An Innovative Approach To Teaching Water Resources Design
Author(s) -
Diane Bondehagen,
Simeon Komisar
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
2009 annual conference and exposition proceedings
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.18260/1-2--5060
Subject(s) - sizing , engineering management , project based learning , process (computing) , engineering design process , computer science , project planning , project management , construction engineering , civil engineering , engineering , systems engineering , mathematics education , mechanical engineering , art , mathematics , visual arts , operating system
A first semester, senior level civil and environmental engineering course, Water Resources Design is, for most, the first experience for students at Florida Gulf Coast University in working with non-trivial design projects. To make the course experience as transferable as possible to future graduate engineering employment, students learn and apply hydraulic software to project development and execution. The course takes an innovative case study approach with 5 design projects required with rotating teams assigned to each project. The projects are taken from "real world" engineering problem assignments which impart to students an appreciation of the constraints and uncertainties inherent in the design process. Project 1 necessitates a quantification and comparison of Capital costs and Operation and Maintenance Costs; Project 2 involves sizing of pipes, pumps and storage for a water distribution system; Project 3 requires a water treatment plant analysis to address two plant operation problems; Project 4 simulates a watershed; and the final design project is a detention pond design. The students soon realize that although there are specific goals to be met in a design, there are also inexplicit objectives requiring an evaluation of engineering uncertainties and engineering judgment in decisionmaking. The students are therefore challenged to base their decisions on sound engineering reasoning and forecasting methods, including multiple iterations of a design with different approaches, and to justify these decisions logically and convincingly in a formal engineering report format. To this end, throughout the course, consultation with other student teams and outside professionals/experts is encouraged. Numerous assessment techniques are employed in course outcome evaluation. The students themselves complete a course evaluation survey which indicates their perception of learning outcome success. Additional assessment methods include faculty review and grading of design project reports as well outside evaluation of the final student design project by an experienced practicing engineer. Two rubrics, designed for the course, are employed in the overall assessment scores. The assessment will report on whether students have met or exceeded expectations in development of design ability, hydraulic software mastery, and an overall synthesis of skills and abilities required to deliver a soundly engineered project solution and formal design report.
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