Congress and Exposition, Huston, Texas Nov.13-19, 2015 • Butler, P. B., Tanbour, E., Rahman, S., and Smith, T. F., ”Virtual International Design Teams,” Proceedings of 2002 ASEE Midwest Section Meeting, Madison, WI, September 2002 Significant Other Publications • M. F. Alzoubi, E. Y. Tanbour and R. Al-Waked (2011), Compression and Hysteresis Curves of Nonlin- ear Polyurethane Foams under Different Densities, Strain Rates and Different Environmental Conditions, IMECE11 2011, Denver, Colorado, USA • E. Y. Tanbour (2011), Institutional Effectiveness, the Point Of View of Southern Association of Colleges and Schools (SACS), King Saud University, Feb 2011 • Emad Y. Tanbour, Rafat Al-Waked and Mohamed F. Alzoubi, Experimental
students in computing-related programs. American c Society for Engineering Education, 2022 Playing in the Sandbox: Developing Entrepreneurial Mindset Communication Skills in Introductory Programming Students Stephany Coffman-Wolph and John K. Estell Electrical & Computer Engineering and Computer Science Department Ohio Northern University Ada, Ohio 45810 Email: s-coffman-wolph@onu.edu, j-estell@onu.eduIntroductionAs one of the charter members of the Kern Entrepreneurial Engineering Network (KEEN), theOhio Northern University
Biology 12 11% 10% Chemical Engineering 5% Student Count 10 Chemistry 16% Civil Engineering 8 Discover Engineering 21% 5% Discover S cience
is also tied to the perception of how others mightinvalidate its existence. This perception is supported by literature which indicates that asexuality“lack[s] social credibility” and suffers “social invisibility” across countries and cultures [30].Since asexuality is characterized by social invisibility, Kayla’s only desirable path forward toresisting was internal. She concluded that asexuality was not a useful or valid identity toexternally resist through, partly because it was socially invisible, and partly because she stillstruggled with her asexual identity development. Kayla's nuanced view of her asexualityhighlights in sharp relief Mollet's finding of the complexity of identity disclosure management,distinctly influenced by perceived
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). Productive communication in an afterschool engineering club with girls who are English Language Learners. Theory Into Practice, 56(4), 246-254.[8] Hester, K., & Cunningham, C. (2007, January). Engineering is elementary: An engineering and technology curriculum for children. In ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition, Conference Proceedings.[9] Cunningham, C. M. (2009). Engineering is elementary. The bridge, 30(3), 11-17.[10] Yoon, S. Y., Dyehouse, M., Lucietto, A. M., Diefes‐Dux, H. A., & Capobianco, B. M. (2014). The effects of integrated science, technology, and engineering education on elementary students' knowledge and identity development. School Science and Mathematics, 114(8), 380-391.[11] English, L
, “Multidisciplinary capstone design at the University of Houston,” Advances in Engineering Education, vol. 2, no. 1, 2010.[6] A. Qattawi, A. Alafaghani, M. A. Ablat, and M. S. Jaman, “A multidisciplinary engineering capstone design course: A case study for design-based approach,” International Journal of Mechanical Engineering Education, 2019, doi: 10.1177/0306419019882622.[7] S. W. Laguette, “Assessment of project completion for capstone design projects,” ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition, Conference Proceedings, 2012.[8] K. Edström and A. Kolmos, “PBL and CDIO: complementary models for engineering education development,” European Journal of Engineering Education, vol. 39, no. 5, pp. 539–555
Control and Prevention, March 1, 2021 [online], Available: https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/#datatracker-home.[7] S. H. Woolf, D. A. Chapman, and J. H. Lee, “COVID-19 as the Leading Cause of Death in the United States,” JAMA, vol. 325, no. 2, pp. 123-124.[8] W. E. Wei, Z. Li, C. J., Chiew, S. E. Yong, M. P. Toh, and V. J. Lee, “Presymptomatic Transmission of SARS-CoV-2 — Singapore, January 23–March 16, 2020” US Department of Health and Human Services/Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, vol. 69, no. 14, pp. 411-415, Apr. 2020.[9] D. Buitrago-Garcia, D, Egli-Gany, M. J. Counotte, S. Hossmann, H. Imeri, A. M. Ipekci, G. Salanti, and N Low, “Occurrence and
– 8.597.8.[2] K. Gieskes and M. Elmore, “First-year engineering – deciding on a major,” 12th Annual First- Year Engineering Experience (FYEE) Conf., July 26 – 28, 2020, Michigan State, East Lansing, MI.[3] S. Zahorian, M. Elmore, and K. J. Temkin, “Factors that influence engineering freshman in choosing their major,” Proc. 120th ASEE Annual Conf. & Exposition, June 23 – 26, 2013, Atlanta, GA.[4] A. Theiss, J. E. Robertson, R. L. Kajfez, K. M. Kecskemety, and K. Meyers, “Engineering major selection: an examination of initial choice and switching throughout the first year,” In Proc. 123rd ASEE Annual Conf. & Exposition, June 26 – 29, 2016, New Orleans, LA.[5] S. L. Kelly, D. K. Maczka, and J. R
calculators in teaching and learning mathematics. International Journal of Instruction (2).[2] Rohrabaugh, A. P. and Cooper, C. M. (2016). Calculators in high school classrooms. Honors Research Projects, 313.[3] Sheets, C. L. (2007). Calculators in the classroom: Help or hindrance? Action Research Projects. 33.[4] Mao, Yi & White, Tyreke & Sadler, Philip & Sonnert, Gerhard. (2017). The association of precollege use of calculators with student performance in college calculus. Educational Studies in Mathematics. 94. 10.1007/s10649-016-9714-7[5] Tiwari, S., & Rathore, S. "Teaching software process models to software engineering students: An exploratory study," in 2019 26th Asia-Pacific
led to an increased interest in PDC topics. Surveys will be specifically designedfor the introductory sequence of courses and the specialized parallel computing course.References [1] Mohamed Zahran and Marsha J. Berger. Parallel computing at the undergraduate level: Lessons learned and insights. In Proceedings of the Workshop on Computer Architecture Education, WCAE’19, New York, NY, USA, 2019. Association for Computing Machinery. ISBN 9781450368421. doi: 10.1145/3338698.3338889. URL https://doi.org/10.1145/3338698.3338889. [2] C. M. Brown, Y. Lu, and S. Midkiff. Introducing parallel programming in undergraduate curriculum. In 2013 IEEE International Symposium on Parallel Distributed Processing, Workshops and Phd Forum, pages
Technology by the Numbers 2019, Washington, D.C.: American Society for Engineering Eduation, 2020.[2] L. P. Ford, J. Brennan, J. Cole, K. D. Dahm, M. V. Jamison, L. J. Landherr, D. L. Silverstein, B. K. Vaughen, M. A. Vigeant and S. W. Thiel, "How We Teach: Chemical Engineering in the First Year," in 127th ASEE Annual Conference, Montreal, Canada, 2020.[3] D. L. Silverstein and M. Vigeant, "Results of the 2010 Survey on Teaching Chemical Reaction Engineering," Chemical Engineering Education, vol. 46, no. 1, pp. 31-40, 2012.[4] H. S. Fogler, Elements of Chemical Reaction Engineering, Pearson, 2016.[5] H. S. Fogler, Essentials of Chemical Reaction Engineering, Pearson, 2018.[6] D. L. Silverstein and M. A. Vigeant, "How We Teach
Impact on Student Success in Engineering and Engineering Technology Education,” in Proceedings, ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition, June 2017, Columbus, OH.[2] Kennedy, E. D., McMahon, S. R., and D. Reis, “Independence in the Making: Using Makerspaces Experiences to Build Foundational Entrepreneurial Competencies,” Entrepreneurship Education and Pedagogies, 0(0) pp 1-18. 2020.[3] “NAE Grand Challenge Scholars Program”, National Academy of Engineers. Accessed Jan. 27th, 2020. [Online] Available: http://www.engineeringchallenges.org/GrandChallengeScholarsProgram.aspx[4] “What Is KEEN,” Accessed Mar. 9th, 2021. [Online]. Available: https://engineeringunleashed.com/what-is-keen[5] J. B. Hylton, D. Mikesell, J.-D. Yoder, and H
engineering, highway design. engineering management, geographic information systems, and land surveying. He has served in numerous leadership positions in ITE, ASCE and TRB. American c Society for Engineering Education, 2021 Impact of Calculus Peer Mentoring on Leadership Development and Math Self-EfficacyIntroductionPilot ExCEL Calculus SequenceWe have recently piloted a three-semester Calculus experience for scholars in the Excellence inCivil Engineering Leadership (ExCEL) program, which is sponsored through a National ScienceFoundation (NSF) Scholarships in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (S-STEM) grant. The goal of the ExCEL
, San Diego, California, 1998. [3] L. C. Burton, J. V. Matson, and J. G. Soper, “The engineering leadership development minor at penn state,” in ASEE Annual Conference, Salt Lake City, Utah, 1996. [4] B. M. Gordon and M. B. Silevitch, “Re-engineering engineering education,” The New England Journal of Higher Education, pp. 18–19, 2009. [5] S. Pitts, S. Klosterman, and S. Mcgonagle, “A successful approach to educating engi- neering leaders at the graduate level,” in Canadian Engineering Education Association Conference, Montreal, Quebec, 2013, pp. 1–8. [6] “Fellowship in leadership,” https://lead.northwestern.edu/phd-students/ fellowship-in- leadership.html, accessed: 2020-01-29. [7] “GEL graduate program,” http://gelp.mit.edu
thematic analysis approach, followingBraun & Clark’s six-phase method [20]. We first read the interview transcripts for familiarity,recording memos with summaries and initial reactions and analysis. We then re-read thetranscripts, generating initial codes and beginning to identify themes with respect to our researchquestion. We then reviewed the transcripts again to further develop the themes. We drew onNowell et al.’s [21] approach to conducting and reporting trustworthy thematic analysis. Tworesearch team members each reviewed each transcript to begin engaging with the data. We thencoded five interview transcripts together to develop a coding scheme and begin to identifythemes. We used both inductive codes and deductive codes. We developed
, surveying was very clearly viewed as a majorcomponent of a standard Civil Engineering curriculum. In the late 1920’s, the University ofWashington required 27 credits of surveying courses, which comprised 14% of the credits for theCivil Engineering program [3].Surveying was clearly having its heyday during this time, but by the mid-20th century, theimportance of surveying relative to other areas of Civil Engineering slowly started to diminish.As Civil Engineering broadened its purview, it began to include subdisciplines such as structuralengineering, geotechnical engineering, environmental engineering, construction science andmanagement, transportation and traffic engineering, and hydraulic engineering. In addition, CivilEngineering became a much
Emphasize? A Systematic Review," Journal of Engineering Education, vol. 106, pp.475-526, 2017.[6] S. Sheppard, A. Colby, K. Macatangay and W. Sullivan, "What is Engineering Practice?,"International Journal of Engineering Education, vol. 22, 2006.[7] J. Mills and D. Treagust, "Engineering Education, Is Problem-Based or Project-BasedLearning the Answer," Australasian Journal of Engineering Education, 2003.[8] L. Shuman, M. Besterfield-Sacre and J. MCGOURTY, "The ABET 'professional skills'—Canthey be taught? Can they be assessed?," Journal of Engineering Education, vol. 94, 2005.[9] E. P. Douglas, M. Koro-Ljungberg, N. J. McNeill, Z. T. Malcolm and D. J. Therriault,"Moving beyond formulas and fixations: solving open-ended engineering problems
Downstream impacted High School 60. [G-SRT.9] Derive the formula for the area of a triangle by drawing an auxiliary line from a vertex perpendicular to the opposite side. Downstream impacted High School 61. [S-ID.1] Represent data with plots on the real number line (dot plots, histograms, and box plots). Downstream impacted High School 62. [S-ID.2] Use statistics appropriate to the shape of the data distribution to compare center and spread of two or more different data sets. Downstream impacted High School 63. [S-ID.3] Interpret differences in shape, center, and spread in the context of the data sets, accounting for possible effects of extreme data
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’ awareness and knowledge of ethical issues andtheir understanding of the responsibility of engineers. Through the null and hidden curriculum,socialization can sometimes go unnoticed. However, this process is formative in learning andidentity formation. Situating ESI in socialization can illuminate the formal and informal elementsthat influence students’ enculturation into the profession and the ways in which undergraduateeducation can support ESI as a value and norm of engineering.AcknowledgementsThis material is based on work supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant Nos.1540348, 1540341, 1540308, and 1755390. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions orrecommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not
),” Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 2020. [Online]. Available:https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/index.html,https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/faq.html#Coronavirus-Disease-2019. [AccessedJanuary 23, 2021].[4] S. J. Daniel, “Education and the COVID-19 pandemic,” Prospects, vol. 49, no. 1, pp. 91-96,April 2020. [Online]. Available: https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11125-020-09464-3.[5] W. Ali, “Online and remote learning in higher education institutes: A necessity inlight of COVID-19 pandemic,” Higher Education Studies, vol. 10, no. 3, pp.16-25, 2020.[Online]. Available: https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1259642.[6] C. Wang, D. M. Shannon, and M. E. Ross, “Students’ characteristics, self-regulated learning,technology self
: Preparing the Future Computing Workforce for Ethical Decision-Makingthrough Interactive Case Studies”. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendationsexpressed in this material are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of thefunding agencies. The research study has been approved by the Institutional Review Board atGeorge Mason University. 13ReferencesABET. (n.d.) Criteria for Accrediting Engineering Programs. https://www.abet.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/EAC-Criteria-2020-2021.pdfAl-Aqeel, S. A. (2013). Pharmacy Students Feedback on the use of Role-play in Teaching Ethics.Pharmacy Education, 13.Birsch, D., & Fielder, J. H. 1994. The Ford Pinto case: A study in
, employer partners, and students (or interns)as they collaborate in experiential learning programs. The platform was created in collaborationwith experiential educators worldwide and was integrated into the intervention in 2018. Theintervention leverages Practera to: • mediate the three-way relationship between an employer partner, the educator, and the student/s. • provide the educational scaffolding to empower students who have not previously worked on employer projects with the skills and perspective to successfully contribute in a work environment—especially when navigating as a remote worker. • provide the educator with real-time learning analytics designed to unearth collaboration issues, track each
] M. Henri, M. D. Johnson, and B. Nepal, “A Review of Competency-Based Learning: Tools, Assessments, and Recommendations,” J. Eng. Educ., vol. 106, no. 4, pp. 607–638, 2017.[2] B. S. Bloom, “Mastery Learning,” in Mastery Learning: Theory and Practice, New York: Rinehart & Winston, 1971, pp. 47–63.[3] S. Sangelkar, O. M. Ashour, R. L. Warley, and O. Onipede, “Mastery learning in engineering: A case study in statics,” in 2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, 2014.[4] J. Moore, “Mastery grading of engineering homework assignments,” in Proceedings - Frontiers in Education Conference, FIE, 2016, pp. 1–9.[5] S. L. Post, “Standards-based grading in a thermodynamics course,” Int. J. Eng. Pedagog., vol. 7
region of south Texas where manycounties have Hispanic/Latinx majority populations [4]. As a result, TAMUK has a highpercentage of undergraduates that identify as Hispanic/Latinx, 75% in fall of 2020 [5]. Researchin higher education has identified challenges for Hispanic students at all levels, communitycolleges [6,7], universities [8,9], and in graduate study [10,11]. Recently completed research hasaffirmed that these challenges exist for Texas A&M University-Kingsville students [12,13,14].Rendón et al.’s report of perceived challenges to Latinx student success in STEM (based on theNSF award # 1759134 to Laredo College) provides a succinct summary: “(1) Lack of culture ofsupport, (2) Lack of educational resources, (3) Academic deficiencies
2019 Full-Time Faculty (M) Daytime 7 Spring 2020 Full-Time Faculty (M) Daytime 12 Full-Time Staff (K) Daytime 13 Fall 2020 Adjunct Faculty (S) Evening 4Team Projects 1 and 2The first project is a self-directed exploration of applying strain gages to a beam. Students mustfirst identify sources for answering comprehension-level questions regarding the strain gage andbridge circuit. For instance, “In your own words, define the gage factor and describe why itmatters” or “In your own words, describe the purpose and process of balancing the bridgecircuit”. Next
future.8 AcknowledgmentsThis material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation under Grants No.1723209 and 1723245. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed inthis material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the NationalScience Foundation.9 References[1] R. W. Fairlie, F. Hoffmann and P. Oreopoulos, "A Community College Instructor Like Me: Race and Ethnicity Interactions in the Classroom," The American Economic Review, vol. 104, no. 8, pp. 2567-2591, August 2014.[2] A. Perrakis and L. S. Hagedorn, "Latino/a Student Success in Community Colleges and Hispanic-Serving Institution Status," Community College Journal of Research and Practice, vol
“Simulation…hasbecome ubiquitous in engineering education.” More recently, Magana [4] presents research donewith a panel of 18 experts from academia and 19 from industry, on what modeling andsimulation (M&S) practices should be integrated into engineering education. There wassignificant consensus on the need for skills related to validation, acknowledging uncertainty inthe interpretation of simulation predictions, and developing intuition and being critical of results.Developing a healthy doubt of computer-generated results in students is an issue that others haveaddressed [5], [6]. Both the increasing use of M&S, and the need for the credibility of M&Sresults to be questioned, is addressed in the ASME Guide for Verification and
Paper ID #34468Best Practices for Attracting Young Talent to the Pennsylvania and U.S.Metalcasting IndustryC. R. Hasbrouck, Pennsylvania State University C. R. Hasbrouck is a graduate research assistant and doctoral candidate in the Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering Department at Penn State. C. R. received a B.S. in Mechanical Engi- neering from Trine University, a M.S. in Mechanical Engineering from Colorado School of Mines, a M.S. in Industrial Engineering from Penn State University, and is currently finishing a Ph.D. in Indus- trial Engineering. Most of C. R.’s research is for ferrous alloy