Business case is acceptable to owner(s) Project proceeds to implementation Phase II. Project Implementation 1. Manufacturer / Assemble parts / Components / Systems 2. Deployment/Installation of system
University and her M.S. and B.S. in manufacturing engineering and electrical engineering, respectively, from the Missouri University of Science and Technology. Dr. Nagel’s long-term goal is to drive engineering innovation by applying her multidisciplinary engineering expertise to instrumentation and manufacturing challenges.Mr. Stephen Keith Holland, James Madison University S. Keith Holland received his PhD in Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering from the University of Virginia in 2004. He served as the Vice President for Research and Development with Avir Sensors, LLC prior to joining the Department of Engineering at James Madison University (JMU). At JMU, he developed statics, dynamics, circuits, instrumentation
through a “quality assurance” regime. To provide a flavor of thecurrent approach, faculty are required to specify the number of hours students need to spend tolearn specific content; academic credit as well as faculty course loads are then assigned usingthis measure, even as the specified learning outcomes provides the basis for determining whatdegree programs students are qualified to enter at the start of the second cycle. This means thatEurope has embraced a learning outcomes regime far more extensive than anything required byABET EC 2000’s accreditation protocols.6As an institutional historian and an ethnographer of educational institutions, we have reason tobelieve that the changes brought about by the Bologna Process will not occur all
affairs organizations. Organizational structures for student support services inuniversities have been studied for many years, and tend to be updated periodically as newgenerations of students (and parents) arrive on campus with new expectations about supportservices. The structural model for these services is highly centralized within ODOS at ourinstitution. ODOS oversees student programming as well as residence life, Greek life, and othercore services; they also provide routine support to students in need. The overall variety instudent affairs organizational models is staggering[5], and our institution fits neatly intoManning et al.’s “administrative-centered traditional” model, specifically the “functional silo”model. As Manning et al. point
its application to threadedfasteners.LawnmowersThe particular model push lawnmower used was an MTD 20 in, 125 cc Gas Walk-Behind LawnMower, available at a national retailer for approximately $150 each. It was advertised as “easysetup” for its usual purpose. For our purpose(s) some adaptation was required. The upper, lower,and blade control handles and emergency stop cable were assembled as directed. The starter rope Page 26.1055.4was not threaded to the handle to simplify cowling removal. No gasoline or lubricating oil wereadded to the engines, and their blades had never come into contact with actual grass. The keypreparation measures were
-generation students (LIFGs) can contribute to US engineering problem definition and solving”.Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are thoseof the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.Bibliography 1. Strutz, M. L., Orr, M. K., & Ohland, M. W. 2012. “Low Socioeconomic Status Individuals: An Invisible Minority in Engineering.” In C. Baillie (Ed.), Engineering and Social Justice: In the University and Beyond (pp. 143-156). Purdue University Press. 2. Ohland, M. et al. 2012. Viewing Access and Persistence in Engineering Through a Socioeconomic Lens. In C. Baillie (Ed.), Engineering and Social Justice: In the University and
Academy of Engineering Distinguished Visiting Fellow at Loughborough University (UK), as a Nokia-Fulbright Fellow at the Helsinki University of Technology, and as an Erskine Fellow at the University of Canterbury (NZ). Other positions have included periods at Delphi Engineering (NZ) and IBM-Endicott (NY), industrial consulting, and as a Senior Technician at the U of S. Jim is an IEEE Life Fellow and an IEEE Components, Packaging, & Manufacturing (CPMT) Society Distinguished Lecturer. He has served as CPMT Treasurer (1991-1997) and Vice-President for Conferences (1998-2003), and cur- rently sits on the CPMT Board of Governors (1996-1998, 2011-2016) and the Oregon joint CPMT/CAS Chapter Exec and chairs the CPMT
) • analyze issues in professional ethics(12 comments) • explain the importance of professional licensure (2 comments) Page 26.1185.6 • General Comment(s) not tied to any specific element of the CEPC (41 comments)The raw number of comments indicated an area of interest but were not necessarily helpful ingaining a consensus. Many of the comments contradicted each other. For example, for the 20comments received for “applying math and science…”, seven were positive toward the criterion,ten were negative and three were neutral in that they made suggestions or asked for clarification.Even such classification was problematic. Some comments were
entrepreneurship projects are constructed primarily in polysemous, contradictory terms. Students largely perceive empirical reality from secondary sources and superficial immersions in “local culture” that average four to eight weeks at a time. As an initial step in the reproduction of the ideology of humanitarian engineering/service learning, a series of markers are argued to constitute certain “facts” about the “third world” (a term used by engineering educators as recently as 2008). Subsequently the third world denizen(s) appears to stand as an abbreviation or, shorthand for a disparate constellation of attributes identified by outsiders visiting from the developed world. This results from a series of markers that apparently speak of
Education.” Association of College & Research Libraries. Last modified February 2015. http://www.ala.org/acrl/standards/ilframework. 4. Lafferty, M., and J. Jeffryes. "Gauging Workplace Readiness: Assessing the Information Needs of Engineering CoOp Students." Issues in Science & Technology Librarianship , no. 69 (2012). http://dx.doi.org/ 10.5062/F4X34VDR. 5. Robinson, M. A. "An Empirical Analysis of Engineers' Information Behaviors." Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology 61, no. 4 (2010): 64058. 6. Wertz, R. E. H., S. Purzer, M. J. Fosmire, and M. E. Cardella. "Assessing Information Literacy Skills Demonstrated
description of situated learning, Greeno et al. 32 describe knowledge as,“distributed among people and their environments, including the objects, artifacts, tools, books,and the communities for which they are apart.”32 This is nearly identical to Newstetter’s 8paradigm shift description of student learning in engineering design teams. This environment isalso consistent with Salas et al.’s 17 integrative model of team effectiveness. In describing thetheory, Salas et al. reference team leaders (plural) not team leader (singular) and describe howshared cognition affects leadership and vice-versa. Within the context of engineering education,this situated learning environment has been described by Johri & Olds 33 as a promising constructfrom the
National Science Foundation under GrantNo. 1262274. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in thismaterial are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the NationalScience Foundation.” Page 26.1434.17 References:1. Fouad, N. A., and Singh, R. (2011). Stemming the tide: Why women leave engineering. Retrieved from Center for the Study of the Workplace website: http://www.studyofwork.com/2011/10/stemming-the-tide- women-engineers-report/.2. Riley, D. (2008). Engineering and Social Justice. Morgan & Claypool.3. Geek. (12
urges practitioners to avoid causing harm. 3Indeed, responsibility to hold an ideal paramount is substantively different from responsibility topromote the same ideal. For example, teachers, pilots, and doctors must all hold paramount thehealth and safety of the individuals in their charge, but among them only doctors must dedicatetheir work to the promotion of these individuals’ health and safety. The American MedicalAssociation’s (AMA) Code of Medical Ethics states that physicians are obliged to provide“competent medical care, with compassion and respect for human dignity and rights.”4 TheAmerican Bar Association’s (ABA) Model Rules of Professional Conduct urge lawyers tofunction as “representative[s] of clients, [officers] of the legal system
are paying the most attention to are academic integrity issues. The standards for plagiarism or collaboration on an assignment may be different in other countries. We have put a lot of emphasis on needing to educate this influx of international students that academic integrity is very important here.[26]Several studies conducted in the 1990’s pointed to academic dishonesty and cheating being onthe rise, but found that courses in ethics could reduce the students’ propensity to engage inunethical academic or business practices.[21] All of these solutions, which were focused onstudents, would probably not be able to be put in place by a single instructor or in one course, butrather need to be addressed, supported and
high school engineering education. In 121 st ASEE Annual Conference & Expostion (p. 24.1321.1-24.1321.7). Inianapolis: American Society of Engineering Education.Hill, R. (1998). What sample size is “enough” in internet survey research?, Interpersonal Computing and Technology: An Electronic Journal for the 21st Century, 6, 3-4.Honey, M., Pearson, G., & Schweingruber, H. (2014). STEM integration in K-12 education: Status, prospects, and an agenda for research. Washington, D.C.: The National Academies Press.Isaac, S., & Michael, W. B. (1995). Handbook in research and evaluation. San Diego, CA: Educational and Industrial Testing Services.Nunnaly, J. (1978) Psychometric theory. New York: McGraw-Hill.Reeve
Jung Typology Extrovert (E) 8 10 13 Introvert (I) 14 18 16 Sensing (S) 11 12 12 Intuition (N) 11 16 17 Thinking (T) 13 15 13 Feeling (F) 9 13 16 Judging (J) 16 24 22 Perceiving (P) 6
disciplines andpossibly implement surveys. The results reported are important to consider for the developmentand/or re-design of the engineering design curriculum to account for industrial demands as oftoday as well as overall program enhancement.References1. Sharunova, A., Butt, M., Kresta, S., Carey, J., P., Wyard-Scott, L., Adeeb, S., Blessing, L. M., & Qureshi, A. J. (2017). Cognition and transdisciplinary design: An educational framework for undergraduate engineering design curriculum development. In Proceedings of Canadian Engineering Education Association Conference 2017.2. Gericke, K., & Blessing, L. (2012). An analysis of design process models across disciplines
of engineering design teams reveals the limited range of engineering identities available tofemale engineering students [10], Dryburgh’s study of professional socialization highlights thedifficult trade off faced by female engineering students adapting to a sexist “work hard/playhard” culture [27], and Seron et al.’s document analysis of female engineering students’ journalentries points to four ideologies—gender essentialism, meritocracy, individualism andexceptionalism—all of which constrained participants’ capacity to engage in a feminist analysisof the normative, masculine engineering culture [13].While this final group of studies is limited by authors’ overwhelming focus on gender as the soledimension of privilege, it does provide us
ahead to design a solar system for educational access.Educational access will likely require design considerations and expenses beyond that of aconventional commercial solar installation. Educational access may also require additionaltechnical experts or sub-contractors to work on the design and installation of the system.Engagement of the school’s facility managers and faculty members early in the process isessential. Dialogue between these parties and the solar developer can maximize the educationalbenefits of a solar installation.Potential Educational AudiencesWhen designing solar PV systems for educational use, the first step is to consider who theintended educational audience(s) might be. A possible list of educational activities