UT
NIVERSITY IMES
Dec. 1, 2014
www.csulauniversitytimes.com
C A L I F O R N I A S T A T E U N I V E R S I T Y, L O S A N G E L E S
INSIDE: GeoWall Team Preps to 'Rock' Nationals LA ONDA:
Issue 207.10
ASCE's GeoChallenge inspires student JUSTICIA PARA MICHAEL engineers to win 2015 GeoWall Competition BROWN PG 6
$11 MILLION AWARDED FOR TEACHER TRAINING PG 2
SQE'S SURVEY ON STUDENT SUCCESS FEES PG 3
CAL STATE LA DISCUSSES LIVING WITH A DISSABILITY PG 7
SPEECH & DEBATE TALK IDENTITY PG 12
ADVISEMENT MAY BE MORE AGGRAVATING THAN HELPFUL PG 7
CAL STATE LA'S ROLE IN THE LA AUTOSHOW PG 8
Photo By Blanca Lopez
Angeline Bernabe Staff Reporter Cal State L.A.’s Geowall team is back to compete another year in the national and regional competition known as GeoChallenge, and this time, they’re prepared and more enthusiastic than ever! Geochallenge, which is a student competition hosted by the Geo-Institute of the American Society of Civil Engineers, allows students from colleges across the country to compete in three different competitions: GeoWall, GeoPrediction, and GeoPoster. With an emphasis on GeoWall, students from Cal State L.A. have formed their own team to compete in GeoChallenge on a national and regional level to design a mechanically stabilized Earth Wall out of paper. Specifically, a Geowall is used for holding different
types of material waste back by the use of ties made of metal or other material. Geowalls are more commonly found to protect freeways in the case of earthquakes. At the competition, teams from all over the country are supposed to build their own versions of a GeoWall under a 20-minute construction time limit. Each design has to be tested with soil by a panel of judges, and the team that builds the best design with the least amount of paper wins. Although it sounds simple, the catch is that the soil material that the design is tested with is unknown until the night before the competition. Ryan Jacobs, a senior Civil Engineering major, has competed in the GeoChallenge for the past two years and explained, “Last year, they used a synthetic crumb rubber material, which was crushed up tires mixed in with sand.”
Gerardo Nunez, a member of GeoWall mentioned, “We didn’t do so well, but we got the fourth place score.”
the team demonstrates a sense of passion in order to win and carry their knowledge about Geowall in the workforce.
Jacobs and Nunez are both veteran contestants of the Cal State L.A. team and currently working hard with a group of students to design several possible models to take to competition.
Blanca Lopez, a senior Civil Engineering major on the GeoWall team who also works for the Port of L.A. shared, “A lot of the times, they’re [Port of L.A.] doing something similar in the projects that I work with, so I was able to see things, and they were able to click on my head from the experience I gained through GeoWall.”
With so much enthusiasm from a group of students at Cal State L.A., GeoWall Team members are determined to win. Only four team members are allowed to travel to competition, but the support of many students on the team has been overwhelming. Jacobs shared, “At competition, they had to come yell at the Cal State L.A. [team] to stop yelling because we’re so darn loud.” From the eagerness to work on possible designs at meetings to the spirit they exhibit at competitions,
Cal State L.A.’s GeoWall team will compete in 2015 on a national level. For more information on GeoWall, you can follow their competition journey through the ECST twitter (@CSULAECST). The team meets on Saturdays from 9a.m. to 12p.m. and Wednesdays from 8p.m. to 10p.m. and encourages students to join them!