below-average students.Troubleshooting Skills in the Bioinstrumentation Laboratory CourseLaboratory courses play an important role in engineering education, providing the students withopportunities to develop proficiency in experimental design, data analysis, the use of relevantequipment and tools, team work, communication skills and other practical skills relevant to theengineering practice1-3. As design instruction has become more prevalent, engineering programshave incorporated design courses and embedded design projects at several stages of theundergraduate curriculum4, including instructional laboratories. However, most of these coursesfocus on the early stages of the design process (i.e. problem identification, design criteria,research
supporting engineering faculty in implementing culturally relevant pedagogy and other course transformation projects.Mrs. Robin Lynn Nelson, University of Texas at San Antonio Robin Nelson is a doctoral student in the Department of Interdisciplinary Learning and Teaching and is pursuing a cognate in Instructional Technology at the University of Texas at San Antonio. Her research interests include the development of TPACK in preservice teachers, evidence-based teaching strategies, and the use of gaming in education. She is a Graduate Research Assistant for the TRESTLE project at UTSA.Mr. Ruitao Jin, University of Texas, San Antonio Ruitao Jin is a current MS student in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
State University. She received her PhD in industrial engineering and has over 32 years’ experience directing statewide engineering outreach services that include technical engineering business assistance, professional development, and educational outreach programs. She is co-PI for a National Science Foundation (NSF) INCLUDES pilot grant, co-PI for a NSF grant to broaden participation in STEM, and was a co-PI for an i6 Challenge grant through the U.S. Economic Development Administration (EDA). She is institutional integrator for the Partnership for the Advancement of Engineering Education (PACE) at NMSU, is University Affiliate Director for the NM Project Lead the Way program, and was co- lead for a NSF funded
Mechatronics area of spe- cialization. She worked as a Visiting Researcher at Commonwealth Center for Advanced Manufacturing in Disputanta, VA on projects focusing on digital thread and cyber security of manufacturing systems. She has funded research in broadening participation efforts of underrepresented students in STEM funded by Office of Naval Research, focusing on mechatronic pathways. She is part of the ONR project related to the additive manufacturing training of active military. She is also part of the research team that leads the summer camp to nine graders that focus on broadening participation of underrepresented students into STEM (ODU BLAST).Dr. Narketta Sparkman-Key, Old Dominion University Dr. Narketta
Professor of Industrial Engineering and Dean of University College at the University of Oklahoma, Norman. He is a registered professional engineer (PE), a certified Project Management Professional (PMP), a Fellow of the Institute of Industrial Engineers, and a Fellow of the Nigerian Academy of Engineering. His areas of interest include mathematical modeling, project modeling and analysis, economic analysis, systems engineering, and efficiency/productivity analysis & improvement. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2018 Application of DEJI® Systems Engineering Model in the Development of a New Faculty Mentoring Program in
algorithms, education of manufac- turing technologies, RFID applications in food and pharmaceutical applications, operations management in healthcare industry.Dr. Sangho Shim, Robert Morris University Dr. Sangho Shim is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Engineering at Robert Morris University (RMU) in Pennsylvania. Before Dr. Shim joined RMU in Fall 2015, he had performed research projects on combinatorial op- timization as a research staff member of Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University under supervisory of Sunil Chopra. He also performed the General Motors Renewable Energy Portfolio project with Industrial Engineering and Management Sciences Department of Northwestern University since
has authored and co-authored over 50 articles. Her publications have appeared in the Journal of Science Teacher Education, Journal of Research in Sci- ence Teaching, School Science and Mathematics, Science Scope, and Science and Children. Professor Czerniak is co-author of a textbook published by Routledge on project based science teaching. She also has five chapters in books and illustrated 12 children’s science education books. Most recently, Czerniak authored a chapter entitled Interdisciplinary Science Teaching in the Handbook of Research on Science Education, published by Lawrence Erlbaum and Associates. Professor Czerniak has been an author and director of numerous grant funded projects in excess of $30
University Marisa K. Orr is an Assistant Professor in Engineering and Science Education with a joint appointment in the Department of Mechanical Engineering at Clemson University. Her research interests include student persistence and pathways in engineering, gender equity, diversity, and academic policy. Dr. Orr is a recent recipient of the NSF CAREER Award for her research entitled, ”Empowering Students to be Adaptive Decision-Makers.”Mr. Russell Andrew Long, Russell Long, M.Ed. was the Director of Project Assessment at the Purdue University School of Engineer- ing Education (retired) and is Managing Director of The Multiple-Institution Database for Investigating Engineering Longitudinal Development (MIDFIELD). He
freshmen andcomplete their degree in either manufacturing engineering, industrial engineering or mechanicalengineering with emphasis in manufacturing. The goal of the project is to create a group ofhighly talented and trained manufacturing engineers with leadership quality, which is muchneeded in manufacturing companies, both locally and nationally. Through the academic classesand leadership activities, the STEM scholars will gain knowledge in not only manufacturingengineering and practice, but also in communication, critical thinking, teamwork andprofessionalism. This paper describes the first three years’ experience of developing and managing theprogram. It includes the recruitment process, cohort building activities, academic support
is an Educational Psychologist and Professor Emeritus of Education at Bucknell University. Her research has focused on meaningful learning in science and engineering education, approached from the perspective of Human Constructivism. She has authored several publications and given numerous presentations on the generation of analogies, misconceptions, and facilitating learning in science and engineering education. She has been involved in collaborative research projects focused on conceptual learning in chemistry, chemical engineering, seismology, and astronomy.Dr. Amy Frances Golightly, Bucknell University c American Society for Engineering Education, 2018 Curious about student curiosity
drive systems as a Research Engineer. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2018 Design and Implementation of Electric Drives Laboratory using Commercial Microcontroller Development KitsAbstractA design and implementation of instructional electric drives laboratory at University of ColoradoDenver using commercial off-the-shelf microcontroller kits and small motors is described in thispaper. The main objective of this project is to provide senior level students with hands-onexperience on electric machine drives and industrial microcontroller programming. Thislaboratory is associated with the electric drives lecture course to enhance their understanding ofthe theory taught in lectures
aerospace applications, I participate in many projects related to controls and heat transfer. Aside from my research, I focus heavily on the advancement of engineering education at the collegiate level. I work on revising and updating laboratory experiments to help improve student understanding of how concepts are applied and utilized. I also spend time writing design optimization MATLAB codes for various applications.Mr. Michael Golub, Indiana University Purdue University, Indianapolis Michael Golub is the Academic Laboratory Supervisor for the Mechanical Engineering department at IUPUI. He is an associate faculty at the same school, and has taught at several other colleges. He has conducted research related to Arctic
-aided mechanisms to engage interests of K-12 students in STEM research. 3Background: Architecture of a Research SprintFigure 1: An illustration of the Stanford d.school design thinking process. The steps shown here represent all modesthat contribute to a design project, and may occur in parallel or iteratively repeat in an actual design workflow [12]. Design thinking is a highly nonlinear method, meaning that the steps shown in Figure 1may occur in parallel and can iteratively repeat. Research Sprints are the author’s design thinkingadaption that interweaves science and engineering knowledge with human-centered designpractices into STEM educational activities. In relatively short periods of
how to provide “higher qualityhealthcare to more people at lower cost” andtrain bioengineering leaders of tomorrow todrive “Moore’s law for health care14.”Change TheorySince a core goal of our effort is to execute asignificant change to our department’scurriculum and norms, we briefly discuss ourtheory of change to explain how we plan toredefine our curriculum. Organizationalresearch amply demonstrates that “howchanges are made and communicated” mattersmore than “what changes are made15.”Members of a community undergoing changeare keenly attuned to just treatment16. To foster Figure 1: Symbiosis between project objectives.a sense of just practices during a changeinitiative, administrators must engage stakeholders (faculty and students) in
, herjob place allowed her live online attendance in classes, and exams.Senior construction engineering technology courses were taught using the distancelearning. The educator used PowerPoint and the white board conventional learning aswell as the document camera for the lecture. The course material was posted onBlackboard. The student contacted the educator using emails and phone calls. Thecourses assessed by assignments, quizzes, projects, and exams. A presentation of the longdistance student about her construction experience was memorable for the class students.The continuous support of the university Information Technology services was the key tothe successful offering of the courses.This presentation describes how the instructor, program
Paper ID #17989Assessing Students’ Researcher Identity and Epistemic CognitionDr. Lisa Benson, Clemson University Lisa Benson is a Professor of Engineering and Science Education at Clemson University, with a joint appointment in Bioengineering. Her research focuses on the interactions between student motivation and their learning experiences. Her projects involve the study of student perceptions, beliefs and attitudes towards becoming engineers and scientists, and their problem solving processes. Other projects in the Benson group include effects of student-centered active learning, self-regulated learning, and incorporat
Paper ID #19605Capturing the Computational Thinking of Families with Young Children inOut-of-School EnvironmentsMs. Hoda Ehsan, Purdue University, West Lafayette (College of Engineering) Hoda is a Ph.D. student in the School of Engineering Education, Purdue. She received her B.S. in me- chanical engineering in Iran, and obtained her M.S. in Childhood Education and New York teaching certification from City College of New York (CUNY-CCNY). She is now a graduate research assistant on STEM+C project. Her research interests include designing informal setting for engineering learning, and promoting engineering thinking in
include discipline-specific elements of arguments, such as weighing and justifyingtrade-offs based on prioritized criteria and constraints, which are features of argumentation inengineering.21 Thus, more discipline-specific instruments are needed to assess students’argumentation in engineering.Some existing instruments can be used to determine the quality of students’ writing inengineering. Most notably, Abts and colleagues developed the Engineering Design ProcessPortfolio Scoring Rubric,22 which includes the following two elements: “evaluation, reflection,and recommendations” and “presenting the project.” These elements might be related toargumentation, in the sense that students are expected to present the project “for the audiencesand purposes
Science Standards.Miss Ezgi Yesilyurt, University of Nevada, Las Vegas Ezgi Yesilyurt is a PhD student in curriculum and instruction/science education at University of Nevada, Las Vegas. She is working as a graduate assistant and teaching science methods courses. She received her MS degree and BS degree in elementary science education. She participated European Union Projects in which she conducted series of professional development programs for in-service science teachers. Areas of research interest are engineering education, inquiry learning and evolution education. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2018Introduction: Methods
program, continuing education, experience,and mentoring: material sciences, mechanics, experiments, problem recognition and solving,design, sustainability, contemporary issues and historical perspective, risk and uncertainty,project management, breadth in civil engineering, and technical specialization.(C) Professional outcomes achieved through the degree program, experience and mentoring:communications, public policy, business and public administration, globalization, leadership,teamwork, attitudes, and professional and ethical responsibility.Detailed commentaries on these outcomes, along with their rubrics in the cognitive domain andthe desired level of achievement can be found in the report published by the BOK2 TaskCommittee [1]The BOK3TC
sites based on their research projects, thereis still a need to provide new PIs with guidance on the different aspects of an REU site such asidentifying resources that can assist in recruiting women and underrepresented minorityapplicants, providing training for graduate students acting as mentors, and strategies for keepinga mentoring connection to undergraduate researchers after they return to their home institutions.Currently, REU site preparation and orientation for new PIs is a face-to-face process thatrequires careful planning and significant travel costs. The REU PI Guide, a set of web-basedresources at https://www.vrac.iastate.edu/cise-reu-pi-resources/, was developed to share bestpractices of experienced PIs and build capacity within
in projects andextracurricular activities completed outside the classroom, than those completed within thetransdisciplinary classroom. This information has proved beneficial for program staff as theycontinue to make programmatic improvements.1. IntroductionMultidisciplinary, interdisciplinary, and transdisciplinary engineering and technology programsare growing in popularity and prior studies have identified advantages to students whoparticipate in these innovative, boundary-crossing programs. Students develop higher levels ofcognitive processing and critical thinking [1], report positive attitudes toward literacy [2],improve research skills [3] and display high levels of teamwork and leadership skills [4]. Thesefindings are by no means
this project is to teach students to understand basiccryptography techniques, how cryptography is used in protecting sensitivedata, understand the basics of Internet hygiene, and how social engineeringcan be used to steal your identity. The lesson is broken into 3 activities: (1) ModernSubstitution Ciphers: Caesar Cipher and other Basic Ciphers, (2) Modern Encryption:Encryption: Public-Key, and (3) Social Engineering: Mortimer’s Social Public-KeyMedia. In the Substitution Cipher activity, students will learn to use simple Introduction to Public
classroom andcombine pre-recorded videos, in class activities and lectures (which distance students cancomplete on their on schedule or connect to in real time using video conferencing software),online assessments and bona fide course-integrated research and development projects. Whererelevant certifications existed (and are available to be taken by students), the courses weremapped to the objectives for these certifications. Courses have targeted EC Council’s CertifiedEthical Hacker and Certified Hacking Forensic Investigator certifications and CompTIA’sSecurity+ certification.The graduate certificate is designed to be able to be completed in conjunction with a graduatedegree program or on a stand-alone basis. The certificate is designed, in
robot’senvironment by means of laser projection. Zieliński provides an object-oriented approach forrobot programming [10]. Freund et al. discuss a process-oriented approach to efficient off-lineprogramming of industrial robots, presenting two approaches: automatic trajectory generationand tech-in/playback programming using virtual reality techniques [11].In industry, the most widely used method for robot programming is by using teach pendants [12].A user uses the pendant to guide a robot along the path of completing a desired task. At the sametime, at different points along the path, coordinates are recorded. After the task is complete, therecorded points can be played back at a slower speed to verify the accuracy of the program. Anactive focus of research
the picture when thinking aboutimplementing diversity and inclusion policies and programming within higher education institutions. Given the persistent gap in underrepresented groups pursuing aviation careers, and after areview of the prior research, a pilot project was conducted during the summer of 2018 and included aquantitative questionnaire that was administered to select aviation students. Given that existingresearch indicates a need for a more holistic approach to diversity and inclusion policies andprogramming, the primary research question was “Do diversity and inclusion policies impactcollegiate students’ considerations for leaving an (aviation) academic program?”Methods Much of the existing research that is conducted
sent to their classrooms. The participant pairs are assigned and then the students split intotwo classrooms with one lead teacher and multiple aids in the room. The agenda consists ofbuilding the Kano (30 minutes), a two-part lesson plan to learn some basics of programming theKano (an hour and a half before lunch and an hour after lunch) and time to work on their selfselected projects for the showcase (about an hour). The two teachers are given the same set ofslides and teaching directions to go through the curriculum provided. At the end of the day, thestudents present their projects at the showcase to each other and family members. They are alsogiven certificates for participating and information on how to access their projects later. Lastly
Mechanical Engineering Technology,Electrical Engineering Technology or Mechatronics Engineering Technology majors.The mission of the Robotics concentration is to conduct world-class research and teaching to trainfuture generations of thinkers and creators.Robotics concentration students at [University Name] will be a part of an intellectually stimulatingenvironment where they will participate in project-based courses and are encouraged to make high-impact contributions to research.The undergraduate Robotics concentration is designed to help students meet their professionalobjectives. Each course in this concentration contains a significant level of robotics and automationprinciples for high-demand occupational areas. Students choose to use this
experiences, and the connection between the two.Dr. Kadri Akinola Akanni Parris, Ohio State University Dr. Kadri A.A. Parris is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Engineering Education at The Ohio State University (OSU). He is the holder of a Master’s Degree in Transportation Engineering and received his Doctorate in Civil Engineering (Geotechnical) with a concentration in Pavement Design, both at OSU. In addition, he holds Project Management Professional (PMP) certification with the Project Management Institute (PMI). Dr. Parris is actively involved in curriculum design, introduction of innovative pedagogies of engagement and the practice of engineering education through teaching several courses across the department
Hospital, Royal Oak, and was a research associate in radiology, nuclear medicine, and bio- mechanics at Wayne State University. Ken has taught at Lawrence Tech evening programs as an adjunct instructor since 1965. His senior projects class, where students generate project ideas, research, design, c American Society for Engineering Education, 2019 Paper ID #24614manufacture, and assess the market for inventive products is the capstone course. Cook also has enjoyeda long side career in magic finding his hobby very useful in teaching. A highlight for his students eachyear is the two-hour magic performance he offers as a