2006-2410: DEVELOPING KNOWLEDGE LANDSCAPES THROUGHPROJECT-BASED LEARNINGPaul Chinowsky, University of Colorado-BoulderHyman Brown, University of Colorado-Boulder Page 11.441.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2006 Developing Knowledge Landscapes Through Project-Based LearningAbstractThe traditional civil engineering-based approach to construction engineering and managementeducation focuses significant attention on core subjects such as scheduling, estimating, andcontracts. This paper introduces an alternative approach to this education based on the conceptsof project-based learning. Through the introduction of courses developed by
2006-212: THE PRINCESS ANNE ATHLETIC CENTER PROJECT: DEMOLITIONAND SITE CLEARANCE PHASESJoseph Arumala, University of Maryland-Eastern ShoreKhaled Nassar, University of Maryland-Eastern Shore Khaled Nassar is an Associate Professor in the Construction Management Technology Program. He earned the Ph.D. in Construction Engineering and Design from Virginia. Tech. Dr. Nassar has had several years of teaching experience in field of construction and architecture. He taught design as well as courses on computer applications and visualization ranging from CAD to simulation and multi-media. On the scholarly side, he has had several research grants in areas ranging from integrating architectural design and
2006-1847: MODELING AND SIMULATION: A NEW FRONTIER FOR PROJECTCONTROLS EDUCATIONStephen Mulva, Texas State University-San Marcos Stephen has spent the past nine years creating, developing, and implementing new concepts, systems, and solutions for complex problems facing the construction industry and its constituent companies. Working in both academic and commercial settings, he has successfully formulated and managed numerous initiatives to improve the financial and operational performance of several companies through the projects and programs which they execute. In particular, Stephen has developed a number of new techniques and management practices for repetitive building programs
2006-34: DESIGN-BUILD APPROACH TO PROJECT DELIVERY: THE CHECKSAND BALANCES IN THE OVERALL CONSTRUCTION PROCESSVirendra Varma, Missouri Western State University Virendra K. Varma, PhD,PE,F.ASCE, is Professor of Construction, and Chairman of the Department of Engineering Technology at Missouri Western State University. He is the Chair of the ASEE Construction Engineering Division. He is a Past President of MSPE-NW Chapter of the National Society of Professional Engineers, and a Past President of ACI-Missouri. He served on the TAC/ABET Commission as a commissioner from 1998-2003. He is an Instructor of the SEMA-MO ATC-20 course on Earthquake Damage Assessment (Structural), and is also an ACI
2006-1600: MULTI-LAYERED, MULTIMEDIA SCHEDULE REPORTINGIhab Saad, East Carolina University Page 11.942.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2006 MMSR: Multi-Layered, Multimedia Schedule ReportingAbstractScheduling is the art and science of forecasting future performance based on historicalinformation. It aims at charting a roadmap for the project to follow during its differentphases of development to secure timely completion. In most construction projects, anowner-approved schedule becomes one of the contract documents, and a way ofcommunication between the main project team members (Owner, Architect/Engineer,and General Contractor). Changes are one of the few
site’sconstruction manager, and the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at TuftsUniversity, based on two, active, on-campus construction projects; a residence hall and a newmusic building. Active, problem-based learning was central to course delivery with access toreal-world applications of construction processes and technology readily available. The courseinstructors were CEE faculty, Linbeck personnel, and numerous guest presenters ranging fromarchitects/engineers/builders to managers of university operations and community relations. Theclassroom was on-site; a construction trailer converted into the Linbeck Learning Center.Pedagogically, this arrangement changed the course dynamics from using sites as co- or extra-curricular components in
2006-1412: DEVELOPMENT OF AN UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAM FORCONSTRUCTION EDUCATION IN BANGLADESH USING GENERAL LINEARMODELI. Choudhury, Texas A&M University Ifte Choudhury is an Associate Professor in the Department of Construction Science at Texas A&M University. He received a B. Arch from Bangladesh University of Engineering & Technology, an M. Phil. in Architecture from the University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne in England, and a Ph.D. in Architecture from Texas A&M University. Dr. Choudhury has extensive experience as a consulting architect working on projects funded by the World Bank, Asian Development Bank, and some other Multilateral Development Banks. His areas of emphasis
China. Her research interests are in the areas of analysis, design, and implementation of 3D/4D modeling, construction information systems; user modeling; virtual reality, information integration, collaborative systems, human-computer interactionand project-management improvement. She is a member of American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), Associated Schools of Construction (ASC), and Association of American Colleges and Universities (AACU).James Tramel, University of Arkansas-Little RockWei Shi, University of FloridaMei Lu, Xi’an University of Architecture and Technology Page 11.723.1© American Society for
engineering courseworkteaches only theories of engineering and construction and that students may encounterdifficulties when applying these theoretical constructs to real world situations. Sawhney et al.18maintain that many civil and construction engineering curricula do not allow the inclusion ofissues of importance to industry, the participation of practitioners, or hands-on experience.The University of Washington’s Department of Construction Management has embarked on anambitious project to develop a 28,000 sq. ft. research and education center, the Pacific NorthwestCenter for Construction Research and Education, to foster experiential learning and research inconstruction engineering and management. The Center is divided into three major
interpretation to public meetings. The ConstructionManagement Technology (CMT) program at the University adopted writing intensive standardswithin CET 356 Construction Documentation and Administration. In CET 356, students writeand revise formal business letters, memos, meeting minutes, and field notes through a series ofclass exercises based on an ongoing project. Exercises are evaluated through an assessment matrix. First draft assessments arereturned for student review and are resubmitted in a final form for grading. The informationfrom the two stage evaluation is reviewed to assess improvement in the individual student. Writing intensive requirements have been applied through two semesters over twoacademic years. Results reflect the
applications toenhance construction process visualization with such tools as 3D animation. The sequence oftopics, course sequencing, software licensing, and laboratory development will be discussed inthe paper along with a proposed project example. After students obtain these basic skills, theywill be able to graphically simulate and the operate construction process with spatial constructiondata in a simple, accurate, safe, and effective way. The prerequisite knowledge for these coursesand the way to bring industry practice into this course is discussed as well.IntroductionRecently, Geographic Information Systems (GIS) and Global Positioning Systems (GPS) arebecoming increasingly useful and beneficial in construction engineering and management
Prof. Eng. in Indiana. Prof. Sener was awarded numerous teaching awards including the Indiana University President's Award for Distinguished Teaching in 1993 and the IUPUI Chancellor's Award for Excellence in Teaching in 1994 and several TERA awards.David Kieser, Kieser Consulting, LLC Dave Kieser., Principal Planner , Kieser Consulting, LLC, M.S. - Civil Engineering, Purdue University and M.PL. Environmental Planning, Indiana University . Mr. Kieser has over eighteen (18) years of experience in the project management, planning and design of capital improvement projects for municipal clients in Illinois and Indiana. More specifically Mr. Kieser's experience includes innovative financing
2006-495: VISUALIZATION IN CONSTRUCTION SCIENCE AND ENGINEERINGEDUCATIONMohammed Haque, Texas A&M University Dr. Mohammed E. Haque is the holder of Cecil O. Windsor, Jr. Endowed Professorship in Construction Science at Texas A&M University at College Station, Texas. He has over fifteen years of professional experience in analysis, design, and investigation of building, bridges and tunnel structural projects of various city and state governments and private sectors. Dr. Haque is a registered Professional Engineer in the states of New York, Pennsylvania and Michigan, and members of ASEE, ASCE, and ACI. Dr. Haque received a BSCE from Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology, a MSCE and a