CE326 3 Syl 16 Winter Cho
CE326 3 Syl 16 Winter Cho
CE326 3 Syl 16 Winter Cho
Winter 2016
Time:
W F 12:00 PM-1:15 PM
Location: 9-307
Instructor:
Textbooks:
Coduto, D.P., Yeung, M.R. and Kitch, W.A. (2011) Geotechnical Engineering:
Principles and Practices, 2nd Edition, Pearson Prentice Hall, Upper Saddle
River, New Jersey, 794p.
Catalog Description: Stresses in soil, consolidation and settlement, soil strength, stability of earth
slopes, structural foundations.
Prerequisite:
CE 325
Communications:
This course relies heavily on Blackboard Learning System (Bb) and email to deliver course material
and receive feedback from students. You must become familiar with these tools to complete this course.
Only your official Cal Poly Pomona email address will be used. It is your responsibility to ensure your
Cal Poly email box is working properly.
General Course Objectives:
The following is a short list of the course objectives. More detailed learning objectives will be provided
for each lesson via Bb.
An understanding of stresses in soil, and the ability to compute both geostatic and induced
stresses from common loading conditions
An understanding of the sources of settlement in soils, and the ability to evaluate and predict
ultimate consolidation and secondary compression settlements
An understanding of the process of consolidation and the ability to compute consolidation
settlements as a function of time
An understanding of the principles of soil strength, the methods of measuring soil strength, and
the application of strength data to engineering analyses
An introductory understanding of engineering aspects of slope stability analysis and design
An understanding of the active, passive and the at-rest earth pressures that can exist between a
structure and the soil with which it is in contact, including the ability to estimate these pressures
An understanding of the geotechnical aspects of structural foundation design, including the
ability to size foundations that satisfy both bearing capacity and settlement criteria
An introductory understanding of geotechnical earthquake engineering
Grading:
The following weighting system will be used in determining final grade for the course
Item
Reading Reviews: 18 @ 5 points each
Homework sets: 8 @ 10 points each
Unexpected Quiz (Attendance): 10 points
Slope stability design project
Midterm exam
Final exam
Total
On-line reading reviews, as parts of the lesson preparations, will be assigned and submitted via Bb.
You will have a reading review for every lesson. The purpose of the reading review is twofold: 1) to
help you prepare for class and 2) to provide feedback to your instructor about what portions of the
homework were most difficult and need extra coverage during class. Reading review questions will
normally be qualitative in nature and require little or no computations. They will be graded based on
the effort you put into them, not on the correctness of your answers. If you prepare for class you should
be able to get perfect scores on the reading reviews.
Percent
7%
10%
Variable
Variable
Variable
Variable
100%
Points
54
80
50 80
100
200
300
784 814
There will a slope stability design project. This design project will be performed in groups. More
details about the project will be provided through Bb.
Exam
-
There will be two exams, a midterm and a final. The midterm exam will cover the first half of the
course (Chapters 9 and 12). The final exam will be comprehensive but focus on the second half of the
course. Both exams will be open book, closed notes.
The instructor will determine student grades for the course using his professional judgment, and the
following guidelines as described in the University Catalog:
A = superior work
B = very good work
C = adequate work
Grading Scale:
Your final grade will be based on how many points you have received out of the total possible. The
grade range will be fixed for the quarter. However, the grade might be curved depending on certain
circumstances. X represents your final average.
Range
X 92
90 X < 92
88 X < 90
82 X < 88
80 X < 82
78 X < 80
72 X < 78
70 X < 72
60 X < 70
X < 60
Grade
A
AB+
B
BC+
C
CD
F
Course Ethics:
By enrolling in my class, you agree to the following classroom procedures in addition to the procedures
outlined in the Cal Poly University Catalog.
Excused absences:
-
Using audible cell phones, pagers, and laptops during exam. Cell phones and pagers should be turned
off before you enter in classroom.
Cheating on any graded assignments or exams.
Showing or exhibiting discourteous behavior to other students or the instructor.
Not attending one of exams.
Duplicating copyright literature or software without permission from the publisher or author. If you are
not sure what you do is plagiarism, please ask me before you do.
To request an absence from a class lab and/or lecture, you must notify me prior to the time of the
absence. Email is acceptable, but for exams you must come to an instructors office and explain
yourself only face to face. Requests for absenteeism may be granted for emergencies only. An
emergency is defined as an unforeseeable event such as a traffic accident or medical emergency.
Medical necessary medical attention of yourself, your brother, sister, mother father, spouse, or child
only. To prove this emergency, you must provide your evidences.
Outside employment conflicts will not be considered towards absenteeism.
You are expected to attend every class meeting on time and be prepared. Should you find it necessary
to miss a class for any reason, you are expected to notify your instructor as early as the absence is
knownpreferably before the absence.
General Ethics:
Do not be late. One time might be tolerable. Over 2 times, this will be reflected on your score.
Do not go out the classroom after you enter in the classroom. I do not want you to distract me and other
students during class time. Please finish your work before class.
When an instructor hears phone ring or vibration from students during class time, the instructor
deducts 10% of total points that the students have earned by the end of quarter.
The instructor will give F to a student if the student breaks the rule again.
Student Access:
Cal Poly Pomona, as a learning-centered university, is committed to student success. Students with
disabilities are encouraged to contact us privately or the Disability Resource Center (909.869.3333,
Building 9, Room 103) to coordinate course accommodations.
Collaboration and Teamwork:
Nearly all worthwhile accomplishments from raising a family to launching the space shuttle are the work
of teams. Civil engineering is no exception. All significant civil engineering projects are completed by
teams.
You will be required to work in teams for the design project in this course. You are encouraged to study
in teams and sit with your teammates during class. There will often be group discussions during class.
You may work with others in completing the homework sets for this course. However, it will be critical
to your success in exams that you individually understand all the problems in the homework sets. Do not
substitute copying for good collaborative learningit will hurt you in the long run. When you do work
in teams on material submitted for a grade you must document the collaboration that took place. The
design project will have a formal report that will be signed by all team members.
There are only two graded items that you cannot receive help onreading reviews and exams. Doing the
reading reviews individually is critical to your understanding of the material and the exams are critical to
demonstrating your degree of mastery of the material. If you receive assistance on a reading review or an
exam, you will receive no credit for that work and be subject to disciplinary action.
Instructor Prerogative:
The instructor will try to create and maintain an optimum learning-centered environment for all students.
To this end, the instructor may need to change policies, procedures, assignments, schedules, grade
weighting, or other aspects of this course when he deems it necessary. You will be notified of any such
changes.
Date
Topic
Chapter
1/6
Introduction
1/8
Stress1
RR 1 and RR2
1/13
Stress2
RR 3, HW 1
1/15
Strength1
1/20
Strength2
RR 5, HW 2
1/22
Strength3
RR 6
1/27
Strength4
RR 7, HW 3
1/29
Slope Stability1
2/3
Slope Stability2
2/5
Slope Stability3
2/10
2/12
2/17
RR 13
2/19
RR 14, Project
submittal 2
2/24
Rate of Settlement
11
RR 15, HW 6
2/26
Foundations1
14-15
RR 16, HW 7
3/2
Foundations2
3/4
3/9
3/11
3/16
12
13
11
RR 8, HW 4
RR 11
10
RR 12, HW 5
RR 17
10
RR 4,
RR 10, Project
submittal 1
Assignment Due
16-17
RR 18, Project
submittal 3
RR 19
RR 20, HW 8
The outline below provides a general overview of the course and the due dates of deliverables. Detailed reading and
homework assignments along with any updates to this schedule are provided via Bb.
RR = On-line Reading Review, due by noon on due date; HW = Homework; HWs and project submittals due at
beginning of class meeting on due date