Instructor: M.L. Weber-Shirk
co-meeting with CEE 455
CEE 255 is available to all undergraduate students and can be used as an advisor-approved elective, or as an extra course.
Student teams conduct research, build working models, design full scale prototypes, create design algorithms, and create educational materials for technology transfer to improve drinking water quality in Honduras.
Students are required to attend two 50-minute meetings per week that are used to present project information, organize teams, present bi-weekly reports, meet with the instructor, and work on the team project.
Students in CEE 255 will participate in an apprenticeship role on teams led by students in CEE 455 or 501/502. They are expected to help with reporting and documentation, but will not be required to take on a leadership role. They are required to write a 2 page report assessing their contribution to the team project and reflecting critically on their service experience.
The first two weeks of the course are spent defining tasks and organizing teams. Students participate in problem definition, solution strategy, team formation, and task scheduling. Student teams write a project proposal early in the semester describing their approach to solving the research or design challenge. Teams present biweekly progress reports in the form of PowerPoint presentations.
Instructor: M.L.
Weber-Shirk
Prerequisites CEE 453 or CEE 454
co-meeting with CEE 255
CEE 455 is available to third and fourth-year undergraduates and graduate students, and can be used as a Major Approved Elective or as a Design Course. (CEE 255 cannot.) Students can take both courses multiple semesters, but can only receive design credit and Major Approved Elective credit once for CEE 455.
Student teams conduct research, build working models, design full scale prototypes, create design algorithms, and create educational materials for technology transfer to improve drinking water quality in Honduras.
Students are required to attend two 50-minute meetings per week that are used to present project information, organize teams, present bi-weekly reports, meet with the instructor, and work on the team project.
The first two weeks of the course are spent defining tasks and organizing teams. Students participate in problem definition, solution strategy, team formation, and task scheduling. Student teams write a project proposal early in the semester describing their approach to solving the research or design challenge. Teams present biweekly progress reports in the form of PowerPoint presentations.
Midterm interviews with each student are required to discuss his/her contribution to the project. Final reports summarizing semester progress will be submitted by teams or individuals as drafts, and then resubmitted after revisions. The content of the final report is also presented to the class as an oral report using PowerPoint.
Content: Summary of semester research and design work
Length: Approximately 12 pages
Format: Research and development tasks are to be ready for submission to the journal Water Research. Design tasks must include appropriate design documentation such as design basis, specifications, and CAD drawings.
Instructor: M.L.
Weber-Shirk
Prerequisite CEE 331 or permission of instructor
This course involves the design and analysis of small-scale systems that are appropriate for providing safe drinking water to the one billion underserved people. Students will work in teams to design sustainable supply and treatment systems. This will require an understanding of the major threats to public health as well as the constraints of implementing technologies in the Global South.
One of the goals of the course is to encourage creative thinking about solutions to the enormous challenge of providing everyone on the planet with safe drinking water. We will challenge the myth that this task can be accomplished by applying existing technologies and identify major technology gaps where better solutions are needed. Engineers are integral to challenge the existing assumptions and to create and document new sustainable solutions.
For more information, refer to the CEE 454 Course Website.
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