TY - JOUR
T1 - Geotechnical and geoenvironmental engineering education during the pandemic
AU - Jiang, Ning Jun
AU - Hanson, James L.
AU - Vecchia, Gabriele Della
AU - Zhu, Cheng
AU - Yi, Yaolin
AU - Arnepalli, Dali N.
AU - Courcelles, Benoit
AU - He, Jia
AU - Horpibulsuk, Suksun
AU - Hoy, Menglim
AU - Takahashi, Akihiro
AU - Arulrajah, Arul
AU - Lin, Chih Ping
AU - Dowoud, Osama
AU - Li, Zili
AU - Gao, Zhiwei
AU - Hata, Toshiro
AU - Zhang, Limin
AU - Du, Yan Jun
AU - Goli, Venkata Siva Naga Sai
AU - Mohammad, Arif
AU - Singh, Prithvendra
AU - Kuntikana, Ganaraj
AU - Singh, Devendra N.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 ICE Publishing: All rights reserved.
PY - 2020/10/2
Y1 - 2020/10/2
N2 - This paper reports the impact of coronavirus disease 2019 on the practice and delivery of geotechnical and geoenvironmental engineering (GGE) education modules, including lectures, lab sessions, student assessments and research activities, based on the feedback from faculty members in 14 countries/regions around the world. Faculty members have since adopted a series of contingent measures to enhance teaching and learning experience during the pandemic, which includes facilitating active learning, exploring new teaching content related to public health, expanding e-learning resources, implementing more engaged and student-centred assessment and delivering high-impact integrated education and research. The key challenges that faculty members are facing appear to be how to maximise the flexibility of learning and meet physical distancing requirements without compromising learning outcomes, education equity and interpersonal interactions in the traditional face-to-face teaching. Despite the challenges imposed by the pandemic, this could also be a good opportunity for faculty members obliged to lecture, to rethink and revise the existing contents and approaches of professing GGE education. Three future opportunities namely, smart learning, flipped learning and interdisciplinary education, are identified. The changes could potentially provide students with a more resilient, engaged, interactive and technology-based learning environment.
AB - This paper reports the impact of coronavirus disease 2019 on the practice and delivery of geotechnical and geoenvironmental engineering (GGE) education modules, including lectures, lab sessions, student assessments and research activities, based on the feedback from faculty members in 14 countries/regions around the world. Faculty members have since adopted a series of contingent measures to enhance teaching and learning experience during the pandemic, which includes facilitating active learning, exploring new teaching content related to public health, expanding e-learning resources, implementing more engaged and student-centred assessment and delivering high-impact integrated education and research. The key challenges that faculty members are facing appear to be how to maximise the flexibility of learning and meet physical distancing requirements without compromising learning outcomes, education equity and interpersonal interactions in the traditional face-to-face teaching. Despite the challenges imposed by the pandemic, this could also be a good opportunity for faculty members obliged to lecture, to rethink and revise the existing contents and approaches of professing GGE education. Three future opportunities namely, smart learning, flipped learning and interdisciplinary education, are identified. The changes could potentially provide students with a more resilient, engaged, interactive and technology-based learning environment.
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U2 - 10.1680/jenge.20.00086
DO - 10.1680/jenge.20.00086
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85106938314
SN - 2051-803X
VL - 8
SP - 233
EP - 243
JO - Environmental Geotechnics
JF - Environmental Geotechnics
IS - 3
ER -