Abstract

To adequately prepare students for engineering practices, it is imperative that institutions adopt innovative methods of teaching, learning, and assessment. One such approach is the use of real field trips (RFT) to construction sites, which can enhance students’ perceptions of related careers. Although virtual field trips (VFTs) have emerged as a viable alternative—or supplement—to traditional field trips, little is known about their potential to provide the same or similar career exploration advantages. Using responses from a self-reported questionnaire administered to university students who participated in an RFT, this study sought to examine the usefulness of site visits in developing essential skills required for civil engineers. It also examines student perceptions on the use of VFTs as part of their university experience and the extent to which it could replace RFTs. The results indicate that students consider VFT as an enjoyable way to learn, given the possibilities facilitated by the new technology. However, notwithstanding its success, the students commonly opined that VFT was not a substitute for a RFT. From a holistic perspective, the issue is not whether VFTs can replace traditional field trips or not; it is rather the focus on identifying an integrated approach that combines lectures, and virtual and real field trips in a manner that supports a social constructivism mode of learning. Ultimately, this combination will enable students to effectively construct multiple links between lectures given in a hall and the real world outside.

Highlights

  • Given that the field of engineering is a practical profession, traditional methods of teaching no longer meet the learning needs of students at higher levels of education

  • Real field trips to construction workplaces allow students to interact with experts in the field, give them the privilege to connect classroom learning to real practical situations, and potentially increase their awareness of available career options, which could eventually influence their decisions and enhance interest and attitudes toward the profession associated with the workplace or sites visited [26]

  • In the pre-site visit survey, more than 58% of the students scored (>3)—watching a virtual field trips (VFTs) provides the same sort of information as visiting a real construction site—while this level of agreement was seen in only 21% of the students in the post-site evaluation

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Summary

Introduction

Given that the field of engineering is a practical profession, traditional methods of teaching no longer meet the learning needs of students at higher levels of education. It has been suggested that interactive activities can help provide a rich content and satisfying lecture experience for students This could be covered in the context of sustainable teaching methods, which ensure that economic, social, and environmental resources are not overused [6]. Real field trips to construction workplaces allow students to interact with experts in the field, give them the privilege to connect classroom learning to real practical situations, and potentially increase their awareness of available career options, which could eventually influence their decisions and enhance interest and attitudes toward the profession associated with the workplace or sites visited [26]. It walistoh ehxanmdisn-eosnsteuxdpenritepnceerceopntiodnesveolnoptihneguseessoefntViaFlTsaksilplsarrteoqfutihreedir ufonrivceirvsiiltyenexgpineereiresn’cecaarnederthe exatsepnitratotiownsh.icIht aitlscoouexldamreinpelsacsetuRdFeTnst. pSeprececpifiticoanllsy,otnhethsetuudsye soofuVgFhTt taosapssaertsso: f(it)htehire uenffievcetrsoiftyreal siteexpveisritenocneuandetrhsetaenxdteinntgtodiwffheircehntitacsopuelcdtsreopflathcee RcoFnTst.rSupcetcioifnicaplrlyo,ctehses;s(tiui)dtyhseoeuffgehctttofavssiretsus:a(li/)real sitteheveisffietsctoonf rsetauldseitnetvs’ispiteornceupntdioenrs;taannddin(igiid) itfhfeereenffteacstpoefctcsoonfstthreuccotinosntrsuictteiovnispitrsocoensss; t(uiid) tehnetse’ffceacrteer deocfisvioirntu-mal/arkeianlgsiatbeilviitsieitss. on students’ perception; and (iii) the effect of construction site visits on students’ career decision-making abilities

Participants and Field Trip Location
Data Analysis
Results
The Effectiveness of Teaching Components
Conclusions
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