Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Kansas State Univ., Manhattan, KS
Abstract :
During Fall Semester 1996 at Kansas State University, the authors carried out an experiment in teaching. The experiment involved Circuit Theory II and Electronics I, two core lecture courses in both the electrical engineering and the computer engineering curricula, which are normally taken concurrently. The basic approach to Electronics I was altered from a strict lecture format, with introductory material on solid-state electronics, two- and three-terminal solid-state devices, and basic electronic circuits, to a combination lecture/discussion/laboratory/design-and experience. In Electronics I, we placed emphasis on review and assimilation of topics covered in previous courses, as well as topics covered concurrently in the Circuit Theory II course. We used a “discovery” approach to the presentation of the subject matter, and we formed an imaginary company, with each student being both an engineer and a middle-level manager. Our company´s goal was to produce a regulated dual-tracking power supply, which provided the vehicle for applying the basic subject matter of Electronics I. In addition, we addressed issues in scheduling, human resources, purchasing, procurement, financial management, marketing, customer/design-team interaction, public relations, publicity, intracompany communications, technical writing, engineering design, fabrication, manufacturing, CAD, graphics arts, test and measurement, and quality assurance. We present a brief summary of the experience
Keywords :
circuit theory; educational courses; electrical engineering education; management education; network synthesis; power supply circuits; CAD; Kansas State University; circuit theory; computer engineering curriculum; customer/design-team interaction; discovery; electrical engineering curriculum; electronics; experiment; financial management; graphics art; human resources; instrumentation; intracompany communications; lecture courses; marketing; middle-level manager; procurement; public relations; publicity; purchasing; quality assurance; regulated dual-tracking power supply; scheduling; technical writing; testing; undergraduate electrical engineering courses; Automotive engineering; Circuit theory; Concurrent computing; Consumer electronics; Education; Electrical engineering; Electronic circuits; Electronic equipment testing; Power engineering and energy; Solid state circuits;
Conference_Titel :
Instrumentation and Measurement Technology Conference, 1997. IMTC/97. Proceedings. Sensing, Processing, Networking., IEEE