
Appraising Constructive Alignment in a Construction Management Programme
Author(s) -
Olubukola Tokede,
Linda Tivendale
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
epic series in education science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
ISSN - 2516-2306
DOI - 10.29007/4b69
Subject(s) - constructive , work (physics) , curriculum , institution , relation (database) , engineering management , higher education , engineering ethics , knowledge management , sociology , engineering , computer science , pedagogy , political science , social science , process (computing) , mechanical engineering , database , law , operating system
Construction Management (CM) programmes generally build on principles in traditional science and social-science disciplines, creatively applied to the construction sector. In the last two decades, there has been significant growth in the number of universities in Australia and UK, offering construction management programmes. Despite these trend, there has been dearth of studies that investigate the alignment of the curriculum content with assessment requirements in construction management subjects. This study appraises the issues pertaining to constructive alignment in construction management programmes delivered in the higher education sector. This work provides an ethnographic insight on the perceived benefits of Constructive Alignment in relation to academic performance, student experience, and student-satisfaction in the UK. Future work will compare outcomes in constructively-aligned courses in other academic institution. This work also suggest best practices for implementing constructive-alignment in the delivery of built environment courses.