Asee peer logo
Displaying results 1 - 30 of 32 in total
Conference Session
Active and Out There: Labs and Active Learning
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Veera Gnaneswar Gude P.E., Mississippi State University; Benjamin S. Magbanua Jr., Mississippi State University; James L. Martin P.E., Mississippi State University
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
students’experiences and suggestions for high-impact learning activities and strategies. 260 students in acivil engineering program (with sophomore, junior and senior standing) were asked to completea three-part survey designed (i) to understand and compare their high-impact learningexperiences at different levels of the civil engineering program, (ii) to study their understandingand preference of high-impact teaching strategies, and (iii) to identify effective strategies toimprove the learning and teaching environment. A few examples of high-impact learningactivities and teaching strategies were included in the survey to help students reflect and respondto the questions. In addition, students were asked to identify learning strategies they consideredleast
Conference Session
Your Best in 5 Minutes: Demonstrations of Hands-On and Virtual In-Class Teaching Aids
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Laura Doyle, Santa Clara University; Tonya Lynn Nilsson P.E., Santa Clara University
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
Hotel. In both cases, the modelsare loaded to failure and the total weight added before failure is compared. After a shortdiscussion, a video of the Hyatt Regency Hotel tragedy is shown. The in-class assignment isfollowed up with a reflection paper assignment. In a survey administered to students in thecourse during fall 2017, 89 percent of student respondents (n = 48) indicated the activity addedto their understanding of the topic and indicated in descriptive questions that the activity washelpful and increased their interest in engineering.IntroductionDue to the nature of civil and mechanical engineering projects, it is vital for practitioners touphold ethical standards during the engineering design process. As educators, we have
Conference Session
Sustainability in Civil Engineering Education: Service Learning, Capstone Integration, Student Affect and Rating Systems
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Deborah Besser P.E., University of St. Thomas; Travis Welt, University of St. Thomas; Hannah Dasyam, University of St. Thomas; Tripp Shealy, Virginia Tech
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
learners to apply new knowledge to ISIEnvision credit ratings, 2. student motivation metrics which are linked to students’ ability toemploy learning strategies and 3. student reflective observation and conceptualization on theirown ability to apply new knowledge. Findings of this study are preliminary and includequalitative measures but point to potential teaching/learning mechanisms which may be furtherexplored in successive studies.IntroductionThe civil engineering profession faces an increasing range of demands including preparingstudents for evolving challenges including design and maintenance of aging infrastructure,development of sustainable infrastructure and resilient design. The shift from an industrializedeconomy to the knowledge economy
Conference Session
Thinking Outside the BOKs: ABET, Ethics, Civil Engineering as Liberal Education, and 3-Year Degrees
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Jennifer Mueller PE P.E., Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology; Matthew D. Lovell P.E., Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology; Michael Anthony Robinson P.E., Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
recognizing the diversity of personalvalues among peers. Students delve further into ethical decision making in the context of academicintegrity during the first year with reflections on real-life scenarios.During the second year, students discuss the need for a purpose of a common set of ethicalstandards and review the American Society of Civil Engineers’ Code of Ethics when interpretingethical dilemmas. Students were introduced to an ethical decision-making process during fall oftheir junior year. This process is a step-by-step guide that includes reflection throughout theprocess of assessing and making a judgment on an ethical dilemma. During each quarter of juniorand senior year, students were given a real-life ethical dilemma, and they utilized
Conference Session
Your Best in 5 Minutes: Demonstrations of Hands-On and Virtual In-Class Teaching Aids
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Tonya Lynn Nilsson P.E., Santa Clara University; Laura Doyle, Santa Clara University
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
are required to reflect and indicate wherethey have seen this connection type outside of the classroom. The demos are followed by four3D examples where students work in their pairs to draw the FBD. A survey conducted in fivestatics courses taught by the authors found that 75.3% of student respondents (n = 78) indicatedthis activity was helpful in their understanding of support reactions with only 9.1% saying it hadno impact and 15.6% indicating it was only a little helpful.IntroductionThe ability to accurately solve statics problems is critical for engineers in a wide variety of fieldsincluding civil, mechanical, aerospace and bio-engineering. Fundamental to determiningstatically correct solutions is the accurate determination of support
Conference Session
Key Educational & Professional Issues of Strategic Importance to the Civil Engineering Profession - and ASCE
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Allen C. Estes, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
chilled the classroom?• Celebrate every moment spent on critical self-reflection about teaching The ETW places a premium on reflective self-assessment. The assessment of the third participant class relies heavily on self-assessment, with the intent that workshop participants will continue to develop these skills at their home institutions.There are several items on the list that are not currently in the ETW but could andprobably should be incorporated:• Build coalitions with educators who are different from me in terms of race, sexual orientation, gender, religion, home language, class, (dis)ability, and other identities The suggestion of building a coalition is a great one and it could easily be incorporated into the
Conference Session
Key Educational & Professional Issues of Strategic Importance to the Civil Engineering Profession - and ASCE
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Stephen J. Ressler P.E., U.S. Military Academy; Thomas A. Lenox Dist.M.ASCE, F.ASEE, American Society of Civil Engineers
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
through March2018, the ultimate goal of the initiative was to change state licensure laws, such that a master’sdegree or equivalent would become the academic prerequisite for licensure as a professionalengineer in the U.S. [1]During this period, the RTB initiative made substantial progress, as reflected in the followingaccomplishments: • In 2004, ASCE published the Civil Engineering Body of Knowledge (CE-BOK)—a landmark document that, for the first time ever, articulated the knowledge, skills, and attitudes required for entry into the practice of civil engineering at the professional level [2]. • In 2008 [3] and 2019 [4], ASCE published CE-BOK updates that improved the document’s usability and addressed changes in
Conference Session
The Civil Engineering Body of Knowledge, 3rd Edition: Preparing the Future Civil Engineer
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Norman D. Dennis Jr. P.E., University of Arkansas; Decker B Hains P.E., Western Michigan University
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
only way a particular level can be attained.Motivation for Assessing Outcomes in the Affective DomainThe 2006 ASCE Summit on The Future of Civil Engineering - 2025 [14] portrayed the engineerof the future to be knowledgeable, skillful, and one who embraces attitudes conducive toprofessional practice. While the first two attributes are conveniently measured in the cognitivedomain, attitudes most often are a reflection of one’s value system and, as such, outcomes relatedto attitude should be measured in the affective domain. Additionally, the U.S Department ofLabor’s Engineering Competency Model [15] describes the Tier I: Personal EffectivenessCompetencies in terms such as: shows sincere interest, maintains open communication, values aninclusive
Conference Session
The Civil Engineering Body of Knowledge, 3rd Edition: Preparing the Future Civil Engineer
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Norb Delatte P.E., Oklahoma State University; Brock E. Barry P.E., U.S. Military Academy; Audra N. Morse P.E., Michigan Technological University; Camilla M. Saviz P.E., University of the Pacific
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
engineering at the professional level. Oncea new BOK is published, COA appoints a Civil Engineering Program Criteria Task Committee(CEPCTC), which is charged with reviewing the criteria in place, and if needed, revising thecriteria using the new BOK, input from the civil engineering community, and other relevantinformation. The BOK is developed based on an extensive review of the scholarly literature,relevant visionary documents, and by identifying the needs of the profession with input from, andreview by, practitioners and educators. The BOK also reflects the strategic goals of ASCE and isapproved by the ASCE Board of Direction. As such, use of the BOK to develop the CivilEngineering Program Criteria ensures that the needs of, and strategic goals
Conference Session
Innovation and Fun in the Civil Engineering Classroom
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Kevin Chang P.E., University of Idaho, Moscow
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
two different perspectives. On one hand, self-assessment is a process of enabling students to: become “more critical and perceptive” in theirlearning, make personal judgments on their learning outcomes and academic activities, andexperience “holistic development” [13], [14], [15], [16]. Goal-setting activities and self-reflection performance are part of an overall process where the ultimate goal is to “grow oneself”and fuel future learning needs by examining individual performance, monitoring and evaluatingthinking and behavior, and finding strategic ways to improve understanding [5], [17], [18], [19].Self-assessment can also be specifically viewed as the ability of a student to reliably evaluateone’s own work and to complete tasks such as
Conference Session
Sustainability in Civil Engineering Education: Service Learning, Capstone Integration, Student Affect and Rating Systems
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Angela R. Bielefeldt, University of Colorado, Boulder
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
rubric levels couldclearly be debated; perhaps all are merely reflecting level 1 of the CEBOK3 rubric. The SEaffect items in the survey do not appear to directly measure the elements in the sustainabilityaffective rubric in the CEBOK3. Self-efficacy items reflect students’ confidence that they haveknowledge and abilities related to sustainable engineering; as such, they are somewhat a self-assessment of the cognitive domain outcomes (e.g. identify is cognitive level 1, understandingreflects comprehension or cognitive level 2).Supporting data from the College of Engineering’s graduating senior survey has also beenincluded. The College-wide survey asks CE students to rate the importance of an “ability toapply the principles of sustainability to
Conference Session
Writers, Experts, and the Workforce in Civil Engineering
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Cara N. Morton P.E, Washington State University; Anna Karin Roo, Washington State University
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
transition of developingan employed engineer persona. This shift in identity is reflected in writing as a student adjuststo the genre of the workplace and adapts to that workplace’s cultural engineering identity. Thisshift in writer identity creation can be compounded by the lack of practical writing help intechnical communication books (Wolfe, 2009, 2011). Wolfe (2011) notes that technicalcommunication books have shifted away from writing practice assignments to focus more onthe overall written product than on how to create the product over the years and assuming moreof a humanities bias in presentation of writing practices. There are elements of the written engineering work that may not become evident in engineering courses or in a
Conference Session
The Civil Engineering Body of Knowledge, 3rd Edition: Preparing the Future Civil Engineer
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Kenneth J. Fridley, University of Alabama; Angela R. Bielefeldt, University of Colorado, Boulder; Kevin G. Sutterer P.E., Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology; Derek Guthrie Williamson, University of Alabama; W. Edward Back, University of Alabama
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
technical communication is included in capstonedesign since teams try to convince the client that they have the best design; since all of the teamswork on the same project it ends up being somewhat competitive. Persuasive communication tonon-technical audiences is largely absent. I believe modifications could be made to try to helpstudents reach level 1, but reaching level 2 would be more difficult.Rose-Hulman. We do not have concerns about fulfilling this in our program. Level 1 is acommon theme in the lessons both within our department and institute-wide. We’re optimisticthe students could effectively reflect on this, but we do not ask them to do so, at least in ourdepartment. The students work hard at level 2 in multiple points in our curriculum
Conference Session
High-Impact Teaching and Learning
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Jenna Williams, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo; Mark William Wright LEED Green Associate, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo; Michael James Deigert, California Polytechnic State University; Anahid Behrouzi, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
to augment physical models, as well as laboratory and in-field experimentation. Thisoverview provides context for the pedagogical approach discussed in this paper which combinesproject-based learning and large-scale laboratory experimentation. Based upon a review ofpublished research related to structural steel design instruction, there have been no similar steeldesign courses which use this teaching approach to expose students to the lateral load resistingframe systems common in seismic areas.Project-based LearningPast engineering pedagogy research has shown that incorporating a project-based approach in astructural steel course, that reflects a task similar to that in industry, is more effective than thetraditional lecture approach [2-3
Conference Session
It's All About the Student: Integration, Problem Solving, Critical Thinking, and Self-Efficacy
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Aliye Karabulut Ilgu, Iowa State University; Suhan Yao, Iowa State University
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
engineeringeducators focused more on content coverage rather than creating learning opportunities forpracticing critical thinking skills [4]. Learning activities that stimulates critical thinking skillswould be desirable in any engineering classroom. Online discussion has emerged as a promising method for encouraging critical thinking indistance education [5], [10]. It provides opportunities for flexibility [11], [12] and collaboration[5]. Asynchronous text-based mode allows for greater reflection and higher levels of criticalthinking and in-depth feedback as well as allowing instructors to model, foster, and evaluate thecritical thinking skills exhibited during the discussion [6], [11], [13], [14]. Despite the potential of online discussions in
Conference Session
Your Best in 5 Minutes: Demonstrations of Hands-On and Virtual In-Class Teaching Aids
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Charles D. Facciolo, Daedalus Structural Engineering; Anahid Behrouzi, California Polytechnic State University - San Luis Obispo
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
goalof modifying the course was to expose students to physical experiments to foster their: (i)engineering intuition and calculation abilities, (ii) proficiency in data acquisition applicationsavailable on smart phones, (iii) data post-processing, analysis, and visualization skills in Matlab,(iv) writing thoughtful reflections in lab reports based on observations and quantitative dataresults, and (v) teamwork. Also, the hope was to engage and excite students in the course topic.Description of Physical / Virtual ExperimentsThe course activities are summarized below in the order they were covered in class. Additionaldetails related to course instruction (lab handouts), model fabrication (materials, budget,drawings), and sample solutions are
Conference Session
Innovation and Fun in the Civil Engineering Classroom
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Angela R. Bielefeldt, University of Colorado, Boulder; Audra N. Morse P.E., Michigan Technological University
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
campus wide inpromoting creative thinking among students.Table 1. AAC&U VALUE Rubric for Creative Thinking [28] Sub area 1 Benchmark 2 3 4 Capstone Acquiring Successfully Successfully adapts an Creates entirely new Reflect: evaluates creativecompetencies reproduces appropriate exemplar to object, solution or process and product using appropriate own specifications idea appropriate to domain-appropriate criteria exemplar the domain Taking risks Stays strictly within Considers new Incorporates new Actively seeks out and
Conference Session
Key Educational & Professional Issues of Strategic Importance to the Civil Engineering Profession - and ASCE
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Horst Brandes, University of Hawaii; Eric L. Flicker, Pennoni Associates Inc.; Kelly Dooley P.E., American Society of Civil Engineers
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
acceptable.The civil engineering body of knowledge was updated in 2008 to reflect changes in theprofession and shortcomings in the first version [6]. The new CE-BOK2 was formulated firmlywithin a Bloom’s taxonomy framework [7], meaning that the expected knowledge (along withskills and attitudes) was prescribed in terms of a number of outcomes and corresponding levelsof achievement specific to civil engineering. Common pathways for fulfillment are also 2outlined, comprising of a bachelor’s degree, a master’s degree or equivalent, and pre-licensureexperience. The term “or equivalent” is described in CE-BOK2 as “approximately 30 semestercredits of
Conference Session
Tales from the Flip Side
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Brian J. Smith, University of Notre Dame
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
“Discussion”portion of lectures. Students typically displayed a solid understanding of the topics and conceptscovered within the videos, as 87.8% of discussion questions were answered correctly. Further,there were only seven instances where a student Table 2. Participation Outcomesmissing from lecture with an unexcused absencewas randomly selected (with three such Participation Outcomes No. Perc.occurrences on the Friday prior to mid-semester Correct Responses 101 87.8%break). This was reflective of the attendance Incorrect Responses 7 6.1%throughout the semester, a byproduct of the Unexcused Absences 7
Conference Session
The Civil Engineering Body of Knowledge, 3rd Edition: Preparing the Future Civil Engineer
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Kenneth J. Fridley, University of Alabama; Decker B. Hains, Western Michigan University; Leslie Nolen CAE, American Society of Civil Engineers
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
include a prescriptive number of credit hours. Mentored Experience (ME): Early career experience under the mentorship of a civil engineer practicing at the professional level, which progresses in both complexity and level of responsibility. Prior editions of the CEBOK referred to this as “E” for experience. The CEBOK3TC wanted to emphasize early career mentoring as part of the experience and adopted this new terminology to reflect and promote the importance of mentoring. Self-Developed (SD): individual self-development through formal or informal activities and personal observation and reflection. This is a new component of a typical pathway that was introduced in the CEBOK3. The CEBOK3TC
Conference Session
Key Educational & Professional Issues of Strategic Importance to the Civil Engineering Profession - and ASCE
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Scott R. Hamilton, York College of Pennsylvania; David A. Saftner, University of Minnesota Duluth; Camilla M. Saviz P.E., University of the Pacific
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
the accreditation cycle under which the program wasreviewed, whether the university is public or private, and the Carnegie Classification. Respondentswere also asked to either provide “Table 5.1” (Curriculum details) from their most recent ABETself-study report, a revised version edited to reflect the current curriculum, or to respond to a seriesof questions designed to elicit the information contained in Table 5.1 of the Self-Study Report.Seventy nine complete survey responses were received including nine from programs undergoingreview in the 2018-19 accreditation cycle. In the case of duplicate records, data obtained from bothsources were compared to confirm that the methods used to identify curricular elements in thisstudy were consistent
Conference Session
Active and Out There: Labs and Active Learning
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Kristin M. Sample-Lord P.E., Villanova University; Virginia Smith, Villanova University; Patricia Gallagher P.E., Drexel University (Eng. & Eng. Tech.); Andrea L. Welker, Villanova University
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
distance, the flow loses its transport capacitydue to dissipation of shear stress. As a result, the deposition is graded to reflect the ability of theflow to transport grains of differing sizes (Fig. 1). Weir Flow direction Accumulated leaves Stop 1 Stop 2 Twist Stop 3 Stop 4 Figure 1. Stops 1 through 4 of the field trip. 3Stop 3
Conference Session
Writers, Experts, and the Workforce in Civil Engineering
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Simon Thomas Ghanat P.E., The Citadel; Mary Katherine Zanin, The Citadel; Dena Garner, The Citadel; Deirdre D Ragan, The Citadel; Jeffery M. Plumblee II, The Citadel; Daniel B. Bornstein, The Citadel; John H. Lewis Jr, The Citadel
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
mentor and mentee responses, showedstudents perceived significant differences in their own gains in analyzing data, thinkingcreatively, and working independently. This is not particularly surprising: research has foundself-ratings of traits, abilities, performance, or leadership typically be higher than the ratingsprovided by observers [13, 14]. Interestingly, literature also assert that such a self-enhancementbias may be psychologically healthy in that it reflects positive self-evaluation and results in bothfewer negative thoughts and also higher expectancies for success in new endeavors [13,14].Table 1. Summary results of descriptive statistics and 2-sample t-test statistical analysis.Research skills marked with * indicate those with
Conference Session
Innovation and Fun in the Civil Engineering Classroom
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Jennifer Mueller PE P.E., Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology; Michelle K. Marincel Payne, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
project from a more holistic perspective and synthesize thevarious subdiscipline components into one whole system. We are currently implementing ourapproach in the freshman year. As our staged implementation approach continues through thefour-year curriculum, we will reflect upon the successes and difficulties that we undergo as wehelp our students be better equipped to face real-world engineering challenges.AcknowledgementsThe authors want to acknowledge the RHIT’s office of Institutional Research Planning andAssessment for administering the surveys, as well as the faculty in the civil and environmentalengineering department at RHIT for agreeing to participate in this project.References[1] D. R. Woods, A. N. Hrymak, R. R. Marshall, P. E. Wood
Conference Session
Thinking Outside the BOKs: ABET, Ethics, Civil Engineering as Liberal Education, and 3-Year Degrees
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Emily F. Cutrer, Texas A&M University-Texarkana; Melissa M. Nelson; James K. Nelson Jr. P.E., Texas A&M University System
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
reflect the population as a whole. [1].The report continues to state that: While continuing to pursue increased knowledge and higher standards of excellence in teaching, research and innovation, two- and four-year colleges in Texas will need to consider more explicitly the primary reason most students attend college: to get a better job and achieve a better life. [1]A primary outcome of the 60x30TX initiative relevant to our discussion is the following: By 2030, all graduates from Texas public institutions of higher education will have completed programs with identified marketable skills: The marketable skills goal emphasizes the value of higher education in the workforce. Students need to
Conference Session
The Civil Engineering Body of Knowledge, 3rd Edition: Preparing the Future Civil Engineer
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Angela R. Bielefeldt, University of Colorado, Boulder; Brock E. Barry P.E., U.S. Military Academy; Kenneth J. Fridley, University of Alabama; Leslie Nolen CAE, American Society of Civil Engineers; Decker B Hains P.E., Western Michigan University
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
outcomes would reflect the evolution of civil engineering practice in theten years since the CEBOK2 was developed.The first section of the survey asked individuals to consider each of the 24 outcomes in theCEBOK2 (2008) in turn. A link to the rubric and the full CEBOK2 was provided. The surveythen asked individuals to rate the importance of the outcome using a 5‐point Likert-type scale of:1 = not important; 2 = minor importance; 3 = neutral; 4 = moderately important; 5 = veryimportant. Then the survey asked individuals to rate the quality of the rubric and description ofthe outcome using a 5‐point scale of: 1 = poorly described; 2 = not well described; 3 = neutral; 4= well described; 5 = very well described. Any ratings of 2 or below resulted in
Conference Session
Your Best in 5 Minutes: Demonstrations of Hands-On and Virtual In-Class Teaching Aids
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Joel Lanning, University of California, Irvine; Matthew W. Roberts, Southern Utah University
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
are bored for 10 minutes thenthat is a worthwhile cost.Several of the experiential demonstrations discussed in this paper were conducted in the mostrecent (2018) offering of structural steel design by one of the authors. Of 65 students respondingto the course survey, only one commented that this type of activity was not very useful.Conversely, there were eight comments that explicitly reflected positively on the use ofdemonstration and activities to learn concepts.Further, the value of class demonstrations is shown by comparing the most recent course (2018)with the previous course (2017). The 2017 offering of the course did not use classroomdemonstrations (to any significant extent). Comparing 2017 to 2018, there was a 93% increase inthe
Conference Session
Civil Engineering Division Poster Session
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Jenna Wong P.E., San Francisco State University; Lakshmipriya Lakshmipathy, Indian Institute of Technology, Madras; Panfilo Jesus Armas; Andres Ernesto Paredes; Chris Park; Jorge Antonio Campos
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
computationalsimulations. This was a crucial component in the learning process as they learned the connectionwith and the need for experimental testing. This was reflected in one response, “We also knewthat the isolation would have an effect on the structure response however, we didn’t expect it tohave a huge impact. The results of our data was shocking to all of us.” Lastly, by using theisolators in the experimental test, the students had excellent insight into ways that these 3Ddevices can be improved for future applications as discussed in the next section. Overall, thestudy was effective in bringing a rather theoretical subject matter such as seismic isolation to lifeand increasing students’ ability to relate to the subject matter and begin to build upon
Conference Session
Thinking Outside the BOKs: ABET, Ethics, Civil Engineering as Liberal Education, and 3-Year Degrees
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Kevin G. Sutterer, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology; John Aidoo, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology; James H. Hanson P.E., Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology; Kyle Kershaw P.E., Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology; Matthew D. Lovell P.E., Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology; Michelle K. Marincel Payne, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology; Jennifer Mueller PE P.E., Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology; Michael Anthony Robinson P.E., Harding University
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
. Leaders and motivate and enable a team, create a collaborative and inclusiveRH5 Collaborators environment, establish goals, plan tasks, and meet objectives. Informed GlobalRH6 engage with diverse beliefs, cultures, languages, or societies. Citizens Self-Directed acquire, apply, and reflect upon new knowledge and skills for personalRH7 Learners and professional growth using appropriate learning strategies. Civically-RH8 partner with a community to create positive change. Engaged CitizensProcessWe found the process identified below to be effective and appropriate for our program, but otherprograms may find a different process to be more
Conference Session
It's All About the Student: Integration, Problem Solving, Critical Thinking, and Self-Efficacy
Collection
2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Mary Katherine Watson, The Citadel; William J. Davis P.E., The Citadel; Timothy W. Mays, The Citadel; Ronald W. Welch P.E., The Citadel; John C. Ryan, The Citadel
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Civil Engineering
upon work supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant No.1741611 Encouraging Civil Engineering Retention through Community and Self-EfficacyBuilding. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this materialare those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National ScienceFoundation.References[1] "Infrastructure Report Card." American Society of Civil Engineers. (accessed 2 Feb., 2019): https://www.infrastructurereportcard.org/.[2] S. Hatch, Diversity by Design: Guide to Fostering Diversity in the Civil Engineering Workplace. Reston, VA: American Society of Civil Engineers, 2008.[3] "Criteria for accrediting engineering programs 2019-2020." ABET. (accessed 2