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The Gene and Linda Voiland School of Chemical Engineering and Bioengineering

Howard Davis and Denny Davis win 2011 Library Excellence Award

Howard Davis
Howard Davis
Denny Davis
Denny Davis

Howard Davis and Denny Davis of the Bioengineering program were named as the joint winners of the 2011 Library Excellence Award. Davis and Davis identified an important educational need in their senior bioengineering capstone design class: the lack of Information Literacy skills in many of their students. Concerned about their students’ ability to succeed, not only in the classroom but in their future careers, they devoted valuable time to participate with WSU librarians in the Project to Improve Information Literacy Skills Development (PRMWG) in WSU Engineering Courses. Wendy Blake, the Chair of PRMWG notes that “Dr. Denny Davis and Dr. Howard Davis have clearly demonstrated their appreciation for the WSU Libraries by their enthusiastic personal commitment to improving the research skills of their students.”

Drs. Davis will be honored at the annual LEA reception on Tuesday, April 26, 2011, 10:00 AM–11:00 AM in the Terrell Atrium.

Denny Davis Receives Sahlin Award

Denny Davis receiving Sahlin Award
(l to r) Dean Candice Claiborn, Prof. Denny Davis, Pres. Elson Floyd, and Provost Warwick Bayly

Denny C. Davis, professor in the School of Chemical Engineering and Bioengineering and director of the Engineering Education Research Center (EERC), earned the Sahlin Faculty Excellence Award for Leadership. Four WSU faculty members have been named recipients of the annual 2010–11 Sahlin awards. The awards were presented at WSU’s annual Showcase celebration of excellence on March 25, 2011.

Professor Davis is recognized as a leader in engineering education at the local, national and international levels because of educational innovations and scholarship he has catalyzed through the EERC. He has provided vital leadership for instructional innovations leading to a nationally recognized interdisciplinary engineering entrepreneurship senior projects experience at WSU.

Professor Denny Davis working with students in the Capstone Design class
Professor Denny Davis working with students in the Capstone Design class

Davis’ servant-leadership has had numerous impacts. He has mentored faculty locally and nationally to become successful in engineering education scholarship. His mentoring has yielded a diverse, well funded cadre of engineering education scholars at WSU and collaborators across the nation. He has traveled abroad as an expert in his field to introduce others to his innovations in engineering design education, and international scholars have visited WSU to personally explore the uniqueness of the programs developed by Davis.

He was a founding member of the President’s Teaching Academy, a group that was charged with helping to lead WSU’s educational process. With his contributions and leadership, the academy developed and implemented several programs and tools that have advanced WSU’s instructional mission.

Denny Davis
Professor Denny Davis

Voiland Researchers are National Leaders in Engineering Education for 2010

Denny Davis, Bernie Van Wie, and Richard Zollars
(l to r) Professors Denny Davis, Bernie Van Wie, and Richard Zollars

“We need to teach our kids that it’s not just the winner of the Super Bowl who deserves to be celebrated, but the winner of the science fair.”
– Barack Obama, 2011 State of the Union address

With government and industry leaders calling for innovation as a way to stay competitive in a global economy and for improved education, particularly, in engineering and sciences, a group of Washington State University researchers is taking a leading role in the field of engineering education.

Three faculty members in WSU’s Gene and Linda Voiland School of Chemical Engineering and Bioengineering received approximately 10 percent of the $18 million awarded nationally by the National Science Foundation’s Transforming Undergraduate Education in Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (TUES) program, more research money in 2010 than any other academic department in the United States. The program provides research support for the improvement of curricula and teaching methods in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) fields.

“If we are to meet the national call to be technology leaders in the 21st century, we need to be innovative in the way that we educate our students and bring the best education tools into our classrooms,” strong funding support speaks very well to the cutting-edge work we’re doing in this area.”

In 2005, WSU researchers from the College of Engineering and Architecture and the College of Education established the Engineering Education Research Center to facilitate research enabling innovation and effectiveness in engineering education. Led by Denny Davis, professor in the Voiland School, the research center has led and encouraged engineering education research that now is one of the larger research thrusts at WSU.

Voiland school researchers were also leaders in establishing the first-ever research experience program for junior high school and high school teachers in the United States. The SWEET (Summer at WSU Engineering Experiences for Teachers) program, which was initiated by three faculty from the Voiland School (Jim Petersen, Bill Thomson and Richard Zollars) and has subsequently been established at a national level, introduces teachers to engineering and helps them develop learning modules that they can bring back into their classrooms.

In 2010, three Voiland School researchers received support for the following engineering education NSF TUES funded projects:

  • Multi-Disciplinary Project-Based Paradigm that Uses Hands-on Desktop Learning Modules and Modern Learning Pedagogies. Led by Bernard Van Wie, professor in the Voiland School, this $600,000 project expands on an earlier project that developed a prototype desktop learning module (DLM). The DLM is a desktop apparatus with multiple, easily interchangeable cartridges that can be reconfigured to perform a variety of experiments. This apparatus is being used in classrooms for implementing better teaching practices and demonstrating basic concepts in fluid mechanics and heat transfer.
  • Appraisal System for Superior Engineering Education Evaluation-instrument Sharing and Scholarship (ASSESS). Led by Denny Davis, professor in the Voiland School, the purpose of this $600,000 project is to create a web-based library of proven engineering education evaluation instruments to help build evaluation capacity for the engineering education community.
  • Exploring Studio-Based Learning in Chemical Engineering Education. Led by Richard Zollars, professor in the Voiland School, this $600,000 project builds on a previously developed scaffolded software environment called ChemProV (Chemical Process Visualizer). ChemProV presents chemical engineering students with dynamically-generated feedback on the syntactic and semantic correctness of their evolving process flow diagrams and sets of equations, guiding them toward correct solutions.

In addition to these projects in engineering education, Shane Brown, assistant professor in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, also received a $400,000 National Science Foundation CAREER grant for a four-year project to better understand how practicing civil engineers gain understanding of engineering concepts. He hopes to develop a model of engineering thinking about these concepts and to create improved curricular materials based on this research.

We are in the Business of Learning

Bernie Van Wie works with students using the Desktop Learning Module (DLM) developed by then PhD student, now Postdoctoral Research Associate, Paul Golter
Bernie Van Wie works with students using the Desktop Learning Module (DLM) developed by then PhD student, now Postdoctoral Research Associate, Paul Golter

Working to devise ways for engineering students to learn better, Baba Abdul, a PhD student in the Gene and Linda Voiland School of Chemical and Bioengineering, relates the basic premise of improving education to that of business—that we are here to serve the customer. “The student is the customer, and we’re in the business of educating,” he says.

Abdul is working with Bernard Van Wie, a professor in the Voiland School, in the area of engineering education. Van Wie’s team recently received a National Science Foundation grant to continue work on the development and use of a desktop learning module (DLM). The DLM, designed by PhD student Paul Golter, is a desktop apparatus with multiple, easily removable cartridges that can be reconfigured to perform experiments. Machinists from the WSU College of Engineering and Architecture Machine Shop were instrumental in helping design and construct the Desktop Learning Module.

Students using DLM device in class
Dissemination efforts took place recently when Prof. Van Wie and WSU PhD student Baba Abdul took the DLMs to Oklahoma University for implementation in a Christmas break Intersession transport course taught by OU’s Prof. Ed O’Rear. Abdul, who joined WSU’s PhD program as a result of Van Wie’s recent Fulbright exchange and NSF OISE supplement for work at Ahmadu Bello University in Nigeria, points to a DLM cartridge with a team of students during an active learning exercise.

Van Wie has been working since the late 1990’s to improve engineering education and to close the gap between how students learn and the way that engineering has traditionally been taught. In particular, he led a team of researchers in developing a curriculum based on Cooperative, Hands-on, Active, Problem-based Learning (CHAPL).

Professional educators have known for years about the benefits of using such learning approaches, and for engineering, hands-on learning is particularly important, says Van Wie. The typical student interested in engineering already tends to be better at learning while doing and at absorbing visual rather than verbal information. While non-lecture techniques have been commonly accepted and used at the elementary school level, they have been slow to be accepted in college, especially in engineering and the hard sciences.

Abdul, who grew up and attended college in Nigeria, remembers suffering through engineering classes that were taught in a traditional format. Professors would come into the classroom, tell students that none of them would receive an A, and then begin lecturing. “They didn’t help us to build our knowledge,” says Abdul.

Many students decided they couldn’t do engineering, and out of his class of 50 students at one of Nigeria’s top universities, only 20 graduated.

Out of the effort to develop an active curriculum, Van Wie uses the DLM for hands-on activities. In classes with the DLM, students learn to match the math they are learning with what is actually happening physically. So, for instance, the DLM contains a heat exchanger. Students conduct experiments to understand the concept of heat transfer between fluids. Understanding the concept of cross-flow and parallel flow can be confusing, says Abdul, but with the DLM, the students can see the difference between the two concepts and then learn to understand the equations “rather than just ‘plugging and chugging,’ ” he says.

The researchers have tested students’ understanding of concepts as they participate in hands-on and project-based learning. From evaluations, the researchers have found students prefer the hands-on activities and the projects that depend on understanding built during those activities.

“They feel that they’re doing real engineering,” says Abdul, “and the group work that they do simulates what happens in an engineering firm.”

The researchers found that working on team-based projects allowed students to learn valuable evaluation skills. The students actually rated themselves more harshly than professors and industry advisors did.

“The learning that happens is a complex learning experience that is focused and authentic,” says Abdul.

In the research, Van Wie’s team has shown that students using DLMs have shown statistically significant improvements in critical thinking skills and understanding of engineering concepts.

With the new grant, the researchers will be expanding use of the DLMs from its initial testing in a chemical engineering transport phenomena class into a variety of engineering classrooms, including civil, mechanical, bio- and even electrical engineering. In chemical engineering, the researchers will be trying out the DLM in thermodynamics and in a senior unit operations laboratory.

The DLM is being further used and tested in classes at five different institutions, ranging from a two-year college, to private four-year universities and a research university. The researchers also hope to begin working with industry partners to produce a commercial product. Recently, over the 2010 Christmas break the researchers successfully implemented the DLMs within a University of Oklahoma intersession class with Prof. Ed O’Rear, a collaborator from Oklahoma’s Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering Department.

Lake Roosevelt High School wins 2010 Imagine Tomorrow Competition

Student team from Lake Roosevelt High School (Mr. Rise, advisor)
Student team from Lake Roosevelt High School (Mr. Rise, advisor)

Imagine Tomorrow at WSU is an annual high school competition that challenges students to seek new ways to support the transition to alternate energy sources. The student team from Lake Roosevelt High School (Mr. Rise was their advisor) entered the 2010 Imagine Tomorrow event last summer, and their project won first place for the category of behavior challenge as well as advisors’ favorite.

For this project, the students aimed to create a solar energy education curriculum for elementary school children in Malawi Africa. The project addresses the question of how developing countries can use sustainable energy education to improve the future for their children. To achieve this goal the Lake Roosevelt group created a partnership with the Masanjala Educational Foundation-Malawi. Curriculum materials they produced were sent to the middle school science teacher in Chiradzulu, Malawi. The project includes a solar water pasteurization component with supporting tools and materials. Water in Malawi is usually untreated, is of poor quality, affects children’s health and ultimately hinders Malawi’s ability to improve living conditions. The curriculum uses reclaimed materials to construct a model of a solar cooker which captures sun energy. Using solar energy to bring water to a pasteurization temperature has been shown to improve water quality and conserves Malawi’s limited wood resources.

2010 Platinum Laureate: Voiland Contribution Furthers Engineering Research and Education

The largest one-time commitment by an individual donor in the University’s history is paving the way for WSU to have one of the nation’s leading chemical engineering programs focused on renewable energy innovations. The naming of the Gene and Linda Voiland School of Chemical Engineering and Bioengineering honors the Voilands’ revolutionary $17.5 million commitment to WSU. This remarkable gift will enable WSU to build on existing strengths and attract exceptional students and faculty to conduct research in catalytic systems for renewable fuels and sustainable energy. This historic gift will ensure that future generations of WSU students will have access to a truly transformative chemical engineering education.

Video Transcript

Gene Voiland: “We believe in giving back and I was very successful in my career but I was very successful really because of some people at WSU and the education I got there.”

Text: Gene & Linda Voiland, 2010 Platinum Laureate, Washington State University Foundation

Linda Voiland: “There was a specific need that came out of the school, out of the school, out of the college.”

James Petersen (Chemical Engineering professor and Director of the Gene and Linda Voiland School of Chemical Engineering and Bioengineering): “Gene and Linda have made a series of gifts to the school, the latest gift has had a huge impact on the school. It has allowed us to hire a world-class faculty member.”

Gene Voiland: “We have basically hired a number of professors and world-class people to do world-class research and teaching.”

James Petersen: “As a result, the US News rankings of the school have risen 18 points in the last two years. The students who graduate from an institution with a high reputation have better potential for jobs and if the department has a high reputation we can do a better job of attracting outstanding students. Not only have the student numbers gone up, the student quality has gone up and the fraction of women has increased. Right now, 30 percent of the juniors and seniors in chemical engineering are women. This is about twice the national average.”

Aime Feero (Senior, Chemical Engineering): “You could do anything with chemical engineering. You don’t have to sit in the lab and be next to the distillation column with your hard hat and all that sort of stuff, but you can go into entrepreneurship or design. There are so many options and I think that is what is appealing to so many women.”

Linda Voiland: “If we turn out the students that we think that we can to do the things that we think they can do, they will be better off for it, the rest of the world will be better off for it.”

Gene Voiland: “I think the big thing is is that whenever someone works with world-class people and are trained by them and learn how they do their business, they’re going to accomplish something. Who knows where they might be a difference, but I know they will.”

Stephen Davidson (PhD candidate, Chemical Engineering): “My project is cobalt catalyzed ethanol steam reform. It’s effectively a process that converts ethanol into hydrogen. The current process takes natural gas and turns it into hydrogen. The obvious benefit here is we can always make more ethanol and there are so many better things you can use natural gas for than for just making hydrogen.”

Gene Voiland: “What I really like is I like the quality of the people. It’s more than the institution. It’s the people. That’s who talks to you is the professor or the researcher.”

Linda Voiland: “I think the thing that strikes me is they’re just real people. They’re very approachable and if I’d had a few people like that when I was going to school, it really would have made an impact.”

Gene Voiland: “I think that’s a lot of what WSU is always about. There is a passion in the school. Sometimes, you know, with really big universities you’re part of something big but you don’t feel like it and this has a very friendly, warm feeling and people care.”

James Petersen: “The undergraduate students that we’re educating are being educated by outstanding scholars interacting with world leaders. All of this I directly attribute to the gift and the vision that Gene and Linda have.”

Aime Feero: “Thank you for supporting the school and making an effort to continue to support the students as well. Not only the money which is obviously a great gift too but the continual support that it will be, I would say thank you for that.”

Gene Voiland: “The way I view it is that we’re making an investment in the future.”

Linda Voiland: “It’s an investment in our kids. It’s an investment in the long-term standing of the school. I think that it will attract world-class students.”

Gene Voiland: “We really believe in WSU.”

Text: Gene & Linda Voiland, 2010 Platinum Laureate, Washington State University Foundation

Lonnie Wilson’s Book, How to Implement Lean Manufacturing, a Bestseller

Book: How to Implement Lean Manufacturing, by Lonnie Wilson

We are proud of Voiland School alumnus, Lonnie Wilson, whose book was recently listed as the best seller in the “Industrial, Manufacturing & Operational Systems: Quality Control” category at Amazon. How to Implement Lean Manufacturing is published by McGraw-Hill and is a practical, hands-on guide to lean manufacturing. Readers have praised Lonnie for his explanations that take the mystery out of the lean manufacturing process.

McGraw-Hill says: “Wilson’s real-world resource offers proven solutions for implementing lean manufacturing in an enterprise environment, covering the engineering and production aspects as well as the business culture concerns. Filled with detailed examples, the book focuses on the rapid application of lean principles so that large, early financial gains can be made.

“Lonnie Wilson graduated from WSU’s Voiland School in 1969 with a B.S. in Chemical Engineering. He has been teaching and implementing Lean techniques for more than 39 years. His experience spans 20 years with an international oil company where he held a number of management positions. In 1990 he founded Quality Consultants which teaches and applies Lean techniques to small entrepreneurs and Fortune 500 firms, principally in the United States, Mexico, and Canada.”