Enhancing student ‘Success’ by using improved student engagement strategies in high-impact practices, specifically Capstone courses, is akin to university’s strategic planning processes. Example-Project titled ‘SMART TRAFFIC LIGHT SYSTEM FOR ARTERIALS’ represents a Capstone course in which training in Instrumentation has become very necessary and relevant. The Senior Project course, a Design, Build & Test exercise, also often referred to as ‘Training in Research and Research Methods’, enjoys regular evaluation and redesign, because it is an important exit course that all graduating engineering students must take, and it is a gateway course to the workforce and graduate school opportunities. Unlike most other courses, it is based on Open-Ended Problem-Solving requirements for which skills in specialized Instrumentation selection is required, and so is Training in Research & Research Methods where students learn to Find Information, Analyse these, Plot them, Interpret what they see, Draw Conclusions and Make Decisions to impact the Design Objective. The measured Student successes which form important institutional yardsticks, included high measures of student engagement and positive outcomes that were influenced by measured factors likes self-efficacy, academic achievement, completion, retention, and career preparation. The grading in the course is based on a combination of “objective” and “subjective” evaluations. The objective part involves regular presentations of work in progress (35% of the overall grade) and a paper/Final report and final presentation (25%), each based on work performed and published articles on the subject matter. The more subjective components are 20% of the overall grade and 20% for peer evaluations of participation in small group discussions based mostly on completed work, cited articles and Class-Design Expo Presentations. Traffic congestion is not only a daily nuisance to millions of drivers and pedestrians, but is also a source of fuel loss, pollution, and hazards on the road. Designing, building and testing a Smart Traffic Light Controller that is capable of monitoring and adjusting signal operations based on traffic volume and flow patterns at adjoining junctions would significantly and positively impact traffic flows, especially at arterials. The achieved goals of this project were to Design, Build and Test a Prototype Smart Traffic Control System that can adapt to changing traffic flow patterns and meet a wide range of transportation and environmental demands, that can include a reduction in vehicular delays and traffic congestion.
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