.D., Campbell University Jacqueline Burgher Gartner is an Assistant Professor at Campbell University in the School of Engineering, which offers a broad BS in engineering with concentrations in chemical and mechanical.David B. Thiessen, Washington State University David B.Thiessen received his Ph.D. in Chemical Engineering from the
] and they have since been distributed to dozens of institutions across the United States as partof a large NSF IUSE grant effort. Figure 1 shows hydraulic loss and double pipe heat exchangerLCDLM kits, both small enough to fit on a standard desk and highly visual. A B Figure 1: Hydraulic loss (A) and double pipe heat exchanger (B) LCDLM kitsThe 2020 coronavirus pandemic has presented a unique challenge in our effort to disseminateand implement LCDLMs across the country; a majority of the participating universities in ourstudy transitioned to an online teaching model in spring of 2020, making in-person use of theLCDLMs unfeasible. Over the past year, our team has developed several virtual
Engineering Education and Electrical and Computer Engineering at Purdue University. He also leads the Global Engineering Education Collabora- tory (GEEC) research group, and is the recipient of an NSF CAREER award to study boundary-spanning roles and competencies among early career engineers. He holds a B.S. in Electrical Engineering from Michigan Tech and M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in Science and Technology Studies (STS) from Virginia Tech. Dr. Jesiek draws on expertise from engineering, computing, and the social sciences to advance under- standing of geographic, disciplinary, and historical variations in engineering education and practice.Dr. David B. Knight, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University David B
Morgan State University. He has authored and co-authored several publications with the recent one on the use of additive manufacturing in building a liquid propellant rocket engine nozzle.Dr. Seong W. Lee, Morgan State University Dr. Lee is currently Professor & Lab Director of Industrial & Systems Engineeing Deparment at Morgan State University.Dr. Lee has been actively involed in development of laboratory hands-on experimental projects using his ongoing research projects to be implemented and used in his teaching classes and capstone design projects.Dr. Gbekeloluwa B. Oguntimein P.E., Morgan State University Dr. Gbekeloluwa B. Oguntimein received his B.S. and Ph.D. degrees in Chemical Engineering from Iowa
characteristics of the program has the potential to be transportable toother institutions.AcknowledgmentThe authors gratefully acknowledge support of this work by the National Science Foundationunder Grant No. 1524527.References1. Freeman, S., Eddya, S. L., McDonough, M., Michelle, K., Smith, B., Okoroafora, N., Jordta, H., and Wenderotha, M. P., (2014). Active learning increases student performance in science, engineering, and mathematics, PNAS, 111, 23-30.2. Hake, R. R. (1998). Interactive-engagement versus traditional methods: A six-thousand survey of mechanics test data for introductory physics courses, American Journal of Physics, 66(1), 64-74.3. Krause, S., Baker, D., Carberry, A., Alford, T., T., Ankeny, C., Brooks, B.J
Paper ID #14856Evaluating Study Abroad Programs: A Follow-Up Effort to Determine Com-parative Value and Importance in Engineering and Non-Engineering Pro-gramsHolt Zaugg PhD, Brigham Young University Holt Zaugg is the Assessment Librarian at the Harold B. Lee Library at Brigham Young University. His research interests focus on assessments and evaluations that improve student learning and integrate library services with other faculty courses.Dr. Gregg Morris Warnick, Brigham Young University Gregg M. Warnick is the Director of the Weidman Center for Global Leadership and Associate Teaching Professor of Engineering
. She is currently working towards a PhD in Chemical Engineering at Washington State University under supervision of Dr. Van Wie and Dr. Thiessen. In addition to her chemical engi- neering research into phase separation in microgravity, Negar is interested in engineering education and new pedagogies. Now she is working on low-cost version of desktop learning modules.Katelyn Dahlke, Washington State University Katelyn Dahlke received her B.S. in chemical engineering from Iowa State University in 2013. She received her M.S. in chemical engineering from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and will receive her Ph.D. from UIUC at the end of summer 2019.David B. Thiessen, Washington State University
biotechnology. His 2007-2008 Fulbright exchange to Nigeria set the stage for him to receive the Marian Smith Award given annually to the most innovative teacher at WSU. He was also the recent recipient of the inaugural 2016 Innovation in Teaching Award given to one WSU faculty member per year.David B. Thiessen, Washington State University David B.Thiessen received his Ph.D. in Chemical Engineering from the University of Colorado in 1992 and has been at Washington State University since 1994. His research interests include fluid physics, acoustics, and engineering education.Dr. Prashanta Dutta, Washington State University Prof. Prashanta Dutta has received his PhD degree in Mechanical Engineering from the Texas A&M