Food!. Training Meeting: ‘Costa Rica & The Project Process’ October 7, 2010 7:00pm CE 110
Preview:
Citation preview
- Slide 1
- Food!
- Slide 2
- Training Meeting: Costa Rica & The Project Process October
7, 2010 7:00pm CE 110
- Slide 3
- Meeting Agenda: If you missed them (3 min) Recent Developments:
(7 min) Replant leader needed Scholarship opportunity Job
opportunity Click-the-link-to-raise money thinger Development
Blurbs: (10 min) Bill Gordon- Fundraising Cristina Vadell- Website
Antonio and Matai- Soap Box Derby!! Costa Rica project thinger
training deal (9 12 min) Amandas Updates (0.3 min)
- Slide 4
- If you missed them Last meeting- Speaker, Jim Olson Fantastic
speech about leadership, serving our country, the Central
Intelligence Agency, some cool missions Very very cool Training
Day- Safety training Built the conference table Learned to weld
Fogged out the mosquitos
- Slide 5
- Scholarship!! CH2M HILL has recently launched a scholarship/
internship program especially for EWB-USA members. Highlights of
the program include: 10 scholarships awarded to EWB-USA student
members $5,000 scholarship for academic or project support (awarded
fall 2010) Opportunity for a paid 10-week summer 2011 internship
Deadline for applications is October 29 with recipients notified in
early December Visit www.ch2mhill.jobs/ewb to learn more and access
the application.www.ch2mhill.jobs/ewb Eligibility Enrolled in a
four-year accredited engineering program and continuing in the
upcoming academic semester. Active, registered member of Engineers
Without Borders-USA through your university chapter. Minimum GPA of
3.0.
- Slide 6
- Job Opportunity! Want to be a counselor this summer? Help out
A&M, future engineers and have a blast! The Explore Engineering
Summer Camps Camp Counselor Application (long name) is now open! A
4-day summer programs to get high school students some know-how in
engineering! Paid! Awesome opportunity! Lots of fun! Interested?
See Grady Meloy for more info (he will give you/show you/maybe not
give you a handout)
- Slide 7
- Click-the-link thinger! Fundraising survey All you have to do
is put in you information (name, email, etc), and select EWB as
your favorite organization. It's just too easy...and if we win, EWB
gets $1000! check the latest listserv email!!
http://www.burnsmcd.com/portal/page/portal/Intern
et/Careers/2_College%20Recruiting/1_Campus%20Vis
its/YouDecideWeProvide
http://www.burnsmcd.com/portal/page/portal/Intern
et/Careers/2_College%20Recruiting/1_Campus%20Vis
its/YouDecideWeProvide
- Slide 8
- Leadership Opportunity: Aggie Replant Lead Coordinate EWB-TAMUs
participation in Replant Serve as group leader during replant
Coordinate member sign up, registration, and communication Good
introduction into leadership Interested? Email
vpprojects.ewbtamu@gmail.com
- Slide 9
- Fundraising! dRaise the fun!
- Slide 10
- Update from Amanda! 1. Bowling this Saturday at 7pm at Grand
Station Entertainment. Sign-up sheet is online. Bring $7. 2. We
will pull tickets together for the Tech Football Game Saturday
October 30th. Just so people know in advance. 3. Let me know if you
are interested in doing Ultimate Frisbee again...I want to lol. 4.
All those in the Mentor Program: Lunch next Tuesday at Chipotle on
University at 12:30pm.
- Slide 11
- The Aggie 500!
- Slide 12
- choo
- Slide 13
- Why do we do projects? Engineers Without Borders USA supports
community-driven development programs worldwide through the design
and implementation of sustainable engineering projects, while
fostering responsible leadership. In English to help develop
communities in need and at the same time make some leaders. In
Spanish Por los nios.
- Slide 14
- Community
- Slide 15
- The Real Reason we do projects
- Slide 16
- The Project Process 521 Pre-Assessment Report 522
Post-Assessment Report 523 Alternatives Analysis 524 Preliminary
Design Report 525 Pre-Implementation Report 526 Post-Implementation
Report
- Slide 17
- Other necessary things Constant communication with the
community!!! Memorandum of Understanding Documents with the foreign
government Travel Waivers Travel Insurance Site Assessment
Checklist Travel logistics (flights, room & board, etc.) Etc.
etc.
- Slide 18
- 521 Pre-Assessment Report Due roughly 2 months before
Assessment trip. Have to make sure enough time is allotted to
complete everything. Must have a site-specific Health and Safety
Plan. Plan of action, what tests are going to be performed,
etc.
- Slide 19
- Slide 20
- Slide 21
- 522 Post-Assessment Report Due within 30 days from the return
of your trip. What you did, what were the results, what data and
info did you obtain, materials list, etc.
- Slide 22
- Percolation test #1 left of collegio 8/16/2009 presoaked all 5
gallons for 4-6 hours timeminutesdrop (in)delta perc rate (min/in)
7:2300.000 0 7:55324.375 7.3 8:12175.5001.12515.1
8:29176.3750.87519.4 8:57287.5001.12524.9 9:14178.2500.75022.7
total111average1.6517.9
- Slide 23
- 523 Alternatives Analysis Due with 522, 523, or anytime in
between. Why one solution was chosen over another. Pretty important
stuff.
- Slide 24
- 1 st ChoiceAlternative Roof: Corrugated tin fastened to wood
rafters. Pros- Ease of construction (does not require special tools
or skills, community familiar with this construction), availability
(most community buildings are built this way), cost (much cheaper
then steel rafters) Cons- Lifespan(wood will weather quicker then
metal in this environment, this is not a concern because buildings
in the area have lasted many years without refurbishment) Load
capacity (they do not hold as much weight as steel, but will be
designed for the same load using more of them) Roof: Corrugated tin
fastened to steel trusses Pros- Quick( if prefabricated, quick to
assemble) High load capacity( we will know how much they are
specified for off the shelf and be able to plan a little easier)
Long Service Life(If properly coated, they will long outlast wood
rafters) Perception(Newer, more expensive buildings are built with
steel, it shows one is affluent and modern) Cons- Cost(more
expensive, not certain of exact difference) Tools and Labor-(Welder
and specialty tools needed in some cases, apart from when nuts and
bolts may be used) Availability(Have not found a provider
locally)
- Slide 25
- 524 Preliminary Design Report Due date varies with each EWB-USA
personnel. Roughly 30% of design of project. Dont want to waste
time on nitty-gritty design work if the concept/basic idea isnt
even practical.
- Slide 26
- 525 Pre-Implementation Report Due roughly 3 months before
travel. The MOST IMPORTANT part of the project. Someone should be
able to read this document and complete the project. Everything you
can think of timelines, materials, designs, legal stuff, travel
arrangements, emergency contact page, etc., etc. etc. etc. etc.
Required teleconferencing presentation. A 50 million page document.
Etc.!
- Slide 27
- Slide 28
- Slide 29
- 526 Post-Implementation Report Due within 60 days of the return
from trip. Present what happened on the implementation trip. Can
propose future ideas. What went wrong, where to improve, etc.
Pictures And more!
- Slide 30
- Education Also vitally important, if they dont know how to use
it, they wont. Plain and simple. Manual in spanish.
Troubleshooting, how to expand, etc.
- Slide 31