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While construction
education continues to gain a foothold at the university level,
it remains a discipline in search of its identity. At the
100-plus U.S. schools that offer four-year construction degrees,
construction programs sometimes are tucked under the umbrellas
of engineering or architecture departments that may seem unlikely.
But change is at hand. Construction
programs are evolving. Once considered primarily as training
grounds for construction managers, programs have ventured
into areas usually associated with engineering, such as research
and continuing education. But even as construction programs
develop, many still seek respect. "Most construction programs
are treated as a stepchild," says Larry Grosse, head of the
Dept. of Manufacturing Technology and Construction Management
at Colorado State University in Fort Collins. "Architecture
and engineering are older programs. Construction management
is still a startup."
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GROWING
UP Schools teach contruction management, but also
are venturing into research and continuing education.
(Photo courtesy of Wentworth Institute of Technology.) |
The American Council for Construction
Education, Monroe, La., which has accredited construction
programs since 1974, now has 60 accredited schools, says David
Dupree, ACCE's executive vice president. By comparison, the
Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology, Baltimore,
Md., has been accrediting engineering programs since 1932
and lists 217 accredited civil engineering programs and 82
in civil engineering technology.
CSU's MTCM department is in the
College of Applied Human Sciences, which Grosse says helps
differentiate it from CSU's engineering programs. "Our students
take engineering courses and we have a good working relationship
with [the engineering department], but it's a distinct advantage"
to be in a separate college, he says. With 650 undergraduates,
CSU has one of the nation's largest university construction
programs.
At the University of Florida, Gainesville,
students can choose from two routes for construction education:
a civil engineering degree with a construction management
emphasis, or a building construction degree from the College
of Design, Construction and Planning, formerly the College
of Architecture. The former is geared toward construction
engineering careers in transportation and infrastructure,
while the latter is focused on buildings, says Charles Glagola,
associate professor of civil engineering.
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SEEKERS
Southern Illinois' Bodapati says research could raise
industry profitability.
(Photo courtesy of SIUE School of Engineering.) |
Industry firms see value in construction-centered
programs. "The good schools pay attention to developing interpersonal
skills," says Sal LaScala, senior vice president for Turner
Construction, New York City. He says construction schools
have done well at developing people skills, but Turner also
finds "excellent students in classical engineering programs,
where they learn how to solve problems." Turner hires about
200 new recruits per year, with an equal mix of engineering
and construction management degrees.
Denny Dahl, human resources director
at Denver-based PCL Construction Enterprises Inc., agrees
that C-schools are a good fit for students seeking careers
with construction contractors. "The [C-schools] do a spectacular
job of giving kids street smarts," he says, citing the need
for strong business and management skills. About one-third
of PCL's new recruits major in construction management. He
sees that growing to 50% over the next few years.
RESEARCH
One topic being debated is the
level of research at C-schools. Some feel construction lags
too far behind other industries in research. Others see an
industry with already tight profit margins that is sometimes
expected to fund research with little practical application.
But most agree a lack of funding is the main obstacle to increasing
research.
"The amount of construction research
is woefully inadequate," says James Smith, head of Texas A&M's
construction science department. Although industry funds much
of what research there is, Smith says academia and industry
need to work together more closely so "companies can see a
benefit" to supporting more.
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IDENTITY
CSU sets separate course.
(Photo courtesy of Colorado State University.) |
Narayan Bodapati, chair of the
construction department at Southern Illinois University, Edwardsville,
says the construction industry "spends less than 0.5% of total
construction value on research." Other industries, such as
pharmaceutical and aerospace, invest up to 20%, he says. Acknowledging
tight margins, he says "that's all the more reason to improve
efficiencies" through research that can increase productivity.
Contractors say research has to
be more practical, not just more prevalent. "Some [past research]
will never be applied in the field," says Turner's LaScala.
"It needs to solve real problems and be something that helps
things go up faster, safer and more economically."
Another deterrent to contractor-funded
university research is the fact that results are often made
available to all contractors, not just the firms funding the
research. "Contractors don't want to fund research to help
the competition," says the University of Florida's Glagola,
a former contractor.
One solution might be to find funding
outside of the construction industry, such as the federal
government. The University of Florida has obtained federal
funding to research topics such as improving project management
techniques and real-time readout of compaction equipment.
But some say more federal participation is needed. "Construction
is not getting its fair share" of federal funding, says Ken
Eickmann, director of the Construction Industry Institute,
Austin, Texas. CII plans to seek funding from the National
Science Foundation and the National Institute of Standards
and Technology. Currently, its coordinated research is funded
by member firms.
Opinions vary on whether more research
at construction schools could detract from teaching. PCL's
Dahl believes schools should focus on recruiting and training
sorely needed construction managers, rather than on theoretical
research. CII's Eickmann says construction research is so
meager that "we're a long way from the point [of overemphasizing
it]." CSU's Grosse acknowledges that "you have to strike a
balance between research and teaching."
COOPERATIVE EFFORTS
Educators and contractors laud
the growth of internships and co-op programs at construction
schools. Some now require co-ops. At Wentworth Institute of
Technology, Boston, students must participate in a two-semester
co-op program before graduation. "Most students will graduate
with one year of practical experience," says Mark Hasso, CM
program coordinator.
PCL finds internships also lead
to lower turnover, according to Dahl. Five-year retention
rates average about 30% for new hires without internship experience
and 100% for employees who have interned with the company,
he says.
To properly recruit and educate
the construction work force, some industry experts say the
process needs to start years before college and continue long
after graduation.
With a deficit of construction
workers growing by over 100,000 per year, the industry needs
to show students as early as junior high school that "construction
is a viable career path," says Sam Hassoun, director of the
West Sacramento-based California Construction Education and
Research Foundation, an arm formed by the Associated General
Contractors of California to promote construction education.
"At the high school level, we've sometimes already missed
them," he says.
After graduation, companies and
schools need to continue fostering cooperative education,
according to Hassoun. Workers are not always up to date on
new contracting methods and technology.
"We need more of a marriage between
technology and construction," Hassoun says. He encourages
more exchange between academic faculty and industry experts,
with contractors occasionally teaching college courses and
continuing education workshops.
Click here for the U.S. Construction Schools (Note:These
listings were published in ENRs Oct. 29, 2001, issue.
Data may have changed since the initial publication.)
Click here for the U.S. Civil Engineering Schools story >>
Click here for the U.S. Architecture Schools story >>
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