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Displaying results 61 - 71 of 71 in total
Conference Session
Service Learning Projects in Developing Countries
Collection
2009 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Maya Trotz, University of South Florida; Amy Stuart, University of South Florida; Daniel Yeh, University of South Florida; Helen Muga, University of South Florida; Linda Phillips, University of South Florida; James Mihelcic, University of South Florida
Tagged Divisions
Environmental Engineering
forsustainable development that is a global partnership, students will learn to understandhow to integrate and transfer the best and most appropriate knowledge,methodologies, techniques, and practices between the developed and developingworlds to ensure a sustainable future.” Examples of their answers are below: Page 14.913.6 4“Working, learning, and being with peers who focus on similar subjects allowspartnerships to be created easily, even on an international level. There were manyaspects of the project that were new for me; host family, working with such a diverseteam, field
Conference Session
Sustainability and Hands-on Engineering Education
Collection
2014 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Paula Ann Monaco, Texas Tech University ; Audra N. Morse, Texas Tech University
Tagged Divisions
Environmental Engineering
-course heldduring the program. SHWYF offers two sessions for students entering grades 8-11th and 4-7th. Page 24.438.4TTU provides a high school outreach program in Brazil comprised of a full-English curriculum,consisting of American high school courses such as literature, writing, history, economics,government and public speaking10. As the program expands, students travel to the United Statesfor a three week summer experience that includes enrollment in mini-courses administered bythe SHWYF program. Brazilian students range from grades 9th-12th with a majority being firsttime visitors to the United States.Table 1: Number of students attending
Conference Session
Introducing Sustainability into Engineering Education
Collection
2011 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Jean D. MacRae, University of Maine
Tagged Divisions
Environmental Engineering
recommendations to EWB-UMaine on how to strengthen the project and approach.Students in the class also write a report and present on an “appropriate technology” of their Page 22.957.5choice and comment on its applicability in different contexts. All EWB members and the campuscommunity are invited to attend the presentations. A list of topics and readings used in the firsthalf of the course is shown in Table 2. The remainder of the course is spent discussing projects,best practices and developing recommendations for the EWB chapter.Table 2. Topics and Readings used in Sustainable Solutions for the Developing WorldTopic
Conference Session
Environmental Engineering Technical Session 4: Environmental Issues and the Impacts of Intersectionality
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Angela R. Bielefeldt, University of Colorado Boulder; JoAnn Silverstein P.E., University of Colorado Boulder
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Environmental Engineering, Women in Engineering
right to live in a healthy environment… the issues addressed center onequity, fairness, and the struggle for social justice by black communities.” [11] Justice drawsattention to “equity, recognition, and participation” [8]. Participation and interactions that valuedifferent perspectives and avoid a deficit model are key conditions for social justice [13].The term ‘environmental justice’ appeared in 80 conference papers associated with the AmericanSociety for Engineering Education (ASEE), based on a search in the ASEE PEER system [14].The majority of the EJ conference papers were associated with the Liberal Education /Engineering and Society (LEES) division (11), Engineering Ethics division (11), andEnvironmental Engineering division (7
Conference Session
Environmental Engineering Division: Sustainability and Hands-On Engineering Education
Collection
2016 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Angela R. Bielefeldt, University of Colorado - Boulder
Tagged Divisions
Environmental Engineering
homework with peers Mostly individual learning (highly inter-active learning) Students About 50 civil engineering Two sections of ~23 students each: 34 enrolled About 25 architectural engineering engineering/pre-engineering, 5 architecture, 4 natural sciences, 2 business Course Required Part of sustainability-focused residential academic context Sustainability was the second program (similar to a living learning community); learning module in the course about 30% of the students also taking a 3-credit
Conference Session
Engaging Students
Collection
2010 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Kristen Sanford Bernhardt, Lafayette College; Sharon Jones, Lafayette College; Christopher Ruebeck, Lafayette College; Jacqueline Isaacs, Northeastern University
Tagged Divisions
Environmental Engineering
of those decisions; in other words, they learn from the experience. Toreinforce the concepts, the game is designed so that students repeat this decision-making processover 10 rounds of the simulation while also interacting with team members (peers) to make thedecisions. Our decision to use a game as well as our choice of the game itself is grounded in theliterature of learning strategies. The following sections review these theories, describe the gamewe have incorporated in our courses, and provide some context for the larger project of whichthis effort is a part.Learning Strategies and Educational GamesBehavioral, cognitive, constructivist, and experiential theories of learning have influenced thedesign of learning activities, including
Conference Session
Environmental Engineering Division Technical Session 3: Teaching Environmental Engineering in the COVID-19 Era
Collection
2021 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Shannon L. Isovitsch Parks P.E., University of Pittsburgh
Tagged Divisions
Environmental Engineering
learning environment. Perhaps initially studentscould not imagine how complex engineering problems would be solved in an onlineenvironment, without the personal, face-to-face contact with their peers and the instructor. Also,while students had the same writing assignments in the online environment, presentations werecanceled. This could be a reason that students felt this learning outcome might suffer. Asfaculty became more accustomed to the online learning environment and available tools,presentations were required in subsequent semesters.After students experienced the online learning environment, more students felt they would atleast do the same in meeting all the objectives than worse. However, teamwork skills and solvingcomplex engineering
Conference Session
Environmental Engineering Division Technical Session 2
Collection
2017 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Steven J. Burian, University of Utah; Manoj K. Jha, North Carolina A&T State University; Gigi A. Richard, Colorado Mesa University; Marshall Shepherd, University of Georgia; John Taber, Incorporated Research Institutions for Seismology
Tagged Divisions
Environmental Engineering
Director for the Global Change and Sustainability Center at the University of Utah where he facilitates interdisciplinary sustainability research initiatives. His research group has contributed new approaches for designing urban water infrastructure, innovative urban databases and water modeling techniques, sustainable solutions for distributed water-energy-food systems in cities, and practical adaptation strategies for water managers facing aging infrastructure, climate change, and other challenges. This research has been funded by NSF, EPA, NASA, DOD, DOE, USAID, National Labs, State Departments of Transportation, and Industry in the U.S. and several countries. More than 75 authored or co-authored peer-reviewed
Conference Session
A Focus on Sustainability
Collection
2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access
Authors
Inez Hua, Purdue University, West Lafayette; Monica E. Cardella, Purdue University, West Lafayette
Tagged Divisions
Environmental Engineering
guided discussions aboutsustainable electronics, each participant’s research progress, and connecting the research processto science standards and curricula. These guided discussions provided an important opportunityfor peer mentoring (teacher participants providing some mentoring for each other), as well asmentoring from the program directors at Purdue University and Tuskegee University. The guideddiscussion occurred via teleconference between teachers on the two university campuses. Thesementoring activities supplemented the research specific mentoring from faculty and graduatestudents. At the end of the program, teachers prepared a technical report, detailing their researchfindings and proposed curricula, and also made oral
Conference Session
Engaging Students
Collection
2010 Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Junko Munakata-Marr, Colorado School of Mines; Jennifer Schneider, Colorado School of Mines; Barbara Moskal, Colorado School of Mines; Carl Mitcham, Colorado School of Mines; Jon Leydens, Colorado School of Mines
Tagged Divisions
Environmental Engineering
. During the almost weekly discussionsof the case study, both the regular (technical) course instructor and the liberal arts (nontechnical)instructors met with students in class to coach them through the process of writing a case studyas well as to elicit feedback on the case-study module process. A timeline of the case-studymodule activities is summarized in Table 1. The weeks without content in this timeline coveredtechnical course material. As the timeline indicates, elements of the case-study module spannedmost of the semester, allowing students the opportunity to revisit these concepts throughout thecourse. Page 15.26.5Table 1. Case-Study
Conference Session
Environmental Engineering Division Technical Session 3
Collection
2018 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Bettina Jeanine Casad, University of Missouri, St. Louis; Monica Palomo P.E., California State Polytechnic University, Pomona; Natalie Mladenov, San Diego State University
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Environmental Engineering
understanding thetheory and concepts guiding their research projects, t(12) = 2.856, p = .014 (see Table 1). In theinterviews, participants reported acquiring or improving several research skills includingmanaging data (70%; “You know, you have your own data and learning how to correlate andanalyze your own data is definitely something I got from this”), time management (46%),creating a poster (54%; “I learned a lot about…creating posters…about how to compile a posterand how…to analyze data”), writing scientific papers (54%), and oral presentations (46%).Table 1. Self-Evaluation of Research Skills: Test of Hypothesis 1b How would you rate yourself on the Mpre (SD) Mpost (SD) following skills? Ask pertinent insightful questions about