Paper ID #15704Creation of an Undergraduate Engineering Laboratory with Minimal Fund-ingDr. Amanie N. Abdelmessih, California Baptist University Before joining California Baptist University fall 2013, Dr. Abdelmessih taught in several universities, starting with Northrop University at the beginning of her career, and spent the last 16 years at Saint Mar- tin’s University, where she was the director of the Thermal Engineering Laboratory, which she founded and developed. She led the efforts to start the Master of Mechanical Engineering program, which started fall 2012 at Saint Martin’s University. She developed and taught
1Question: Course best aspectInteresting and allowed for creativityLearning to effectively use CAD was very helpful and I think it will help me a lotin my future careers. It was nice to be allowed to be creative with choosing whatwe wanted to model and make it our own.The individual project was a great way to learnworking on your own designs for the TestsIts a fun creative courseThe creativity and freedom with design optionsindividual projectsThe assignments given were open ended and allowed the students to be creative.This allowed for greater understanding of key concepts and enthusiasm in thecourse.The best aspect for me was that the individual project and the group project gaveme a creative outlet.Open ended CAD projectsThe best aspect of this
networks, real-time computing, mobile and wireless networks, cognitive radio networks, trust and information security, and semantic web. He is a recipient of the US Department of Energy Career Award. His research has been supported by US Department of Energy, National Science Foundation, Air Force Office of Scientific Research, Air Force Research Laboratories, Ohio Supercomputer Center, and the State of Ohio.Prof. Prabhaker Mateti, Wright State University Prabhaker Mateti, Ph.D. in Computer Science, 1976, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. My research interests are in Internet security, distributed systems, programming language design, techni- cal aspects of software engineering, and graph algorithms. My recent
experiences, outcome expectations, physics identity, and physics career choice: A gender study. J. Res. Sci. Teach. Journal of Research in Science Teaching.25. Oyserman, D., & Destin, M. (2010). Identity-Based Motivation: Implications for Intervention. The Counseling Psychologist.26. Hackman, J., and Oldham, G. Motivation through the design of work: test of a theory. Organizational Behavior and Human Performance, 16, 2, August 1976, Pp. 250-279, ISSN 0030-5073, 10.1016/0030-5073(76)90016-7.27. Jones, B. D. (2009). Motivating students to engage in learning: The MUSIC Model of Academic Motivation. International Journal of Teaching and Learning in Higher Education, 21(2), 272-285.Appendix A Engineering Identification &
begin their journey to becoming an Engineer in a classroom alongsidedozens, if not hundreds, of their peers. These early courses are intended to present students witha set of core knowledge and skills that will prove useful across all engineering disciplines, thusmolding the foundation of their academic careers. Year by year, thousands of students will gothrough this rite of passage in various class sections, with various instructors, eventuallychoosing between various engineering disciplines. It is not difficult to find examples of academicpublications pertaining to the development, implementation, and performance of what we willcall ‘large format courses’, a core course required for most if not all engineering students, taughtby many
skills the project intended to develop. The skills they developed will be useful to them notonly in the context of design, but in their future engineering careers. As pointed out by theNational Academy of Engineering8, the engineer of 2020 will need creativity, teamwork, andcommunication skills. The students’ survey responses indicated that teamwork and creativity inparticular were developed as a result of this project.The student surveys also indicated that they learned about the need to test designs. In theircomments, they emphasized that they realized how difficult it is to take something from theconceptual stage to a final product, and that they would have liked more time to continue to testand iterate their designs. This indicates that
teaminteractions that characterize 21st century engineering careers. These professional skills may beeffectively assessed using a performance assessment that consists of three components: (1) a taskthat elicits the performance; (2) the performance itself (which is the event or artifact to beassessed); and (3) a criterion-referenced instrument, such as a rubric, to measure the quality ofthe performance.6Engineering Professional Skill Assessment (EPSA)The Engineering Professional Skills Assessment (EPSA)7 was created as a direct method forsimultaneously teaching and assessing professional skills, such as ethics. EPSA is a performanceassessment consisting of: 1. a 1-2 page scenario about an interdisciplinary contemporary engineering problem intended
Theory, Signals and Systems, Electromagnetic Theory, Dig- ital Signal Processing, and Dynamic Modeling and Control. His research interests include Engineering Education, Robotics, Applied Digital Control, and Signal Processing.Joseph D Legris, Roger Williams University School of Engineering, Computing and Construction Management I am a fourth year undergraduate student pursuing a degree in Mechanical Engineering. I have experience in Matlab, SolidWorks, C+ language, and all Microsoft office applications. I have spent my career thus far involved in autonomous robotics design, dynamic modelling,and material studies. I am currently part of a bio medical design team entering the VentureWell design competition.Charles FlynnMr
what it means to be an engineer so as to get a clearer sense of my perceived calling in my life and career.” 8. “…a) better understand the needs of the poor and disadvantaged and/or b) work within constraints of a limited budget to choose between technical alternatives.”The summary of student ratings of the top three responses followed by responses to theremaining options appears in Table 1 below. Table 1. Rank and ratings by project students in the pilot survey for possible response statements to the survey question as indicated above. Response Overall Overall Average Junior (P1) Senior (P3) WERCware Statement Rank Rating (N=20) Avg. Rating Avg. Rating Team Avg. Item
in the ClassroomMany have recognized the potential uses of drones within the classroom; however, there has beenlittle work on how they can be successfully integrated within the existing curriculum. It can beargued that this may be related to concerns about safety, security, privacy and liability. However,drones have been successfully incorporated into existing outreach activities to encourage studentsto pursue careers in science and engineering by many 5 15 11 . This makes arguments about safetyand security difficult to support. One possible reason for the slow uptake of UAVs within thewider curriculum may be because they are perceived to be “toys” 15 . This may lead people tooverlook their potential to revolutionize the computer engineering
experience was closely related to Likert: Strongly Agree, Agree, Disagree,my career interests. Strongly DisagreeThe workload I was given kept me sufficiently Likert: Strongly Agree, Agree, Disagree,challenged. Strongly DisagreeI feel that the work I performed was of value Likert: Strongly Agree, Agree, Disagree,professionally. Strongly DisagreeGiven your job description, what were its best Free responsefeatures?What were its drawbacks? Free responseWhat is your overall evaluation of this work Exceeds, Meets, or Below Expectationsassignment?Did you have an exit interview with your co-op Yes or Noemployer to
dependence on computers seriouslychallenges educators to provide information in more dynamic, compelling, thorough, andinteractive ways. Furthermore, shortened attention spans impede students from staying engagedand focused in math and science classrooms, resulting in poorer performance and diminishedinterest in pursuing technical careers. It has been shown that student involvement through hands-on activities and tinkering in and out the classroom can and does help student engage, focus andlearn better basic and more advanced engineering concepts. It is also important to note that suchstudent engagement has also been identified as a key factor in remedying the achievement gapamong minority populations. Many tools have been developed that use the
incorporated in a DDM course offered in the Mechanical EngineeringTechnology Program. This new course enables students to learn the theoretical aspects as well ashelp them understand the technological impact of DDM to the manufacturing industry. Thiscourse prepares them to deal with the newer developments and face upcoming challengeswhether they will be pursuing engineering careers of product designer, 3D printing professionals.In this course students gain hands on experience in AM processes, product designing, 3Dprinting, and were able to analyze the technology by using product life cycle approach.This newly developed course is successful in attracting a significant number of students. Thecourse helps us to serve the advanced manufacturing community
traits in recent collegegraduates (Hart Research Associates, 2007). There is no doubt that these expectations arecritical for STEM majors who are entering the ever-changing, high-tech workforce as well asthose pursuing academic careers. In the Engineer of 2020 (2004), the National Academy ofEngineers (NAE) highlighted the importance of education that prepares students for a rapidlychanging, global, technologically advanced, and innovative workplace. In order to be successfulin such an environment the NAE outlined the characteristics of the future engineer. Amongthese characteristics are strong analytical skills, practical ingenuity, creativity, agility, andflexibility.Creative work in most disciplines is more than having eccentric or unique
authored numerous papers on sus- tainability related to topics such as low impact development and carbon sequestration, and is active in the sustainability education community. Dr. Haselbach is a licensed professional engineer and a LEED AP (BD+C). Prior to her academic career she founded an engineering consulting company in the New York – Connecticut area. Her degrees include a BS in Civil and Environmental Engineering from Cornell, an MS in Chemical Engineering from UC Berkeley, and a PhD in Environmental Engineering from the Uni- versity of Connecticut. She is currently an Associate Professor in Civil and Environmental Engineering at Washington State University, an Associate Director of the USDOT Tier 1 UTC: Center
Principal Investigator John Mather learned thislesson early in his career. During his graduate studies, Mather designed a balloon payloadintended to measure cosmic background radiation. He and his team had grown tired of testingand forewent some of their planned tests. The payload failed. “Testing is tiresome, tedious,boring, and essential,” said Mather. “If you do not test it, it will not work.”27 Years later, afterMather set aside his involvement in research related to cosmic background radiation, NASAoffered him the opportunity to fly the experiment in space on the Cosmic Background Explorer(COBE). A mission fraught with challenges and multiple redesigns, he carried the lessons of hisfailed graduate experiment with him: test, test, test. The
Technical College, and Chandler-Gilbert Community Col- lege. The award focused on expanding outreach activities to increase the awareness of potential college students about career opportunities in electronics technologies. Dr. Alaraje is a member of the American Society for Engineering Education (ASEE), a member of the ASEE Electrical and Computer Engineer- ing Division, a member of the ASEE Engineering Technology Division, a senior member of the Institute of Electrical & Electronic Engineers (IEEE), and a member of the Electrical and Computer Engineering Technology Department Heads Association (ECETDHA). c American Society for Engineering Education, 2016 Seven Years Study on the
11 11Figure 2. Radar plots of models of percent faculty allocation in position descriptions (a) as presently prescribed to faculty and (b) distributed activity after transformation.6.2 Progress to-date and looking forwardWe sought to initiate the project by providing space for all faculty and staff in CBEE toparticipate. As a mechanism we used the annual Fall Term Faculty Retreat (an all-day eventutilized to initiate each new academic year) as a forum to convey the message that the work andrewards of this project are available for all faculty and staff to participate in, and according totheir own interests, expertise, and career trajectories. Subsequent to a brief
the design and implementation of mechatronic and production engineering courses. His non-academic career is centered on product development and manufacturing processes.Dr. Alejandra J. Magana, Purdue University, West Lafayette Alejandra Magana is an Associate Professor in the Department of Computer and Information Technology and an affiliated faculty at the School of Engineering Education at Purdue University. She holds a B.E. in Information Systems, a M.S. in Technology, both from Tec de Monterrey; and a M.S. in Educational Technology and a Ph.D. in Engineering Education from Purdue University. Her research is focused on identifying how model-based cognition in STEM can be better supported by means of
engineering and Virtual Instrumentations) in Madrid, Spain. He is Fellow mem- ber of IEEE (for contributions to distance learning in electrical and computer engineering education) and member of the Board of Governors (BoG) (2005–2018) of the IEEE Education Society, President (2013- 2014) and Jr Past-President (2015-2016) of the IEEE Education Society; Founder and Past-Chairman (2004-2006) of the Spanish Chapter of the IEEE Education Society, Past-Chair of the IEEE Spain Sec- tion (2010-2011) and IEEE Region 8 Educational Activities Subcommittee Chair. He has been awarded with the 2012 TAEE (Technologies Applied to Electronic Education) Professional Career Award, IEEE EDUCON 2011 Meritorious Service Award (jointly with
of applicants. The study analyzed the bump inadmission standards for SAT scores using a logistic regression. The bonus for African-Americanapplicants is roughly equivalent to an extra 230 SAT points4.A study out of the University of Oklahoma addressed the decreasing enrollment of engineeringstudents across the nation. As a result, the school investigated the key factors that influenceselection of engineering as a career path and initiated a corrective program to reverse this trend2.This study is not focused on how the applicants are admitted, but focused on recruitingapplicants based on key factors.Additionally, the U.S. Coast Guard Academy suggested two methods to achieve diversity. Inmodel A, the strategy is to attract academically
● inclusion of clearer visuals and better multimedia capabilities Digication was chosen as the electronic notebook platform. Digication is a university sponsored and maintained tool which interacts well with Google collaborative software already implemented on campus. Digication allows students to create their own personal eFolios by forming websites which are collections of webpages and has many ‘modules’ available for the addition of artifacts on each page including rich text, images, video, audio, among others. Students can access and edit their eFolio at any time from anywhere (with internet access) and allow for access throughout their college career including after graduation. Additionally, team members and even ‘external’ community partners
multidisciplinaryengineering problems. It focuses on the engineering design process, teamwork, communication,and other skills that are important for engineers. It also introduces students to tools that will beuseful in their future curriculum and careers. This multidisciplinary course is offered tomechanical, aerospace, chemical, and electrical engineering majors and it meets for one 50-minute lecture and one 3-hour lab each week during a 15-week semester. Students in the courseare given the opportunity to apply the engineering design process, as well as practice and/or learnother important engineering skills by working on a hands-on team-based design project duringthe labs in a makerspace.In the past, various design projects have been implemented in this course
paper sheds light on: the mission, the nature, andrelevant benchmarks of this collaborative effort. Modifying curricula and programs towardindustrial relevance and the “practice”, regarded by many as a step in the right direction, willhelp equip graduates with the “tools of the trade”, thus lessening the burden on the industry inthe locale, in having to spend time and effort preparing and training employees at the start oftheir career. If engineering faculty and program planners would slant curricula and programsmore in the direction of “industrial relevance” and the “practice”, it would help a great deal inequipping engineering graduates with the “tools of the trade” , thus lessening the burden on theindustries. In this endeavor, the author
, 2008.6 M. W. Ohland, S. D. Sheppard, G. Lichtenstein, O. Eris, D. Chachra and R. A. Layton, "Race, gender, and measures of success in engineering education," Journal of Engineering Education, vol. 100, pp. 225-252, 2011.7 M. Matthews, "Keeping Students in engineering: a research-to-practice brief," in American Society of Engineering Education, 2012.8 E. Seymour, Testimony offered to the Research Subcommittee of the Committee on Science of the U.S. House of Representatives hearing on Undergraduate Science, Mathematics, and Engineering Education: What's Working?, 2006.9 C. Adelmann, "Women and Men of the Engineering Path: A Model for Analyses of Undergraduate Careers.," 1998.10 T. Freeman, L. Anderman and J. Jensen, "Sense of Belonging in
resonator arrays.Dr. Colleen Janeiro, East Carolina University Dr. Colleen Janeiro teaches engineering fundamentals such as Introduction to Engineering, Materials and Processes, and Statics. Her teaching interests include development of solid communication skills and enhancing laboratory skills.Dr. William E. Howard, East Carolina University William E (Ed) Howard is an Associate Professor in the Department of Engineering at East Carolina University. He was previously a faculty member at Milwaukee School of Engineering, following a 14- year career as a design and project engineer with Thiokol Corporation, Spaulding Composites Company, and Sta-Rite Industries. c American Society for Engineering
. The changes to the programwere not only made in response to industry but also made it easier to differentiate theengineering technology program from the traditional electrical engineering degree offered atTexas A&M. Having a degree that centered on project-based learning and that preparedgraduates for careers in electronic intelligence-based product development proved to be adrawing card for new students and the enrollment approximately doubled over four years.Finally, the product development emphasis supports both the College of Engineering stronginterest in developing students’ entrepreneurial and innovation capabilities. Currently, multiplestudent projects have assisted small (and large) businesses in developing and
increased engagement with the material, students oftenselect research topics based not on interest, but rather on the availability of information1.The Introductory Engineering CourseIntroduction to the Engineering Profession (EGS 1006L) is a one-credit course offered tostudents entering the engineering curriculum at FGCU. When this course was first created, it wasdone so within a brand new school of engineering. As such, “Introduction to the EngineeringProfession” was originally developed to provide an overview of the engineering programs atFGCU, and encourage students to consider engineering as a potential career choice. In Fall 2014,the course was revised to provide a more cohesive, meaningful first year experience that tied intothe pedagogical
perceptionsabout faculty support fall along institutional lines. That is, many quotes illustrating a lack offaculty support come from the large Research institution, while several quotes illustrating greatersupport come from the smaller and/or more teaching-focused institutions. However, it isimportant to note that even within the same institution, a difference between faculty support inlarger classes and in smaller classes was noticed by students. For example, one studentdescribed the differences he perceived between classes at his institution. First, he discussed theLarge or Very Large classes that students take early in their undergraduate careers: General education classes that are held in big auditorium rooms the professor doesn’t know
engineering, rehabilitation engineering and assistive technology, telemedicine and home health care, emergency and military medicine, medical information systems and electronic patient records, and medical ethics.The instructor stresses career opportunities for engineers in clinical application environments.C. HeartspringThe mission of Heartspring7 (Wichita, KS) is to help children with special needs grow and learnon a path to a more independent life. Heartspring School serves severely disabled children withASD, mental retardation, Down syndrome, visual/hearing impairments, and behavior disorders.Most of these children have significant, multiple disabilities, meaning concomitant impairments(e.g., mental retardation-blindness