Engineering students provide key insights for Habitat for Humanity

Engineering 333 started off unexpectantly.
âIt was very stressful at the start of the semester. There were many students who were utterly surprised,â said Duncan Waanders, a senior engineering major.
âMouths are open on day one,â said Matt Heun, the instructor of the course. âStudents were saying thereâs no way you can expect that of us.â
But Heunâs gotten comfortable allowing students to sit in that uncomfortable space. In fact, he joins them there.
When the answer is not known ... yet
âNormally with every class thatâs taught the professor knows the answer or itâs in the back of the book or in an answer key, but how do you teach and learn when the professor doesnât know the answer?â wondered Heun.
Thatâs a learning outcome of ENGR 333. Professor Heun sets a problem before the students and asks them to work to solve it.
âIâll guide them in the right direction when they need guidance, but there are no lectures for this part of the class,â said Heun. âItâs all student-driven, and thatâs a terribly scary way to teach, because I donât know what the outcomes are going to be, but both myself and my colleagues across the university acknowledge there are certain problems in society we donât yet know the answer to.â
The that
And so thatâs the space Heun and his engineering students inhabited this fall.
Habitat for Humanity is one of the largest players in residential housing construction, and their is particularly known for its efforts in reducing carbon emissions throughout the building process. Mark Ogland-Hand, a leader in the organization, wondered about the expected carbon savings of a low-carbon footprint house Habitat was constructing. Ogland-Hand and Heun devised a question for the engineering students: what would it take to reduce those carbon emissions by a further 20%?
âI thought âweâre not qualified to work for a real client, weâre just senior engineers, we donât know how to solve big world problems,ââ recalled Waanders of the assignment.
Heun felt differently: âMark with Habitat wants to know the answer. My students are smart enough to figure it out. So, letâs figure it out.â
With that, the project got underway and so did the 2021 fall edition of ENGR 333.
Into the unknown
The two sections of Heunâs class were each assigned an existing Habitat house in Grand Rapids to analyze as well as the low carbon build that was just a foundation when they were introduced to the project in early September.
The two sections divided up to work on two areas, some working on analysisâeverything from looking at embodied carbon, the onsite carbon emissions, electricity, and heating, and the other area focused on design elementsâfocusing on what design aspects would help reduce emissions further.
âThereâs a time in most of these projects when students come to me and ask, âhow do we analyze or design some aspect of this project,â and I say, âI donât know, never done that,â and they look at me and say, âyou donât know, and you expect us to do it.â At that moment, the project ceases to be an assignment and switches to a responsibility,â said Heun. âThey are now responsible for figuring out how this is going to endâthat moment for me is like magic. When it happens, I see the wheels turn, theyâre thinking âwe better figure this out because we will be making a presentation to the entire engineering department.â
Digging for answers
And throughout the semester, students figured things out through research and through asking a lot of questions of both consultant (Heun) and client (Ogland-Hand).
Hundreds of questions came into Ogland-Hand, and he answered them all.
âOne of our students Baylee kept a spreadsheet of all of the emails she sent to Mark and his responses. Itâs hundreds of emails he responded to,â said Heun. âItâs an incredible investment on his part, and that investment benefits both Habitat and also our students.â
âI sensed a strong interest in learning, a strong interest in asking the right questions and finding the right answers,â said Ogland-Hand. âTo see such young people so clearly passionate and so clearly jump in and tackle some of these things and ask good questions and clearly have a passion for this is very encouraging.â
Finding answers and confidence
And, in early December, the students stood in front of a lecture hall packed with students, faculty, staff, and their clients, and presented a detailed analysis of what they found.
To simplify it greatly, the students found that while you canât ignore the carbon emissions present in the initial upfront activity of getting materials and all the onsite construction actions, the majority of the carbon emissions come after someone occupies and operates the house. It really came down to the utilities.
âThe greatest takeaway is because houses last for so long, what we do right now for a house is going to have effects for decades to come until the equipment needs to be swapped out,â said Ogland-Hand after the presentation.
And that holds true in education too. The confidence built through problem-based education will hopefully serve students for decades to come.
Equipped to be problem solvers
âAlthough it can feel overwhelming at the time, itâs good experience for students, because there will be times in their careers when someone will ask them to do something, and theyâll have little experience in it. In those moments, theyâll need to get up to speed quickly. But a few months or several months in theyâll get some good results,â said Heun. âIt provides confidence for the next time someone asks them to do something they have little experience with.â
Waanders remembers what Heun said to the class on day one when they argued they werenât qualified to take this on.
ââYou will look later in the semester and realize how far you have come, how much you have learned, and how much you can do,ââ recalls Waanders of Heunâs words.
âHe was right. System worked as intended,â said Waanders. âI think everyone in our class was amazed at how much we were able to come together and how much we were able to accomplish. We were able to make a comprehensive presentation. Where at the beginning most of us couldnât really define what embodied carbon was, now most of us can quote what it is for a specific house, and I think thatâs really incredible.â
âA couple students came up to me after todayâs presentation and they asked, âhow did you know we could do this?â,â said Heun. âThe process of crafting a project that is the right size and scope is always exciting and itâs always a joy to do that for the students. Students learn so much when they encounter big challenges, when they work collaboratively with each other and the professor, and when they serve others in the process."
Heun and his colleagues have been doing this type of work with students for years ... heading into the unknown together in pursuit of new insights.