Baltimore , Maryland
June 25, 2023
June 25, 2023
June 28, 2023
Environmental Engineering Division (ENVIRON) Technical Session 3
Environmental Engineering Division (ENVIRON)
13
10.18260/1-2--43689
https://peer.asee.org/43689
154
Matt Baideme is a Lieutenant Colonel in the United States Army. He earned his Ph.D. from Columbia University (2019). He teaches courses in environmental engineering and science, with research and teaching interests focused on engineering education, engineered biological treatment systems, microbial nitrogen cycling, and microbial biochemical degradation pathways.
Michael A. Butkus is a professor of environmental engineering at the U.S. Military Academy. His research has been focused on engineering education and advancements in the field of environmental engineering.
Lieutenant Colonel Andrew Pfluger, U.S. Army, is an Associate Professor and Academy Professor in the Department of Geography and Environmental Engineering at the United States Military Academy. He currently serves as the director of the Environmental Prog
The distribution of graded assignments, and the points available therein, was studied across 14 of our institution’s junior- and senior-level environmental engineering courses. Several of the courses studied incorporated teamwork as a stated course objective or a student learning outcome, while many instructors separately chose to implement teamwork as one of their stated teaching methods. Point distribution, whether on assignments submitted by individual students or those by groups or teams of students, varied by course based on several factors, including teamwork as a stated course objective or peer learning as a priority for the course instructor. For our ABET-accredited Environmental Engineering major, achievement of ABET Engineering Accreditation Commission (EAC) Student Outcome 5 was also a factor, with teamwork incorporated on graded assignments to achieve ABET EAC Student Outcome 5. Courses with labs and sizeable design projects, especially those tied to ABET EAC Student Outcome 5, had a much larger fraction of team-based activity points than those without labs or large course projects. To examine teamwork as a teaching method, an evaluation of student grades indicated that team-based activities did not equally benefit all students, with lower performing students receiving a larger grade benefit. In similar fashion, group learning exercises did not significantly improve student learning for subsequently administered individual exams. When student learning related to team selection methodologies were examined within a large enrollment course, it was concluded that students who selected their own teams earned grades that mirrored their overall course grade. Lower performing students who were randomly assigned, or purposefully grouped with higher performing students based on previous performance, typically earned higher grades on the group assignment than other events in the course. However, the increased grade in these cases did not consistently reflect improved individual performance.
Baideme, M., & Newhart, K. B., & Robbins, C., & Butkus, M. A., & Pfluger, A. R. (2023, June), Influence of Group Learning in Environmental Engineering: A Curriculum and Course-level Assessment Paper presented at 2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Baltimore , Maryland. 10.18260/1-2--43689
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