Diane T. Rover, University Professor; Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Iowa State University
2015-2016
Office: 333 Durham; 294-2819; drover@iastate.edu
Office Hours: by appointment
An Overview of Dr. Rover's Semester
Schedule
Dr. Rover will be teaching CPRE 588: Embedded Computer Systems during spring
semester. Dr. Rover conducts research in the areas of engineering
education and system-level design of embedded computer systems. She currently
supervises two Ph.D. students and postdoctoral researcher. She spends time on
professional and institutional service, including serving on the ABET EAC Executive
Committee and the IEEE Education Society Board of Governors. Dr. Rover is
principal investigator of a National Science Foundation grant at ISU to
investigate STEM faculty engagement with broader impacts (www.spisu.iastate.edu/stem-fit).
In addition, she is the faculty director and co-PI for
the university-wide SP@ISU Program (www.spisu.iastate.edu),
and the alliance director for the sixteen-institution IINSPIRE LSAMP Program (www.iinspirelsamp.iastate.edu).
She is also co-PI for a nation-wide grant to establish the National Alliance
for Broader Impacts (broaderimpacts.net/).
These programs are funded by NSF.
An Overview of Dr. Rover's Teaching
Philosophy and Style: Every Semester
Dr. Rover's approach to teaching is based upon active learning, in which
instructor and student join together in the process of learning with a goal of
having students "connect" with the subject matter. The classroom is
one place for active learning; to that end, class attendance and participation
are essential. The classroom goes beyond lecturing, including experiential
exercises and small-group work. Students learn by doing, and in the process,
learn how to learn. The grading is set up so that students earn a grade
and one student's success does not come at the expense of another's. Dr. Rover
encourages questions and facilitates communication. She emphasizes clarity of
presentation, availability to students, comprehension of subject matter at a
hierarchy of levels, and critical thinking. She believes that what you get out
of a class depends on what you put in, and she applies that to herself as well.
One of her favorite one-liners on active learning:
You are here to learn, not to be taught.
or, in the words of others:
What we want is to see the student in pursuit of knowledge, and not knowledge in pursuit of the student. George Bernard Shaw
Teach the young people how to think, not what to think. Sidney Sugarman
The student who is never required to do what he cannot do never does what he can do. John Stuart Mill
Education is not the filling of a pail, but the lighting of a fire. William Butler Yeats
My goal ... is to build a working relationship based on trust. I enter into a partnership with each student, with clearly defined, realistic goals. We define my job as their teacher and their job as my student. The process of learning, and the pride that comes with each success, can then begin for both of us. Judith Nichtern
Much I have learned from my teachers, more from my colleagues, but most from my students. Talmud
Dr. Rover's Inspirational Thought of the
Semester: Every Semester
Become what you are capable of becoming.
Excerpted from a Robert Louis Stevenson quote, this statement is a reminder to
strive for individual excellence by taking advantage of one's strengths,
skills, and qualities. We each bring our own perspectives and abilities to
activities we engage in, but simply by setting excellence as a goal and
dedicating yourself to it, you will make a difference through the
process.