When James Hark first started shadowing members of the construction team who were working on renovations to the University of Virginia’s Alderman Library, he found himself struggling to keep up with some of the things they were talking about in their meetings.
Fast forward a couple months, and that is no longer the case.
“What once sounded like a different language is now making a lot more sense, as I can follow along with each meeting and understand the terminology of construction,” Hark said. “Being able to shadow different members of the team has given me a unique perspective of the intricacies of the construction process, and it’s been incredibly satisfying being able to watch the project progress over the last few months.”
Hark, a Boston native who is pursuing a master’s degree in landscape architecture, and Andrew Garnjost, a Northern Virginia native going for a master’s in civil engineering, have been shadowing Chris Rhodes, a project manager for Skanska construction company, and members of his team as part of a new graduate-level course within 鶹ƽ School of Engineering and Applied Science called “Construction Practice.”
The course is the brainchild of Diana Duran, an assistant professor in the Department of Engineering Systems and Environment, and Rhodes, who maintain that learning the ins and outs of the construction industry is an endeavor that can be better accomplished on a construction site than in a classroom.
Each week, students tour the project site, attend a project meeting and shadow a project engineer, project manager or superintendent to see how the company employee performs different tasks for the project. At the end of each week, students reflect on the activities they engaged.

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