FAIRFIELD UNIVERSITY

School of Engineering

 

- EG 31 Syllabus -

Fundamentals of Engineering 1

Fall Semester, 2005

 

INSTRUCTOR:                   Jeffrey N. Denenberg, PhD.

Adjunct Professor: EE

 

LECTURERS:                     Interdisciplinary Faculty Team

 

EMAIL:                                 Jeffrey.Denenberg@ieee.org

 

PHONE:                               203-268-1021

 

WEBSITE:                           http://doctord.webhop.net

 

OFFICE HOURS:                One hour prior to each class, McAuliffe 2nd floor

 

CLASS HOURS:                 6:30 p.m. - 9:30 p.m. Mondays (Section 01, first class is on September 12, 2005)    

2:00 p.m. - 4:30 p.m. Thursdays (Section 02, first class is on September 8, 2005)

 

LECTURE ROOM:                            CNS 304 (Section 01)

McA 102 (Section 02)

 

TEXTBOOK:                       Fundamentals of Engineering, Prentice Hall E-Source, 2005 (ISBN 053695108X). TOC

 

SUPPLEMENTAL:              Engineering by Design, G. Voland, 2nd Ed, Pearson Prentice Hall 2004 (ISBN 0131409190).
Old EG31 Materials

 

 

SUMMARY COURSE DESCRIPTION

 

To introduce freshmen to the profession and to fundamentals of engineering study, an overview is provided of engineering disciplines, professionalism, computer-based skills, engineering design analysis methods, and the engineering design process. Hands-on engineering activities are emphasized.  Pre-requisites or co-requisites are MA 125 and PS 15.

 

COURSE LEARNING GOALS

 

EG31 introduces the student to the systematic design process and to the application of statistics to engineering data. The student is expected to conduct the active and diligent study needed to meet the following learning goals.

 

®     Develop a more informed understanding of what engineers in different fields do

®     Understand basic ethical responsibilities of engineers towards society and the profession

®     Understand the significance of professional engineer licensing and how to obtain it

®     Understand the underlying principles of electrical and digital circuit analysis

®     Become familiar with electrical and digital circuit experimental laboratory equipment

®     Know how to perform fundamental Visual Basic and HTML programming

®     Learn how simultaneous equations are solved with the aid of Matlab

®     Learn how mechanisms analysis is performed with the aid of Working Model

®     Learn to communicate experimental procedures and results through written engineering laboratory reports

®     Learn the basics of scheduling an engineering project

®     Appreciate how to work as part of a successful interdisciplinary engineering team

®     Learn to apply Excel and Word in engineering written communications

 

COURSE LEARNING OUTCOMES

 

After meeting the EG31 learning goals, the student is expected to have the following abilities.

 

®     Select or confirm choice of an engineering or non-engineering academic major

®     Judge professional actions as ethical or unethical based on codes of engineering ethics

®     Assess the importance of being professionally licensed in chosen engineering field

®     Calculate current flows and voltage drops in an electrical circuit represented by a schematic diagram

®     Represent a set of simultaneous linear equations in matrix form and solve using Matlab

®     Predict the output of a digital logic circuit represented by a gate symbol diagram

®     Construct and test functional experimental electrical and digital circuits

®     Prepare a lab report that clearly communicates the principles, procedures, and results of experiments and tests

®     Work as a cooperating, contributing member of a student project team

®     Construct a Gantt or PERT chart for scheduling all the tasks required in a student design or test project

®     Prepare a table of data as an Excel spreadsheet

®     Write a discussion or report using Word

®     Analyze the motion of a mechanism using Working Model

®     Prepare a Basic computer program to control an educational robot

®     Construct a web site by directly coding in HTML

 

STUDENT RESPONSIBILITIES

 

Attendance

 

EG31 is a fast-paced course to introduce the student to a range of subjects and skills. A substantial portion of a topic would be missed by being absent from even a single session.

 

®     Students are required attend each regularly scheduled session.

®     Releases are to be submitted to the instructor prior to missing a specific class for athletic participation.

®     The student is responsible for acquiring all notes and assignments from any missed class.

®     Field trip participation is not mandatory unless the student registers with the instructor to attend. If a student commits to a field trip but doesn’t attend, Professionalism points will be subtracted from the final grade.

 

Homework

 

True learning of a subject requires thoughtful and thorough completion of homework study and written assignments in a timely manner (hint: if you can teach the lesson…you’ve learned it). Also, since an underlying objective of EG32 is to encourage a sense of professional responsibility, students are required to turn in their assignments on time.

 

®     Students are expected to spend nine or more hours per week on EG32 homework and project assignments.

®     Written and problem assignments are to be prepared by each individual student unless specifically identified by the instructor as a team effort. Duplicate written assignments will be returned without a grade.

®     Credit is to be given in footnote format for information you extract or download from published sources and incorporate into your lab or project reports.

®     Assignments are due at the following lecture. If an assignment is one week late, 20% of the grade will be deducted. No grade will be given if an assignment is more than two weeks late,

®     Essay and technical document homework assignments are to be word-processed.

®     Since homework submittals are technical communication, grammar, spelling, appearance and organization will impact your grade. Multiple pages of written assignments are to be stapled (no paper clips or folded corners).

 

Quizzes

 

Quizzes encourage firm understanding of basic principles explained in the textbook sections and lecture notes assigned for homework. Frequent quizzes, along with homework assignments, assist timely identification and counseling of students at risk of not achieving a minimum final grade of C-.

 

®     Closed-book quizzes are announced in the syllabus schedule.

®     Closed-book quizzes are given during the first five minutes of the lecture.

®     Open-text quizzes may be given unannounced at any time.

®     Make-up quizzes will not be given.

Exams

 

®     Mid-Term and Final Exams can be taken only during the scheduled sessions.

 

 

COURSE REQUIREMENTS

 

Materials

 

®     The textbook is to be brought to every class for reference during lectures and open-book quizzes.

®     Writing instruments and notebooks are to be brought to every class for recording lecture notes.

®     A stapler is to be used for fastening multiple pages of homework assignments.

®     A floppy disk may be used to save any computer files created in the classroom.

 

Email

 

®     Each student is expected to have an email address for receiving class-related communications.

®     Computer files generated in the classroom may be emailed to your personal account for retention and printing.

 

COURSE AND ASSIGNMENT GRADING

 

A final grade below C- is assumed to reflect failure on the part of the student to meet the Course Learning Goals.

 

Course and assignment grading is consistent with the procedure described in the Fairfield University catalog:

 

A

93 - 100

A-

90 - 92

B+

87 - 89

B

83 - 86

B-

80 - 82

C+

77 - 79

C

73 - 76

C-

70 - 72

D

60 - 69

F

00 - 59

 

The final grade is weighted as follows.

 

Final Exam

25%

Intermediate Exam

25%

Team Design Project

25%

Quizzes

10%

Homework

10%

Professionalism

05%

 

Results to Date

 

Section 01 - Mondays: Final Grades             Includes Projected Final Grades

Section 02 - Thursdays: Final Grades          Includes Projected Final Grades

 

INSTRUCTOR FEEDBACK

 

®     Dr Denenberg is available for the hour before each class on the 2nd floor of McAuliffee Hall.
Guest instructors are available for discussion of lecture topics or to provide feedback on graded assignments following each session or by appointment.

 

FREE STUDY ASSISTANCE

 

®     Tutoring in engineering, math, and science courses is available between 6 p.m. and 9 p.m. in the MCA gallery or by special arrangement. Contact the School of Engineering office, x4147, MCA 106 for details.

®     For help with math courses, contact the Math Center, x2515, BNW 12.

®     For help with writing papers, contact the Writing Center, x2214, DMH 247.

®     For online access to E-Source textbooks covering engineering skills, graphics, and applications, visit http://emissary.prenhall.com/esource/access/login.php. Log in under the user id and password provided in class.

 

 

 


SCHEDULE

Use of guest lecturers gives the student an opportunity to interact with practicing engineers having industry and research experience in their topic areas. The Instructor and guest lecturers often provide copies of their presentations (via the on-line links below) for home study but the student is still expected to actively follow the discussion and take written notes to record clarification or additional insight.

Session

Mon (01)

6:30-9:30

Thu (02)

2:00-4:30

EG31 Topic (Fall 2005)

Instructor

Reference
(Old Text, *web)

Assignment

Schedule Notes

I

Sept 12

Sept 8

Engineering: Success, Disciplines, Career Options

CAREER SELECTION

Denenberg

Text: pp 1-72 (3-59,C2*)

Notes1: ppt, pdf, html

Notes2: ppt, pdf, html

Get ahead in your reading
p.15 # 1-2*,
p. 34 # 1,10 (p. 20)

 

II

Sept 19

Sept 15

Units, Equations and the Physical World

ANALYSIS METHODS; COMMUNICATIONS

Denenberg

Text pp 81-115 (69-103)
Notes: ppt, pdf, html

Text p 108-112 (95-99)
#2, 6, 8, 14, 19

 

III

Sept 26

Sept 22

Electrical Circuit Analysis (Matlab)

INTRO TO ELEC ENG; S/W TOOL

Denenberg

Text: pp 116-153 (105-143),
       pp 331-370 (C19,20*, 325-337)
Circuits: ppt, pdf, html
Electronics: ppt, pdf, html

MatLab Tutorial: Index

Rework  MatLab Analysis with Measured Values;
Design Exercise

Design Exercise Solution

 

IV

Oct 03

Sept 29

Electronic Circuit Design [Lab: Bannow 133]

INTRO TO EE; LAB REPORT

Denenberg

Lab Report Format

OrCad, CircuitMaker

Laboratory Report

 

V

Oct 17

Oct 06

Digital Logic Circuits (MultiSim) [Lab]

INTRO TO COMP ENG; SW TOOL

Denenberg

Craciun

Digital Logic: ppt, pdf, html

Multisim Files: html

Play-Hookey, Alex_Pounds

Laboratory Report
AdderCircuit, 74ls08, 74ls32, 74ls86

Oct 10

Columbus Day

VI

Oct 24

Oct 13

Energy, Gas Mileage and Hybrids

ANALYSIS METHODS; INTERDISCIPLINARY

Denenberg

Notes: ppt, pdf, html

HSD Simulator (Java)

 

 

VII

Oct 31

Oct 20

Intermediate Exam – Take Home
Active Noise Cancellation Discussion

Denenberg

DetroitDiesel.mp3
SAE ANC Presentation

 

 

FT

 

 

Site Visit (Nash-Elmo Engineering)

CAREER SELECTION

 

 

 

To be Scheduled

VIII

Nov 07

Oct 27

Exam Reprise

Mechanics: Stress and Strain
INTRO TO MECH ENG

Denenberg

Text pp 155-196 (145-188)
Notes: ppt, pdf, html

Text: p.197-206
(188-197)
#3, 15, 16

 

IX

Nov 14

Nov 03

Mathcad
S/W TOOL; LAB PREP

Denenberg

Text pp 415-447 (339-364)
Notes: ppt, pdf, html
Tutorial

 

 

X

Nov 21

Nov 10

Computer Programming (HTML)

INTRO TO SOFT ENG

Denenberg

Dave Kristula's HTML Tutorial

Dave's Javascript Tutorial

Download/Install HTML-Kit

Build a personal web page; Use discussed elements

 

XI

Nov 28

Nov 17

Mechanisms Analysis (Working Model)

INTRO TO MECH ENG; S/W TOOL

McFadden

 

WorkingModelExample

Nov 23-27

Thanksgiving

XII

Dec 05

Dec 01

Programming in MatLab
INTRO TO
SW ENG; S/W TOOL

Denenberg

Text: pp 331-400 (C19*,C20*)

Notes1: ppt, pdf, html

 

 

XIII

Dec 12

Dec 08

Review for Final Exam

EG32 Preview

Denenberg

 

 

 

XIV

Dec 19
6:30 pm

Dec 20
9:00 am

Final Exam

Denenberg

 

 

Dec 15-23
Final exam Period