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Development and Implementation of a Final Year Civil Engineering Capstone Project – Successes, Lessons Learned, and Path Forward

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Conference

2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access

Location

Virtual On line

Publication Date

June 22, 2020

Start Date

June 22, 2020

End Date

June 26, 2021

Conference Session

Beyond the Capstone: Integrating Authentic Experiences that Promote Learning and Excitement

Tagged Division

Civil Engineering

Page Count

16

DOI

10.18260/1-2--34440

Permanent URL

https://peer.asee.org/34440

Download Count

1417

Paper Authors

biography

Andrew C. Brown P.E. The University of Auckland

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Dr. Andrew C. Brown is a Professional Teaching Fellow at the University of Auckland. He has professional experience in retaining wall design, slope stability analysis, forensic engineering, litigation support, construction management and quality assurance, erosion and sediment control, stormwater management, field instrumentation, performance monitoring, geoenvironmental engineering, and project management. He incorporates his experiences as a consulting engineer into courses covering the practice of civil engineering, including a senior level capstone course which runs in parallel with a currently ongoing civil engineering project. His doctoral research was conducted on the long-term field performance of retaining structures in expansive clay.

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biography

Hugh Watson Morris University of Auckland, NZ

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Hugh Morris is a Senior Lecturer in Civil Engineering who had a short period in local government and consulting before joining the University 30 years ago. He has taught timber engineering design to structural engineering students and introductory design to 1000 first year students from multiple engineering disciplines. He has a passion for teaching and research interests in earthquake engineering and timber buildings.

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Abstract

This paper will cover the development and implementation of a final year Civil Engineering Capstone Project at the University of Auckland, New Zealand. The Capstone project is based on a Civil Engineering design office experience, and allows students to experience authentic involvement with a real-world, open-ended project. Students integrate their technical knowledge by working in teams to deliver an engineering design report and presentation that must achieve real, coordinated outcomes for a client. The Capstone design project is selected each year with the help of local engineering practitioners with the goal of allowing students to work on a challenging civil engineering project which is local (i.e. students can visit the site and observe the design problems which need to be solved), currently in progress (i.e. final details of the selected solution are not yet constructed), and requires substantial problem-solving input from each specialisation within Civil Engineering (e.g. Construction, Environmental, Geotechnical, Transportation, Structural, and Water). Students manage their own design teams of 7 to 10 individuals (depending on course enrolment numbers), taking advantage of available resources to develop unique solutions to the design project (a single design project is assigned to the course, and each group develops their own solution). A short series of lectures and a site visit are included in the first weeks of the one-semester course, but student learning primarily takes place during Design Office sessions, where students work in teams on their design with the support of specialist academic staff and consulting engineers.

The course has overcome a number of obstacles inherent to the implementation of an open-ended, team-based design project for a large class (e.g. student team dynamics, peer assessment, etc.), although the course structure continues to be developed and improved. Several students have commented that this course was the best group exercise in their university experience, and many noted that it was the most valuable paper they had done in their degree. Similarly, the real-world practitioners and clients in attendance at the final student presentations have commented on how impressed they were with the depth of understanding the students had of the project. Feedback from the engineering consulting industry has indicated that following the introduction of this course, they have observed a higher level of understanding in new graduates of the role of a civil engineering practitioner than in years past.

In this paper, the principles of “Capstone”, the course organisation, timeline, and assessment structure, and the evolution of the course from its initial pilot run with 10 students in 2017 to full-scale implementations with approximately 200 students in 2018 and 240 students in 2019 will be evaluated. The model of staff involvement, industry participation, and the level of success that has been achieved in getting buy-in from staff will be discussed. The course successes, lessons learned, and path forward will be discussed in the context of student learning styles and experiential learning, with the intent that the knowledge gained in this course will prove valuable to the development of similar Capstone courses.

Brown, A. C., & Morris, H. W. (2020, June), Development and Implementation of a Final Year Civil Engineering Capstone Project – Successes, Lessons Learned, and Path Forward Paper presented at 2020 ASEE Virtual Annual Conference Content Access, Virtual On line . 10.18260/1-2--34440

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: © 2020 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