Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., New Hampshire Univ., Durham, NH, USA
Abstract :
Summary form only as given. The age of the Heathkit has passed. Previously, electrical engineering educators were able to rely on tinkering experiences outside the classroom to motivate the subject matter in first and second year courses, especially physics, circuit theory and circuit design. In contrast, today´s typical first year student has had little experience with tinkering due to high levels of circuit integration and complexity in consumer electronics. In an effort to recover some of that tinkerer motivation in an introductory course, the author designed a three-week module to develop students´ abilities to analyze systems and devices in terms of input, processing and output stages. As part of this module, each student assembled a do-it-yourself kit for an electrical device and wrote a brief analysis of the device in terms of its stages. This year, the author chose a siren kit for the range of components involved (resistors, diodes, capacitors, transistors, switches and ICs) and the level of expertise required to assemble it. Students became acquainted with a laboratory environment, learned the resistor color code and acquired soldering skills. Hopefully, students also formed lasting connections between electrical symbols on paper and physical devices that will motivate them in subsequent electrical engineering courses. This poster describes the complete three-week module design and execution, including associated assignments, student evaluations, pitfalls and successes
Keywords :
educational courses; electrical engineering education; laboratories; student experiments; electrical engineering education courses; first year students; introductory course; laboratory environment; motivation; tinkering; Assembly; Capacitors; Circuit synthesis; Circuit theory; Consumer electronics; Diodes; Electrical engineering; Physics; Resistors; Switches;