An Engineering and Educational Technology Team Approach to Introducing New Unsaturated Soils Mechanics Material into Introductory Undergraduate Geotechnical Engineering Courses
Author(s) -
Arthur Ornelas,
John Sadauskas,
Sandra L. Houston,
Wilhelmina Savenye,
Eddy F. Ramirez,
Claudia E. Zapata
Publication year - 2020
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.18260/1-2--19175
Subject(s) - curriculum , engineering education , soil mechanics , civil engineering , geotechnical engineering , engineering , applied mechanics , institutionalisation , engineering ethics , soil water , mechanical engineering , pedagogy , geology , soil science , sociology , political science , law
The undergraduate geotechnical engineering introductory course has not been significantly modified in decades in U.S. universities, and to date, there is no significant coverage of unsaturated soil mechanics. Meanwhile, 74% of U.S. geotechnical faculty respondents to a recent survey indicated that unsaturated soils mechanics should be introduced at the undergraduate level. A student’s depth of understanding of soils as an engineering material would be greatly enhanced via introduction of geotechnical principles for unsaturated (three phase) conditions, with the saturated soil case being presented as a subset of the broader theory. Goals for this project include the development, piloting, dissemination, and institutionalization of lecture and laboratory modules for educating undergraduate students in the basic principles of unsaturated soils theory and the application of these principles to problems of movement of structural foundation systems. Engineering and educational technology team experiences in development of these modules and in implementation at home and partner institutions will be discussed, with an emphasis on updating the Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM) curriculum in an environment in which change is often difficult.
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