pressure gradients plus gravitational forces plus shearforces. This was an ambitious topic to tackle for both students and teacher (as well ascartoonist). It may not have been completely successful, but the earlier two cartoons helped toset the stage for this more complex representation. Figure 8: Navier-Stokes equation.Many students will recall the apocryphal story of Sir Isaac Newton “discovering” gravity whensitting beneath an apple tree and being struck on the head by a falling apple. This scene is shownin Figure 9 and used to represent the conversion of potential energy into kinetic energy. Adultswho grew up in the 1970’s will remember the Schoolhouse Rock cartoon segment “A Victim ofGravity” which contains the
used for department wide planning and improvement activities. Thismethod engages the learners and the teachers in a cycle that allows real and sustainable labimprovement to be made.References[1] Feisel, L. D., & Rosa, A. J. “The role of the laboratory in undergraduate engineeringeducation.”, Journal of Engineering Education, 94(1), 2005, pp 121-130.[2] Domin, D. S., “A review of laboratory instruction styles.” Journal of Chemical Education,76(4), 1999, pp 543-547.[3] Abdulwahed, Mahmoud, and Zoltan K. Nagy. "Applying Kolb's experiential learning cyclefor laboratory education." Journal of engineering education, 98.3, 2009, pp 283-294.[4] Wankat, P. C., & Oreovicz, F. S. Teaching engineering. Purdue University Press, 1993, 99292-294[5
• Northeastern Creates a new model of education where real world experience earns university credit, removing the divide between work and learning• GE Develops a workforce pipeline prepared and trained to accelerate the transformation to a Digital Industrial company• NU / GE Partnership selected as 1 of 8 university/colleges for DoE initiative Competency Based Bachelors Degree Reviving Apprenticeships• Builds on the foundational legacy of GE’s highly successful Apprenticeship programs• Expands from Northeastern’ s long proven co-op program and student experiences• Leverages GE training resources and expertise to develop a application based, relevant job-ready workforce• Augments the framework throughout with NU faculty expertise, learner supports
generation, one must first look at Baby Boomers andGeneration X. The Baby Boomers born at the end of World War II are independent, rule breakersand creative thinkers that shook up the world as adults in the 1960’s. This generation was verydriven and career oriented. Their children, Gen X’ers, grew up as “latch key kids” that felt thattheir parents didn’t have time for them.2 As a result, the Gen X’ers resolved to be the opposite oftheir parents. Their children, Millennials, were more protected and made to feel “special”. Thisover indulgences has led to many describing them as entitled, disrespectful and disengaged.3They have also grown up in the digital/internet era and feel very comfortable with technology.4Fullerton conducted a focus group of
Education Session CEED 212Academic accommodation process1. Student requests an accommodation2. Interactive process with DS staff3. Accommodation Letter4. Student—Instructor interaction Proceedings of the 2018 Conference for Industry and Education Collaboration Copyright ©2018 American Society for Engineering Education Session CEED 212UD’s academic accommodation process1. Student requests an accommodation Online form: accommodation/s requested, background Schedule a meeting with DS staff Can be any time in the semester
the aircraft at a velocity of V1=280-m/s. Ideally, the air willleave the diffuser with a negligible velocity (V=0). Air is treated as an ideal gas with constant specific heatsCp=1.005-kJ/kg-K. Student can change any input to find the alternative design in jet engine of aircraft. Proceedings of the 2018 Conference for Industry and Education Collaboration Copyright ©2018 American Society for Engineering Education Session ETD 425Case Study 10. Long-hand-calculation of Stiffness Matrix for two dimensional triangular three-node-element in CAE study.There are three topics are show in this spreadsheet. 1. With matrix
-workshop survey; eleven handouts during the workshop that were either completed individually, in dyads,or in small groups; and a follow-up survey in the fall semester of 2018.Data AnalysisA thematic analysis [17] was conducted by categorizing each quote based on emergent themes within thehigher-level categories of student assets and challenges, corresponding to the two prompts on the handout.Thematic analysis is an iterative analysis process that includes reading and rereading participantresponses, developing categories to capture the key component(s) of the responses, and then combining,collapsing, and/or renaming categories based on examinations of the other responses [17]. In addition,each response was coded for workshop location (Texas or
).EverydayCognition:ItsDevelopmentinSocial Context,Cambridge,MA:HarvardUniversityPress. Secules,S.,A.Gupta,A.Elby,E.Tanu,SupportingtheNarrativeAgencyofa MarginalizedEngineeringStudent,JournalofEngineeringEducation107(2),1-33, 2018 Turner,D.W.,III(2010).Qualitativeinterviewdesign:Apracticalguidefornovice investigators.TheQualitativeReport,15(3),754-760 U.S.CentersforDiseaseControl(2016).YouthRisksBehaviorSurvey. Woods,D.R.(1994).Problem-BasedLearning:HowtoGaintheMostinPBL, Waterdown,Ontario:D.R.WoodsPublishing. 17
initiatives, teacher and faculty professional development programs, and S-STEM programs.Dr. Catherine Mobley, Clemson University Catherine Mobley, Ph.D., is a Professor of Sociology at Clemson University. She has over 30 years experience in project and program evaluation and has worked for a variety of consulting firms, non-profit agencies, and government organizations, including the Rand Corporation, the American Association of Retired Persons, the U.S. Department of Education, and the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research. Since 2004, she been a member of the NSF-funded MIDFIELD research project on engineering education; she has served as a Co-PI on several engineering education research projects, including one on
Engineering Strategic Goal of Becoming a National Model of Inclusivity and Collaboration. In The Collaborative Network for Engineering and Computing Diversity annual conference. Washington, DC.Bothwell, M., Furman, K., Driskill, Q.-L., Warner, R., Shaw, S., & Ozkan-Haller, T. (2018b). Empowering faculty and administrators to re-imagine a socially just institution through use of critical pedagogies. In Annual Conference of the Collaborative Network for Engineering and Computing Diversity. Washington, DC.Brownell, S. E., & Tanner, K. D. (2012). Barriers to faculty pedagogical change: Lack of training, time, incentives, and… tensions with professional identity? CBE—Life Sciences Education, 11(4), 339–346.Bucciarelli, L. L
a faculty devel- opment and leadership program to train and recruit diverse PhD students who wish to pursue academic positions in engineering or applied science after graduation. Dr. Sandekian earned B.S. and M.S. degrees in Aerospace Engineering Sciences at CU Boulder in 1992 and 1994, respectively. She went on to earn a Specialist in Education (Ed. S.) degree in Educational Leadership and Policy Studies in 2011 and a Ph.D. in Higher Education and Student Affairs Leadership in December 2017, both from the University of Northern Colorado. She is a Founding Leader of the American Society of Engineering Education (ASEE) Virtual Community of Practice (VCP) for LGBTQ+ Inclusion in Engineering and a facilitator of
Conference, Indianapolis, IN. https://peer. asee. org/20142, 2014.[6] W. C. Lee and K. J. Cross, "Help me help you: Building a support network for minority engineering students," age, vol. 23, p. 1, 2013.[7] J. P. Bean and B. S. Metzner, "A conceptual model of nontraditional undergraduate student attrition," Review of educational Research, vol. 55, pp. 485-540, 1985.[8] V. Tinto, "Constructing Educational Communities: Increasing Retention in Challenging Circumstances," Community College Journal, vol. 64, pp. 26-29, 1994.[9] W. C. Lee Jr, "Providing co-curricular support: A multi-case study of engineering student support centers," Virginia Tech, 2015.[10] W.C. Lee, L. Moyer, A. Godwin, and D. Knight,”Instrument Development: Measuring
of classes (see the below section regarding s tudent and faculty reflections). These new courses will be offered s tarting in 2019, and will serve CIA minors and discipline specific majors as well: ART 376 The Art of Mixed Reality: Conceptual creation, storytelling, interface design in 3D virtual and augmented realms, visual styles and use of metaphors. A theorybased view of mixed reality (MR) worlds, including coding and software, the making of 3D assets, technical challenges and constraints. The students will develop, research, write and propose their own idea for a MR project. ART 470 Conceptual Art and Storyboarding for
, flipping, and efficiency in active learning classrooms. Comput Educ. 2014;78:227-236.16. Kim MK, Kim SM, Khera O, Getman J. The experience of three flipped classrooms in an urban university: an exploration of design principles. Internet High Educ. 2014;22:37-50.17. McLaughlin JE, Roth MT, Glatt DM, et al. The flipped classroom: a course redesign to foster learning and engagement in a health professions school. Acad Med. 2014;89(2):236- 243.18. Piaget J, Elkind D. Six Psychological Studies. Vol 462. Vintage Books; 1968.19. Freeman S, Eddy SL, McDonough M, et al. Active learning increases student performance in science, engineering, and mathematics. Proc Natl Acad Sci. 2014;111(23):8410-8415.20. Topping K, Ehly S
Management, Reliability for System of Systems, and Systems Simulation. He is a topic leader in systems thinking, including systems theory and complex systems, for the Society for Engineering and Management Systems (SEMS). Prior to joining the doctoral program at ODU, he worked as a systems analyst and operations officer for five years. He is a past proceedings chair of the American Society for Engineering Management and is currently a member of the Academy of Management and Institute of Industrial Engineers. He holds a BS in Business, an MA in Operations Management, and PhD in Engineering Management from Old Dominion University.Mr. Parker Jones, Mississippi State University BS Industrial EngineeringEmily S. Wall
students had never heard of these goals but were alleager to incorporate the sustainable development applications into their proposed design projects.Each student was asked to conduct research on the UN Goals and then write a brief essay onwhich goal(s) they wanted to incorporate into their proposed design project. Each group selectedgoals that were most applicable to their design project which can be found on Table 2. Of the 17UN Goals the engineering students selected eight as illustrated in Figure 2. • Goal 5: Gender Equality • Goal 6: Clean Water and Sanitation • Goal 7: Affordable and Clean Energy • Goal 9: Industry, Innovation and Infrastructure • Goal 11: Sustainable Cities and Communities • Goal 12: Responsible Consumption and
support continuing someoutreach methods, streamlining workflows to exclusively use interlibrary loan as a request andfulfillment system, and the need to periodically train interlibrary loan staff. We also recommendthat discoverability of standards in our collection should be improved through catalogingimprovements and creation of finding aids for different audiences.IntroductionWhen designing something for human use, there is often a free-wheeling, creative phase that isunbounded by reality. However, at some point in the implementation of the design, constraintsbecome a part of the creator(s) process, whether it be the laws of physics, available materials, oran agreed-upon convention, ethical limit, or rule. Standards documents represent one form
survey responses, a p-value < 0.005 (= 0.05 / 10 tests)is interpreted as significant.R was used for all analysis [29]. The Internal Review Board approved this study.7. ResultsThe pass rate in Fall 2017 (passive learning textbook) was 78% (57 of 73 students), which wassignificantly lower (p-value = 0.04) than 91% (69 of 76 students) in Fall 2018 (active learningtextbook). Of the students who did not pass, 10 changed majors in Fall 2017, and 2 changedmajors in Fall 2018.Course grades are shown in Table 1. Fall 2018's homework average was 88 out of 100 points,which is interpreted as significantly higher (p-value < 0.001) than Fall 2017's homework averageof 71. Of the grade categories, homework most utilized the textbooks and respective
the data and outcomes from this summer activity will help determine if the winterbreak is a more effective intervention period than the summer, since it happens earlier in thestudents’ academic career.AcknowledgmentThis paper is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant No.1430398. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this materialare those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National ScienceFoundation.References[1] US Census Bureau, Census Data for Kern County and Bakersfield, California, 2010 census and 2019 estimates.[2] California Assessment of Student Performance and Progress, Kern High School District and California Mathematics
-019- 02434-7. [Accessed Jan. 15, 2020].[3] A.W. Eberhardt, O.L. Johnson, et al. “Team-Based Development of Medical Devices: An Engineering-Business Collaborative”. J Biomech Eng. Vol. 138, No. 7, Jul. 2016. [Online]. https://doi.org10.1115/1.4032805 [Accessed Jan. 31, 2020][4] C. Cohen., D.C. Fehder, et al. “The design of startup accelerators”, Research Policy, Vol. 48, No. 7, pp. 1781-1791, Sep. 2019 [Online]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.respol.2019.04.003 [Accessed Feb. 3, 2020].[5] Y. Yazdi, S. Acharya. “ A New Model for Graduate Education and Innovation in Medical Technology”. Ann Biomed Eng, Vol. 41, 1822–1833 (2013). [Online]. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10439-013-0869-4. [Accessed Feb. 3, 2020]
had never heard of these goals but were alleager to incorporate the sustainable development applications into their proposed design projects.Each student was asked to conduct research on the UN Goals and then write a brief essay onwhich goal(s) they wanted to incorporate into their proposed design project. Each group thendiscussed the goals selected by the individual team members and decided upon the goals thatwere most applicable to their design project. These results can be found on Table 2. Of the 17UN Goals the engineering students selected eight as illustrated in Figure 2. • Goal 5: Gender Equality • Goal 6: Clean Water and Sanitation • Goal 7: Affordable and Clean Energy • Goal 9: Industry, Innovation and Infrastructure
analogies are bothhighly relatable and quickly sketched. For example, while discussing the types of networkcabling required between various network devices such as routers, switches, hubs, or computersystems, the analogy of a burger, as shown in Figure 2, can be used.Figure 2. Ethernet cabling between network devices shown using the analogy of a burger. "R" fora router, "S" for switch, "H" for hub, "Comp" for computer, and "X" for crossover cables. OtherEthernet cables connecting networking devices are straight-through.Connections between similar network devices (router to router, for example) require theinterchange of the transmit and receive pins on the connectors at each end of the cable. Weachieve this using crossover Ethernet cables. Under
also believe the project quiz assessment strategy may be a viable strategy forsimilar programming courses.References[1] Terenzini, Patrick T., et al. "Collaborative learning vs. lecture/discussion: Students' reported learning gains." Journal of Engineering Education 90.1 (2001): 123-130.[2] Vitasari, P., Wahab, M. N. A., Othman, A., Herawan, T., & Sinnadurai, S. K. (2010). The relationship between study anxiety and academic performance among engineering students. Procedia-Social and Behavioral Sciences, 8, 490-497.[3] Bell, A. E., Spencer, S. J., Iserman, E., & Logel, C. E. (2003). Stereotype threat and women's performance in engineering. Journal of Engineering Education, 92(4), 307-312.[4] Joy, M., & Luck, M. (1999
Attrition Process,” Rev. High. Educ., vol. 23, no. 2, pp. 199–227, 2000.[8] S. K. Gardner, “Student and faculty attributions of attrition in high and low- completing doctoral programs in the United States,” High. Educ., vol. 58, no. 1, pp. 97–112, Nov. 2009.[9] A. E. Austin, “Preparing the Next Generation of Faculty: Graduate School as Socialization to the Academic Career,” J. Higher Educ., vol. 73, no. 1, pp. 94–122, 2002.[10] A. E. Austin, H. Campa, C. Pfund, D. L. Gillan-Daniel, R. Mathieu, and J. Stoddart, “Preparing STEM doctoral students for future faculty careers,” New Dir. …, vol. 2009, no. 117, pp. 83–95, 2009.[11] C. L. Colbeck, “Professional identity development theory and doctoral education
years between 2014 - 2016. Section 6 discusses the most recent changes between2017. Section 7 concludes.2. Other styles of online classesThis section briefly details some of the other styles of online classes that are being used. Theintention of this work is not to say that these other online structures are "worse" than what we aredoing at our university, but rather should be used as a point of comparison for the other optionsof teaching an online class.2.1 Massive Online Open Courses (MOOCs)A MOOC is an online course with the option of free and open registration, a publicly sharedcurriculum, and open-ended outcomes [1]. MOOCs have been around since the late 2000's andstill remain popular today. Universities such as Stanford, Harvard, MIT
- china.com/product/gyonUFwYCrhp/China-50-5000-Gallon-Continuous-Stirred-Tank- Reactor-fixed-speed-or-convertable-speed-.html. (b.) “Chemical reactor,” Wikipedia, 19-Nov-2019. [Online]. Available: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chemical_reactor. (c.) T. Geisler, “Isothermal CSTR | James C. Sutherland.” [Online]. Available: https://sutherland.che.utah.edu/teaching/educational-apps/isothermal-cstr/. (d.) K. Wittrup, and William Green Jr.. 10.37 Chemical and Biological Reaction Engineering. Spring 2007. Massachusetts Institute of Technology: MIT OpenCourseWare, https://ocw.mit.edu. License: Creative Commons BY-NC-SA. [12] M. D. Koretsky, D. M. Gilbuena, S. B. Nolen, G. Tierney, and S. E. Volet
facilitate learning laboratory skills while practicing social distancing.references[1] D. D. Burkey, D. D. Anastasio, and A. Suresh, “Improving Student Attitudes Toward the Capstone Laboratory Course Using Gamification,” ASEE Annu. Conf. Exhib., vol. June 23-26, no. Atlanta, GA, 2013.[2] A. Antonaci, R. Klemke, and M. Specht, “The Effects of Gamification in Online Learning Environments : A Systematic Literature Review,” Informatics, vol. 6, no. 32, pp. 1–22, 2019.[3] R. Alsawaier, “The Effect of Gamification on Motivation and Engagement,” Int. J. Inf. Learn. Technol., 2017.[4] M. R. N. Gari, G. S. Walia, and A. D. Radermacher, “Gamification in Computer Science Education: a Systematic Literature Review,” ASEE
, Inc. (1986). Tomorrow's Teachers: A Report of the Holmes Group. EastLansing, MI: Author. (ED 270 454)[3] A Nation Prepared: Teachers for the 21st Century: The Report of the Task Force OnTeaching As a Profession, Carnegie Forum On Education and the Economy. Washington, D.C:The Forum, 1986.[4] L. S. Lee, “Status and anticipated development of technology teacher education programs inthe United States,” Ph.D. dissertation, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, 1991.[5] H. C. Hall and S.W. Miller, “Home economics teacher education into the 21stcentury,” Journal of Home Economics, vol. 81, no. 2, pp. 7-14, 1989.[6] W. Dugger, “Technology Education in the United States,” in XXII International Conferenceon Technological Education in Schools
, the data contained funding information for all doctoral students, including fundingmechanism(s) and total dollar amount of funding by month for each funding mechanism. Weconsolidated the funding categories to Teaching Assistantship (TA), Research Assistantship(RA), Fellowship, and No University Funding. Assistant instructor (AI) positions were classifiedunder TA, and any scholarships the students received were included under Fellowship. Anyfunding received externally from the institution was not included in the dataset. However,government agency funding, such as that through the National Science Foundation (NSF) or theNational Institutes of Health (NIH), are distributed to students through the institution and wouldbe included in the dataset