, "On Measuring Mechanical Oscillations using Smartphone Sensors - Possibilities and Limitation," ACM SIGMOBILE Mobile Computing and Communications Review 1-11, 2013. 5. C. Riley, J. Millar, S. Lozano, and S. St.Clair, “Using Mobile Devices to Teach Structural Dynamics and Structural Health Monitoring,” in Proceedings of the 2016 ASEE Annual Conference, New Orleans, LA. Available: https://peer.asee.org/27152 [Accessed: Sept. 10, 2017] 6. M. Feng, Y. Fukuda, M. Mizuta, and E. Ozner, "Citizen Sensors for SHM: Use of Accelerometer Data from Smartphones," Sensors 2980-2998, doi:10.3390/s150202980, 2015. 7. C. Riley, “Dynamic Evaluation of Transportation Structures with iPod-Based Data Acquisition
Missouri University Science & Technology in Civil Engineering in 1999, and a PhD in Civil Engineering from Lehigh University in 2004. He is a registered Professional Engineer in Michigan.Mr. Michael O’Connor P.E., New York University With five decades of construction and project management experience as a civil engineer, split equally between the public and private sectors involving projects with a total value of several hundred billion (US$s); my goal has always been to deliver solutions that are customer focused and performance that adds value. c American Society for Engineering Education, 2018 The Civil Engineering Body of Knowledge: Supporting ASCE’s Grand
Industry, Retrieved from: https://www.bea.gov7. Bureau of Economic Analysis, Industry Economic Accounts and International Monetary Fund, Retrieved from: https://www.bea.gov8. Roadmap for Manufacturing Education, The Manufacturing Institute, December 2012.9. Morrison, T., Maciejewski, B., Giffi, C., DeRocco, E.S., McNelly, J., Carrick, G., Boiling point? The skills gap in U.S. manufacturing, Sponsored by Deloitte and The Manufacturing Institute, Retrieved from: http://www.themanufacturinginstitute.org/~/media/A07730B2A798437D98501E798C2E13 AA.ashx10. Todd, R. H., Red, W. E., Magleby, S.P., and Coe, S. “Manufacturing: A Strategic Opportunity for Engineering Education.” Journal of Engineering Education
-Based Learning,” Proceedings of the 2017 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition, 2017.[12] N. Salzman, B.C.S. Chittoori, and S. Miller, “Senior Civil Engineering Students’ Views on Sustainability and Resiliency,” Proceedings of the 2018 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition, 2018.[13] M. Marincel Payne and J. Aidoo, “Strengthening Sustainable Design Principles in the Civil Engineering Curriculum,” Proceedings of the 2017 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition, 2017.[14] R. Du, M.A. Butkus, and J.A. Starke, “Incorporating Risk and Uncertainty into Undergraduate Environmental Engineering
Science Foundation’s Division ofUndergraduate Education under the IUSE program through grant #1821578, with past supportfrom NSF IUSE 1432674, and a WSU Graduate School Research Assistantship plus feedback fromundergraduates about evaluation of questions. Past involvement of Arshan Nazempour was criticalin initial question development that formed a foundation for some of the items in the question bankstrategy. References1. Beheshti Pour, N., D. Thiessen, and B. Van Wie, Improving student understanding and motivation in learning heat transfer by visualizing thermal boundary layers. International Journal of Engineering Education, 2018. 34(2(A)): p. 514-526.2. Brown, S., et al., Effectiveness
, V.G., Hanson, A., Auzenne, M, & Williamson, S., “Enhancing criticalthinking skills of civil engineering students through Supplemental Instruction”, ConferenceProceedings of the ASEE, 2007.[10] Lin, J., and Woolston, D.C., “Important lessons learned from seven years of experience inundergraduate academic support programs”, Conference Proceedings of the ASEE/IEE Frontiersin Education Conference, Saratoga Springs NY, 2008.[11] Mahdi, A. E., “Introducing peer-supported learning approach to tutoring in engineering andtechnology courses”, International Journal of Electrical Engineering Education, 43(4), 2006,pp277-287.[12] Murray, M. H., “PASS: Primed, persistent, pervasive”, Conference Proceedings of theNational PASS Day Conference
-framework [Accessed December 11, 2019].[4] J. Dewey, “How we think,” 1910. [Online]. Available: http://rci.rutgers.edu/~tripmcc/phil/dewey-hwt-pt1-selections.pdf [Accessed December 7, 2019].[5] B. S. Bloom, Taxonomy of Educational Objectives. New York: Longman, 1956.[6] Resource Area for Teaching, “Bridging the engagement gap with hands-on teaching,” 2013.[Online]. Available: from http://www.raft.net/public/pdfs/case-for-hands-on-learning.pdf [AccessedDecember 8, 2019].[7] P. Goertz, “10 signs of a 21st century classroom,” Edutopia: George Lucas EducationalFoundation, February 2015. [Online]. Available: https://www.edutopia.org/discussion/10-signs-21st-century-classroom [Accessed December 7, 2019].[8] K. Gary, “Project-Based Learning,” IEEE
/indicator_ctr.asp. [Accessed 31January 2019].[2] Creditdonkey, "23 College Dropout Statistics That Will Surprise You," November 2017.[Online]. Available: https://www.creditdonkey.com/collegedropout-statistics.html. [Accessed 31January 2019].[3] K. A. Ossman and G. W. Bucks, "Adding Hardware Experiments to a First-Year EngineeringComputing Course," in Proceedings of the ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Columbus,OH, 2017.[4] O. Caglayan, S. Ande, E. Coronado, M. J. Martinez and S. J. Hondowski, "SummerEngineering Academy for First-year Students in STEM: Making the Transition to CollegeThrough Coding and Robotics," in Proceedings of the ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition,Salt Lake City, UT, 2018.[5] J. C. McNeil, A. Thompson and N. Hawkins, "A
Black Professors’ Experiences with and Responses to Racism and Racial Climate.”American Journal of Education 117, no. 4 (August 2011): 495–526. https://doi.org/10.1086/660756.Rasmussen, Brian, and Daniel Salhani. “A Contemporary Kleinian Contribution to UnderstandingRacism.” Social Service Review 84, no. 3 (September 2010): 491–513. https://doi.org/10.1086/656401.Basford, Tessa E., Lynn R. Offermann, and Tara S. Behrend. “Do You See What I See? Perceptions ofGender Microaggressions in the Workplace.” Psychology of Women Quarterly 38, no. 3 (September2014): 340–49. https://doi.org/10.1177/0361684313511420.Elsass, Priscilla M, and Laura M Graves. “Demographic Diversity in Decision-Making Groups: TheExperiences of Women and People of Color,” n.d
needed to carry out theirprojects.Over the course of the research group, students obtained access to the makerspace, selected andpursued sewing project(s), and learned the fabrication skills needed to complete their work. Tomand Lindsey pursued e-textiles projects—LED bike gloves and glowing beanbags; Maddie,Maria, and Brittany constructed garments, Vanessa worked on reusable cloth menstrual pads,and Tiffany constructed hair scrunchies.3.2 Individual DocumentationStudents were asked to individually document their experiences pursuing sewing projectsthrough a digital journal document stored in a shared Google Drive. Students engaged in twodistinct documentation practices that resulted in - 1) Field Notes Entries and 2) ReflectionEntries each
hoc analysis of the results obtained when applyingthis strategy to existing student submission data. This allows us to investigate what feedback orboosters would have been earned by individual students in a real-life situation to validate thefeedback design before live deployment.Related WorkRewards, Operant Conditioning, and Intrinsic MotivationApplying rewards to increase student motivation has been widely researched in areas includingpsychology, education, and video games 1 2 17 . In 1940’s, Skinner formed the theory of operantconditioning to explain how a behavior can be shaped by its resulting consequences 15 . Bystudying the behavior of animals in experiments, Skinner formulated the underlying ideas ofpositive and negative reinforcement
participants, as one noted saying thatleadership coaching, “Relatively independent, but improved me in general, including [within theprogram].” Value of leadership coaching sessions Experience visiting the classroom Classroom supply ordering Lunch food Quality of other teams' practice presentations Feedback from your practice presentation Communcation from your teacher Communication from your partner/s 0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100% Excellent Good Okay Below average PoorFigure 3. Participants’ ratings of components of the program, N=34. The 15
willingparticipation of the student subjects who completed the experiment and provided incrediblyuseful feedback about potential refinements to our methods.References[1] J. Sweller, “The worked example effect and human cognition,” Learn. Instr., vol. 16, no. 2, pp. 165–169, Apr. 2006.[2] S. Kalyuga, P. Ayres, P. Chandler, and J. Sweller, “The expertise reversal effect,” Educ. Psychol., vol. 38, no. 1, pp. 23–31, 2003.[3] R. Moreno, M. Reisslein, and G. Ozogul, “Optimizing Worked‐Example Instruction in Electrical Engineering: The Role of Fading and Feedback during Problem‐Solving Practice,” J. Eng. Educ., vol. 98, no. 1, pp. 83–92, 2009.[4] J. Sweller, “Cognitive load during problem solving: effects on learning,” Cogn. Sci
satisfaction 4.6/5) and believed that the camp helped them significantly in understandingtopics in nanotechnology (4.8/5). The most popular activity was the Scanning ElectronMicroscope when the students were amazed by how different things looked under highmagnifications.References 1. Prins, R. J., MacDonald, S., Leech, J., Brumfield, J., Ellis, M., Smith, L., and Shaeffer, J., Techfacturing: A Summer Day Camp Designed to Promote STEM Interest in Middle School Students through Exposure to Local Manufacturing Facilities, 2010 ASEE Southeast Section Conference. 2. Sala, A., Sitaram, P., and Spendlove, T., Stimulating an Interest in Engineering Through an ”Explore Engineering and Technology” Summer Camp for High School
knowledgeinto new frameworks.Flexibility in topic, discussion, structure and partners is key to providing a meaningful classroomexperience for students, while also teaching engineers to remain nimble, contextual and criticalin thought as they evaluate solutions to a design problem.Incorporation of multiple professional and peer viewpoints, in the form of professional advisorsand alumni mentors, gives students diverse perspectives as well as comfortable resources toconsult outside of the classroom, and demonstrates that many approaches can exist in tackling adesign challenge.Bibliography 1. Atman, C. J.; Adams, R. S.; Cardella, M. E.; Turns, J.; Mosborg, S.; Saleem, J. Engineering Design Processes: A Comparison of Students and Expert
Conference on Mathematics Education in a Global Community, Palermo, Italy, 2007.11. Allen, K., The Statistics Concept Inventory: Development and analysis of a cognitive assessment instrument instatistics (Doctoral dissertation), SSRN Electronic Journal, 2006, doi:10.2139/ssrn.213014312. Wilcox, B., Caballero, M., Baily, C., Sadaghiani, H., Chasteen, S., Ryan, Q., and Pollock, S., “Development anduses of upper-division conceptual assessments”, Phys. Rev. ST Phys. Educ. Res. 11, 020115 – Published 23September 2015, http://journals.aps.org/prstper/pdf/10.1103/PhysRevSTPER.11.02011513. Streveler, R., Miller, R., Santiago-Roman, A., Nelson, M., Geist, M., and Olds, B., “Rigorous Methodology forConcept Inventory Development: Using the 'Assessment Triangle
. Forexample, one participant wrote that s/he liked, “the emphasis of communication in the graded portions [ofthe service-learning module], this is something that Engineering classes do a very bad job at teaching even though itis essential in CE”.Finally, a large number of the student participants said a major benefit of the experience was theopportunity to get to know their classmates and professors better. “This also helped me meet and bondwith classmates, which means more study buddies!”, wrote one participant. Other examples stated, “Duringthe build day, it was rewarding to work with our peers in a challenging setting outside of school. We were able toapply skills in leadership, creativity, and initiative” and, “Volunteering and working with our
5 5 0 2 8 12 14 18 22 24 28 0 -5 -5 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 18 22 24 -10 -15 -10 -20 -15 Time (s) Time (s) Figure 7. The difference
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)’s Gordon EngineeringInstitute of Leadership program is a well-established co-curricular programTechnology targeting undergraduate students. Students work experientially to(2007) develop hands on leadership skills, building towards a competency model, and a small subset complete a second year as senior fellows, running leadership labs and mentoring younger students to “learn by doing.”Northeastern Northeastern’s Gordon Engineering Leadership program offers aUniversity (2008) customized masters degree or a stand-alone graduate certificate for master’s students. The program offers courses on leadership and
, "Competency assessment: methods for development and implementation in Nursing education," The Online Journal of Issues in Nursing, September 30, pp. 1-7.10. Voorhees, R. A., 2001, "Competency-based learning models: a necessary future," New Directions for Institutional Research, No. 110, Summer, pp. 5-13. 11 11. Jiang, M., Parent, S., and Eastmond, D., 2006, "Effectiveness of web-based learning opportunities in a competency-based program," International Journal of E-learning, 5(3), pp. 353-360.12. Wood, D., Bruner, J. S., and Ross, G., 1976, "The Role of Tutoring in Problem Solving*," Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 17(2), pp. 89-100.13. Jones, E.A., and Voorhees, R.A., 2002
their search for theright type of practitioners, to enrich the academic process by bringing the practice into the classroom. After Foundation Engineering was over, and the final course grade was out, a“questionnaire” was sent to those who enrolled in the class seeking their opinions, evaluations,and any comment(s) they may wish to offer. Twenty six out of a total of 30 students returned the“questionnaire” on time! The opinions expressed and comments made were, by and large,positive to say the least. After regrouping, and rephrasing to correct the English language; thecomments offered by the ex- students, could be summarized as follows: The adjunct was easy to approach every time and everywhere, and was always helpful, His
thetop.AcknowledgementThe authors gratefully acknowledge the funding that makes this work possible from the NationalScience Foundation's Directorate of Undergraduate Education's STEM Talent ExpansionProgram Grant No. DUE-1068453. Any opinions, findings and conclusions or recommendationsexpressed in this material are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of theNational Science Foundation. References1. Downey, G.L., Lucena, J.C., Moskal, B.M., Parkhurst, R., Bigley, T., Hays, C., Jesiek, B.K., Kelly, L., Miller,J., Ruff, S., Lehr, J.L. and Nichols-Belo, A. "The Globally Competent Engineer: Working Effectively with PeopleWho Define Problems Differently." Journal of Engineering Education. 2006; 95(2): 107-22.2. Hurtado, S., Alvarez, C.L
). Of the state’s 74,000 high schoolgraduates in year 2015, 58,000 applied for Tennessee Promise support to attend one of the 13community colleges or 27 colleges of applied technology. (“Haslam Postsecondary EducationInitiatives Showing Success,” 2015)Higher Education SystemConcepts of reinventing government as a customer driven service began in the 1990’s. Thecommon thread originates from the quality movement proposed by W. Edwards Deming. Heproposed the management of integrated systems as the basis for quality in any productionsystem. Deming formalized the approach into a System of Profound Knowledge (SPK). Thesuccess of Deming’s approach is demonstrated in his work to assist with rebuilding Japan’s postWorld War II economy. (The Deming
backgrounds andinterests.References [1] Gustin, S. (2011). “Democratizing Design: Autodesk’s CEO Carl Bass Announces 123D.” Wired. First published May 3, 2011. Last accessed 1/20/2016 at http://www.wired.com/2011/05/democratizing-design/[2] Editors. “adidas Futurecraft: The Ultimate 3D-Printed Personalized Shoe.” Materialize. Last accessed 1/20/2016 at http://www.materialise.com/cases/adidas-futurecraft-the-ultimate-3d-printed-personalized-shoe[3] Florida, R. (2012). The Rise of the Creative Class. Basic Books.[4] Cavalcanti, G. (2013). “Making Makerspaces: Creating a Business Model.” Make. Published June 4, 2013. Last accessed 2/1/16 at http://makezine.com/2013/06/04/making-makerspaces-creating-a-business-model/[5
semester grades between classes that usedthe quiz approach and those that did not use it. The survey is presented in Appendix A, and thegrade comparison results are in Appendix B.The study consisted of applying the "in-class quiz" methodology at the undergraduate level overa period of three years. Students from the departments of civil engineering, electricalengineering, and mechanical engineering participated in the pilot study, the details of which arepresented in Table 1. Table 1: Pilot Study Course Description (Engineering) Course Session Year/s Department1 Major2 Number Average of Age
design project “isincorporated into the engineering classroom it allows for a unique blend of creativity andchallenge that is often hard to accommodate in introductory engineering curriculum”. While thefirst implementation of the project was by no means perfect, we look forward to improving andre-implementing the project, both because of the valuable skills it develops in the students andbecause of the enthusiasm, excitement, and engagement that was evident in the students.References1.Jordan, S. & Pereira, N. (2009). Rube Goldbergineering: Lessons in Teaching Engineering Design to FutureEngineers. Paper presented at the American Society for Engineering Education Conference & Exposition2. O’Connor, D. (2003). Application Sharing in K-12
Island International Engineering Program (IEP).3 The Rhode Island IEPseeks to train engineers to be able to operate in the international workplace by earning onedegree in an engineering discipline and one in a foreign language. In a similar, but more focusedway, the Georgia Institute of Technology, School of Civil and Environmental Engineering uses aprogram called the Joe S. Mundy Global Learning Endowment4 to provide an internationallearning experience for students that may include international research or a summer-long studyabroad. In addition to the significant resources often needed to promote study abroad, there areother curricula actions that affect the perceived ability of institutions to promote globalization-related learning outcomes
interdisciplinary design education. In 14th Int. Conf. onControl, Automation and Systems (ICCAS), pages 678–685, Oct 2014. doi: 10.1109/ICCAS.2014.6987866.10. I. Deaconu and A. Voinescu. Mobile gateway for wireless sensor networks utilizing drones. In 13th RoEduNet Conference: 8th RENAM Joint Event, pages 1–5, Sept 2014. doi: 10.1109/RoEduNet-RENAM.2014.6955319.11. S.A. Rahok Yokokawa, H. Oneda, S. Osawa, and K. Ozaki. Development of a teaching material that can motivate students to learn control engineering and image processing. In 17th Int. Conf. on Comput. Sci. and Eng. (CSE), pages 413–419, Dec 2014. doi: 10.1109/CSE.2014.104.12. The Navigation and Control Technology Inside the AR.Drone Micro UAV, Milano, Italy, 2011.13. AR.Drone 2.0
what types ofknowledge, skills or attitudinal sets are needed to become an effective ‘life-long learner.’” (p.105)12 Thus, despite McGourty et al.’s call for operational clarification, 1 outcome (i) still appearsto confound many engineering programs.Our research was guided by the question, “How do engineering programs address ABET studentoutcomes as reported within their program self-study documents?” Our research goal was to helpeducators interpret the breadth and specificity of ABET student outcomes by offering a structuraltechnique to interpret outcomes and to plan, implement, and evaluate curricula. This paperpresents our research process—a curriculum design framework to map the components ofstudent outcomes. To illustrate its