Filtering by
- All Subjects: educational
- All Subjects: Simulation
- Creators: Computing and Informatics Program
- Member of: Barrett, The Honors College Thesis/Creative Project Collection
- Member of: Theses and Dissertations
Media Mentality is a media education resource website designed to aid students in early career development. This project was developed with a few goals in mind: improve accessibility, provide opportunity and inspire a new generation of the workforce. We wanted to level the playing field as students enter undergraduate programs with varying degrees of experience. We see this website as an opportunity for interested parties to continue the research and add to the wealth of knowledge in a student worker role. The hope is that students, particularly freshman and first-year transfer students will utilize the site, expand their horizons, learn about all the career opportunities available to them, and push the envelope when it comes to the curriculum taught at Arizona State University. Visit www.mediamentality.com
Media Mentality is a media education resource website designed to aid students in early career development. This project was developed with a few goals in mind: improve accessibility, provide opportunity and inspire a new generation of the workforce. We wanted to level the playing field as students enter undergraduate programs with varying degrees of experience. We see this website as an opportunity for interested parties to continue the research and add to the wealth of knowledge in a student worker role. The hope is that students, particularly freshman and first-year transfer students will utilize the site, expand their horizons, learn about all the career opportunities available to them, and push the envelope when it comes to curriculum taught at Arizona State University.
Unity simulation tool by implementing political policies or adjusting values via sliders, buttons, etc., which will alter the values in the framework. The user can then use the simulation interface to view different estimated population values for categories of people, such as regional differences, education levels, and more.
The majority of the public is not aware that common objects in their backyard can be mosquito breeding sites, thus leading to an increase in mosquitoes and mosquito-borne diseases affecting humans and animals during the peak seasons. An engaging app that instructs people of all ages how to identify, prevent, and eliminate breeding sites may be of use in increasing positive behavioral changes in people, and therefore reducing available breeding sites for mosquitoes. The Embodied Games Lab in Psychology at Arizona State University created an educational game phone app using machine learning to teach students how to identify and eliminate mosquito breeding sites. Skeeter Breeder is an interactive, educational game that teaches participants about potential mosquito breeding sites and how to eliminate them from the immediate environment as documented by smartphone imagery. Currently, there is no educational game phone app that uses machine learning to teach this topic. This Thesis describes a pilot study focused on educating about common mosquito breeding sites and increasing the knowledge of 5th graders on the topic through an agentic (by taking their own pictures), engaging (game-like platform with rewards), and interactive (receiving immediate feedback on pictures) game developed from scratch at ASU.
NASA has partnered with multiple colleges, including ASU, on a mission to study an asteroid called Psyche. Psyche is the first asteroid discovered made of metal, mostly iron, that is close enough for us to study and could give insight into what Earth’s core is like. The mission plans and research documents on how the various measurement tools work are not engaging to those without a background in STEM. This serves as inspiration to make a web-based game in order to make the information more engaging to the player. This web-based game will take the user through the Psyche mission going from the assembly of the measurement tools all the way to when the satellite is orbiting the asteroid. The creative project consisted of creating a simulation for a young audience, between ages 10 and 18, to experience what the mission could look like once the satellite is at the Psyche asteroid and what the data collected could mean. The asteroid could have been formed through a process called the dynamo process or it could be a piece of a larger parent body. It could be made mostly of metal or silicates, which will be determined during the mission. These are some of the results that will be generalized and relayed to the player. This creative project includes the four main sections of the orbit phase of the mission in which the users will perform tasks to collect some data in order to see some of the generalized possible results of the study of Psyche. Some of the data collected would be the amount of metal making up the asteroid and figuring out what the gravitational pull is. The first main section will use the magnetometer, the second section will use the multispectral imager, the third section will use X-Band Radio Waves, and the fourth section will use the gamma ray and neutron spectrometer.
The process of learning a new skill can be time consuming and difficult for both the teacher and the student, especially when it comes to computer modeling. With so many terms and functionalities to familiarize oneself with, this task can be overwhelming to even the most knowledgeable student. The purpose of this paper is to describe the methodology used in the creation of a new set of curricula for those attempting to learn how to use the Dynamic Traffic Simulation Package with Multi-Resolution Modeling. The current DLSim curriculum currently relates information via high-concept terms and complicated graphics. The information in this paper aims to provide a streamlined set of curricula for new users of DLSim, including lesson plans and improved infographics.