EV450 |
ENV ENG FOR COMMUNITY DEVELOP |
2020 |
1 |
Geography and Environmental Engineering |
3.0
(BS=0.0,
ET=0.0,
MA=0.0)
|
This course is the capstone experience for a three-course environmental engineering sequence. With a focus on water and sanitation challenges in the developing world, students assess various technologies and their ability to meet community needs. The course highlights the engineering design process to develop appropriate solutions and introduces decision modeling with consideration of social, political, and economic factors. A semester-long term project leverages real world case studies to provide cadet teams an opportunity to apply knowledge and creatively design sustainable solutions to ill-defined problems. Students must make logical assumptions throughout the project, present and evaluate solution designs, and prepare a formal written report defending their selected course of action. |
30 @ 75 min (2.000 Att/wk) |
0 @ 0 min |
|
Must be a First Class cadet. An engineering design project is completed in multi-disciplinary design groups. |
EV450 |
ENV ENG FOR COMMUNITY DEVELOP |
2017 |
2 |
Geography and Environmental Engineering |
3.0
(BS=0.0,
ET=0.0,
MA=0.0)
|
This course is the capstone experience for a three-course environmental engineering sequence. With a focus on water and sanitation challenges in the developing world, students assess various technologies and their ability to meet community needs. The course highlights the engineering design process to develop appropriate solutions and introduces decision modeling with consideration of social, political, and economic factors. A semester-long term project leverages real world case studies to provide cadet teams an opportunity to apply knowledge and creatively design sustainable solutions to ill-defined problems. Students must make logical assumptions throughout the project, present and evaluate solution designs, and prepare a formal written report defending their selected course of action. |
40 @ 55 min (2.500 Att/wk) |
0 @ 0 min |
|
Must be a First Class cadet. An engineering design project is completed in multi-disciplinary design groups. |
EV450 |
ENV ENG FOR COMMUNITY DEVELOP |
2014 |
1 |
Geography and Environmental Engineering |
3.0
(BS=0.0,
ET=0.0,
MA=0.0)
|
This course is the capstone experience for a three-course environmental engineering sequence. It balances engineered solutions to technologic problems with economic, socio-cultural, and political considerations evaluated during a decision-making process. With a focus on water and sanitation challenges in the developing world, students assess various technologies and their ability to meet community needs. The course highlights the engineering design process to develop appropriate solutions and introduces decision modeling with consideration of social, political, and economic factors. A semester-long term project leverages real world case studies to provide cadet teams an opportunity to apply knowledge and creatively design sustainable solutions to ill-defined problems. Students must make logical assumptions throughout the project, present and evaluate solution designs, and prepare a formal written report defending their selected course of action. |
40 @ 55 min (2.500 Att/wk) |
0 @ 0 min |
|
Must be a First Class cadet. Each cadet will complete a paper and oral presentation on a contemporary water resources project. |
EV450 |
ENVIRONMENTAL DECISION MAKING |
2007 |
1 |
Geography and Environmental Engineering |
3.0
(BS=0.0,
ET=0.0,
MA=0.0)
|
This course is the third in a three-course sequence and is concerned with the balance of engineered solutions with economic, socio-cultural, political, and ecological considerations evaluated during a decision-making process. Using management of water resources as a teaching model, the realities of decision-making and policy development for all areas of engineering, and particularly environmental engineering, are examined. The course begins with instruction on the tools available to water resource managers, to include both structural (engineered) and non-structural approaches to solve water resource problems. Elements of engineering design and the design process are introduced as well as methods of conducting tradeoff analyses. The course makes use of case studies of current water resource projects and includes a term project. Visiting speakers are employed to present views of government and concerned public interest groups. |
40 @ 55 min (2.500 Att/wk) |
0 @ 0 min |
|
Must be a First Class cadet. Each cadet will complete a paper and oral presentation on a contemporary water resources project. |
EV450 |
ENVIRONMENTAL DECISION MAKING |
2005 |
1 |
Geography and Environmental Engineering |
3.0
(BS=0.0,
ET=0.0,
MA=0.0)
|
The course is the third in a three-course sequence and is concerned with the balance of engineered solutions with economic, socio-cultural, political, and ecological considerations evaluated during a decision-making process. Using management of water resources as a teaching model, the realities of decision-making and policy development for all areas of engineering, and particularly environmental engineering, are examined. The course begins with instruction on the tools available to water resource managers and then assesses needs for structural (engineered) and non-structural approaches to meet those needs. Elements of engineering design and the design process are introduced as well as methods of conducting tradeoff analyses. The course makes use of case studies of current water resource projects and includes a term project. Visiting speakers are employed to present views of government and concerned public interest groups. |
40 @ 55 min (2.500 Att/wk) |
0 @ 0 min |
|
Must be a First Class cadet. Each cadet will complete a paper and oral presentation on a contemporary water resources project. |