A Developing-Country Case-Study Approach to Introducing Environmental Engineering Students to Nontechnical Sanitation Constraints in Developed Countries

Junko Munakata-Marr, Jennifer Schneider, Carl MItcham, Barbara Moskal, Jon Leydens

Research output: Contribution to conferencePresentation

Abstract

By studying closed-ended technical problems, upper-undergraduate and early graduate environmental engineering students may not appreciate the importance of the nontechnical aspects of sanitation or the critical interrelationship between technical and nontechnical components. A module on sanitation engineering for the developing world was created and implemented in a senior/graduate level wastewater engineering course. Students developed case studies as a means to broaden and deepen their understanding of nontechnical issues of wastewater engineering. The case studies focused on developing countries, but the perceptions, treatment methods, and nontechnical issues are also relevant in developed countries. The goal was to increase student appreciation for the technical and nontechnical complexities and their interplay when designing and implementing sanitation systems in both the developed and developing world. Based on tests administered before and after case-study development, statistically significant change was observed in the students’ understanding of technical and nontechnical sanitation issues. This paper presents the module design and implementation, assessment instruments and a detailed statistical and qualitative analysis of the module’s impact in the first classroom implementation.

Original languageAmerican English
StatePublished - 22 Jun 2010
Externally publishedYes
EventAmerican Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference and Exposition -
Duration: 22 Jun 2010 → …

Conference

ConferenceAmerican Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference and Exposition
Period22/06/10 → …

Keywords

  • assessment
  • case studies
  • developing and developed countries
  • nontechnical sanitation engineering constraints

EGS Disciplines

  • Environmental Engineering

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