Journal of Information Technology in Construction
ITcon Vol. 23, pg. 138-156, http://www.itcon.org/2018/7
Emerging CAD and BIM trends in the AEC education: an analysis from students' perspective
submitted: | April 2016 | |
revised: | August 2017 | |
published: | June 2018 | |
editor(s): | Turk Ž. | |
authors: | Gulbin Ozcan Deniz, Assistant Professor,
College of Architecture and the Built Environment, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, PA; denizg@philau.edu | |
summary: | As the construction industry is moving towards collaborative design and construction practices globally, training the architecture, engineering, and construction (AEC) students professionally related to CAD and BIM became a necessity rather than an option. The advancement in the industry has led to collaborative modelling environments, such as building information modelling (BIM), as an alternative to computer-aided design (CAD) drafting. Educators have shown interest in integrating BIM into the AEC curriculum, where teaching CAD and BIM simultaneously became a challenge due to the differences of two systems. One of the major challenges was to find the appropriate teaching techniques, as educators were unaware of the AEC students’ learning path in CAD and BIM. In order to make sure students learn and benefit from both CAD and BIM, the learning path should be revealed from students’ perspective. This paper summarizes the background and differences of CAD and BIM education, and how the transition from CAD to BIM can be achieved for collaborative working practices. The analysis was performed on freshman and junior level courses to learn the perception of students about CAD and BIM education. A dual-track survey was used to collect responses from AEC students in four consecutive years. The results showed that students prefer BIM to CAD in terms of the friendliness of the user-interface, help functions, and self-detection of mistakes. The survey also revealed that most of the students believed in the need for a BIM specialty course with Construction Management (CM), Structure, and Mechanical-Electrical-Plumbing (MEP) areas. The benefits and challenges of both CAD and BIM-based software from students’ perspectives helps to improve the learning outcomes of CAD/BIM courses to better help students in their learning process, and works as a guideline for educators on how to design and teach CAD/BIM courses simultaneously by considering the learning process and perspectives of students. | |
keywords: | Building information modelling (BIM), computer-aided design (CAD), architecture, engineering, and construction (AEC) education | |
full text: | (PDF file, 0.537 MB) | |
citation: | Ozcan Deniz G (2018). Emerging CAD and BIM trends in the AEC education: an analysis from students' perspective, ITcon Vol. 23, pg. 138-156, https://www.itcon.org/2018/7 |