A collaborative research team from UT's College of
Engineering and School of Information received a $1 million grant from the
National Science Foundation to teach construction professionals to
incorporate cutting edge technology into everyday tasks.
William O'Brien, assistant professor of civil engineering, Christine Julien,
assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering, Kathy Schmidt,
director of the Cockrell School of Engineering's Faculty Innovation Center,
and Randolph Bias, associate professor of information are building on a
previous small scale project that has demonstrated effective solutions to
incorporating computing and sensing technologies into construction work
sites. The team has demonstrated the use of education modules to speed
adoption of what the industry calls "intelligent job site" (IJS) technology
such as sensors, mobile computing, and wireless networking to provide both
localized and project-wide efficiencies.
The team plans to use this new federal grant to scale up their work into a
unified learning environment easily copied and customized to local
conditions. In this expanded effort, Randolph Bias, who is also Director of
the iSchool's Information eXperience Lab, will provide a systematic
user-centered design component to the technology and training modules.
"Construction sites are unique, large and dynamic, with lots of worker
choice of actions. This all makes effectively coordinating employees
difficult," says O'Brien. "Complicating it further are the often low
education levels of craft workers." Intelligent job site technologies
promise great improvements, but "considerable workforce development is
needed to speed adoption of these technologies." To which Bias added, "All
this wondrous technology is of no value if human beings can't figure out how
to use it. The team will be conducting usability studies along the way to
ensure that the technology is designed to fit the target audience."
The educational program promises a dramatic long-term increase in workforce
skills by offering both a new method of teaching using innovative
instructional technologies, as well as sustainable partnerships with
industry and academia to educate the current and future workforce..