Woo! We made it. I’m still feeling a little under the weather, so I’m just going to follow the suggested prompts. Sorry for the lack of creativity.
I’m not sure if it qualifies as the most memorable moment, but the video above captures what may have been the most satisfying. Not only was it visually mesmerizing (I could have sat there all day just watching this, but we had other tests to run), but after all the problems we had with our dye, lighting, and the water channel itself, the payoff here was spectacular.
I found the most challenging aspect of this course to be the seemingly never ending stream of technical problems. Having only really performed controlled lab experiments in physics and chemistry, where everything is planned by the professor and has been performed countless times before, I wasn’t really ready for the number of things that could go wrong in a real lab. But as I mentioned above, the gratification of finally overcoming all those challenges and getting good data made it all worth it.
I’m personally unsure of what the “environment in which I thrive” is anymore, but overall I feel much more comfortable dealing with all the aforementioned challenges of real lab work. As for the “no-single-answer” questions, I think this lab provided a lot of practice dealing with multi-factor problems. Throughout all the labs, we were constantly running into issues, be it with our apparatus, our data, or our analysis... Having to search for all the possible and most probable solutions to all these problems, I think we’ve all gotten better at hypothesizing causes and solutions for any sort of issue.
So, I kind of have a weird approach to team dynamics. I used to do a lot of leadership work, and have a fair bit of experience managing my peers, but I generally don’t like taking the lead. I’d rather follow one of my teammates’ lead and just deliver whatever I’m responsible for. Of course, this sometimes doesn’t go all that well... If it seems like the group isn’t actually getting anywhere, or our current leadership feels a little directionless, I’ll step in, but only a little bit. Nobody likes feeling like they’re being usurped, so I try to direct the group towards solution rather than simply taking over. Back in highschool I used to work as a tutor, and now I work as an instructional student assistant. Drawing on my experience in teaching, I’ll ask my entire group leading questions that should at least get us moving in the right direction again. That way, just as my students really do solve the problem on their own, our group leader maintains his/her position and we are set back on track. (That was a weird ramble... not sure if that even related to the question.)
I think that I’m somewhere in between on this one. While the course exposed me to something really cool that I had idea about, I don’t think experimental testing is something I could do every day. I feel that if I was constantly setting up and running tests like these, I would eventually burn out. If I was working on something else, and we had the opportunity to run some wind tunnel tests, I’d definitely be up for that... But I think I could only handle it in moderation. Living in the wind tunnel is certainly not for me.
I’m not really sure here. Perhaps inclusion of something in the water channel might be cool. This quarter only a small portion of the class actually was able to work with it. I don’t know what exactly we would do with it, since quantifying things is rather difficult with the current setup...
I think that the three little projects that we had in 302 were quite useful for developing the thought processes required for 307. The open-ended nature of the flow viz project at least starts forcing students to think for themselves. But something a little more structured like the atmospheric boundary layer report is probably the best option. Labs that have a very defined set of requirements but multiple ways to get there would prepare future students for the endless “no-single-answer” questions of 307.
I remember back in 331, Dr. K openned the course with a very long and confusing metaphor that was intended to show the importance of understanding the physical meaning of engineering problems. While that didn’t really help me at the time, I think that the idea is definitely important. In 301, 302, and 303 we studied from textbooks about all sorts of aerodynamic and thermodynamic phenomena, but we never really discussed what they physically were. I found that this lab didn’t really show me what the physical meanings were, but rather it forced me to put it all together myself. In order to figure out the issues we were seeing in our data, we had to put what we learned in previous classes into a physical perspective and analyze how it might be effecting our data.
Alright, I don’t really think I answered half of these questions... I just sort of prattled on about vaguely related things.











