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100 Freshman Civil Engineers: A Model for Integrating Communication and Teamwork in Large Engineering Courses

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Conference

2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition

Location

Vancouver, BC

Publication Date

June 26, 2011

Start Date

June 26, 2011

End Date

June 29, 2011

ISSN

2153-5965

Conference Session

Rethinking PowerPoint and Other Acts of Communication

Tagged Division

Liberal Education/Engineering & Society

Page Count

10

Page Numbers

22.14.1 - 22.14.10

DOI

10.18260/1-2--17295

Permanent URL

https://peer.asee.org/17295

Download Count

376

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Paper Authors

biography

April A. Kedrowicz University of Utah

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Dr. April A. Kedrowicz is the Director of the CLEAR (Communication, Leadership, Ethics, And Research) Program at the University of Utah, a collaboration between the College of Humanities and College of Engineering. The program was developed in 2003 through a grant from the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, with the goal of integrating communication (speaking and writing), teamwork, and ethics into the curriculum of every department in the College of Engineering. Dr. Kedrowicz has been the director of the program since its inception and has developed a situated, incremental curriculum plan in all seven departments in the college. Her responsibilities include faculty development (she has facilitated numerous college-wide workshops), TA training (approximately 15 graduate students from the Humanities work with CLEAR to develop the communication competence of engineering undergraduates), programmatic and basic research, instructional development, and assessment.

Dr. Kedrowicz received her Ph.D. in Communication from the University of Utah in 2005. She also holds bachelor’s and master’s degrees in Organizational and Corporate Communication from the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point.

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biography

Maria Dawn Blevins University of Utah

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Department of Communication Studies Ph.D. student,
CLEAR Consultant, University of Utah, School of Engineering

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Abstract

100 Freshman Civil Engineers: A Model for Integrating Communication and Teamwork in Large Engineering CoursesEngineering education has been transformed over the past decade. Increasingly,engineering students are seeing the integration of communication, teamwork, leadership,and ethics into their engineering curriculum. The best models are those that couple theseprofessional skills with actual engineering projects to show students how intricatelylinked communication and teamwork skills are with engineering problem solving anddesign. Much emphasis is placed on senior capstone courses, as this meets the immediatedemand of preparing graduating seniors for the non-technical aspects of their careers. Incontrast, freshman classes receive less attention in terms of their position to “set the tone”for the coupling of communication and engineering, likely because the demands placedon freshman engineering classes are already high. They serve as a recruitment tool, peakinterest in engineering as a field of study, expose students to the many and varied areas ofconcentration in the discipline, and perhaps, introduce students to engineering projectsand basic design skills. While the many and varied objectives of freshman classes alreadychallenge the curriculum, increasing enrollment is another constraint. Unusually largefreshman classes make intensive speaking and writing opportunities challenging in termsof evaluation and feedback.At the University of Utah, we have successfully integrated communication andinterpersonal skill development into the freshman civil engineering class for severalyears. CVEEN 1000 provides students with an overview of civil and environmentalengineering, including the major elements of the profession, a basic understanding of thecore disciplines, and the ideas surrounding engineering design. In addition, this courseprovides students with the expectations, requirements, demands, and commitments theycan be expected to address as they complete the Civil and Environmental Engineeringcurriculum, including development of technical, communication, and team skills. Despitemany years of success with this course, we faced a unique challenge this year whenenrollment increased by almost fifty percent. This increased number of studentsthreatened to disrupt our already intensive instruction and evaluation processes.Our purpose in this paper is to showcase our unique approach to team teaching, illustratethe individualized attention students receive on their writing, speaking, and teamworkassignments, and provide an assessment of our approach. Specifically, we will highlightour model of team teaching, and show how we capitalize on a unique class structure toallow for individualized communication experiences and feedback for all 100 students.We will show how our freshman class meets the aforementioned recruitment andretention objectives, while also introducing students to civil engineering design andrequisite communication skills. Finally, we will assess our efforts through gatheringstudent feedback in the form of surveys, evaluating students’ speaking and writingcompetence, and gathering feedback from the instructional team to guide continuousimprovement in the course.

Kedrowicz, A. A., & Blevins, M. D. (2011, June), 100 Freshman Civil Engineers: A Model for Integrating Communication and Teamwork in Large Engineering Courses Paper presented at 2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Vancouver, BC. 10.18260/1-2--17295

ASEE holds the copyright on this document. It may be read by the public free of charge. Authors may archive their work on personal websites or in institutional repositories with the following citation: © 2011 American Society for Engineering Education. Other scholars may excerpt or quote from these materials with the same citation. When excerpting or quoting from Conference Proceedings, authors should, in addition to noting the ASEE copyright, list all the original authors and their institutions and name the host city of the conference. - Last updated April 1, 2015