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Abstract

Electrical Engineering 2300 is a required course for certain undergraduate and graduate computer science students at Lamar University. This course for non-engineering majors covers a broad range of topics, including electrical energy, analog circuits, combinational logic, and digital circuits. Teaching a survey course in electrical engineering to a class with no prerequisite engineering knowledge except introductory calculus poses a considerable challenge for the instructor. What is the objective of such a course? Where does one begin? How can the material be condensed into twenty-five 50-minute lectures? Why should a non-engineer want to acquire this knowledge? Because engineering is much more than book learning, theory is reinforced by laboratory exercises in circuits and digital electronics. Typically, the students have no prior hands-on laboratory experience. The laboratory component seeks to meld the familiar (computer simulation) with the novel (hands-on synthesis and analysis) and relate each activity to current lecture material. Course exams lean heavily toward the practical application of skills, such as using technical data sheets. At its best, this course brings a real-world perspective to the future computer science professional and aids the development of problem solving skills. This paper presents a brief synopsis of the course, lessons learned by a new instructor, and recommendations for developing similar courses.

Introduction The novice instructor was about to tackle her first semester teaching electrical engineering to undergraduates.

“ELEN 2300: Analog & Digital Logic Circuits. Credits 3. For non-EE majors, this course covers a broad range of analog and digital circuits. Prerequisite: Calculus I.”

It didn’t seem so bad. The framework offered broad latitude for instructor discretion.

“GOALS: Successive knowledge development leading to the understanding of basic computer architecture, including basic analog and digital logic circuits, number systems, memory devices, various building blocks of a computer, and interfacing real-world inputs/outputs to the computer.”

Computer architecture? In a one-semester course for non-majors?

“Prerequisites by topic: Physics Complex variables Basic computer skills”

What had I gotten myself into?

First, don’t panic. As a novice instructor, I had the advantage of not knowing that I was in deep trouble, so I entered the classroom each day with confidence. Furthermore, the other professors were so glad not to be teaching ELEN 2300 that they wouldn’t criticize any scheme or

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Details

Business indexing term
Title
Abort, Retry, Ignore Electrical Engineering For Non Engineers
Source details
Conference: 2002 Annual Conference; Location: Montreal, Canada; Start Date: June 16, 2002; End Date: June 19, 2002
Pages
7.137.1-7.137.6
Publication year
2002
Publication date
Jun 16, 2002
Publisher
American Society for Engineering Education-ASEE
Place of publication
Atlanta
Country of publication
United States
Source type
Conference Paper
Language of publication
English
Document type
Conference Proceedings
Publication history
 
 
Online publication date
2015-03-10
Publication history
 
 
   First posting date
10 Mar 2015
ProQuest document ID
2317686154
Document URL
https://www.proquest.com/conference-papers-proceedings/abort-retry-ignore-electrical-engineering-non/docview/2317686154/se-2?accountid=208611
Copyright
© 2002. Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the associated terms available at https://peer.asee.org/about .
Last updated
2025-11-18
Database
ProQuest One Academic