Instructor: Dr. Zhi-Qing (ZQ) Lin
Office: 2165 SLW
Email: zhlin@siue.edu
Phone: 618-650-2650
Class Schedule: Lecture: 6:00pm-8:50pm Tuesdays and Thursdays, 0408
Peck Hall, July 7-August 8, 2014. Field and Lab Practice: 9:00am-3:30pm,
Saturdays, July 19-August 2, 2014.
Office Hours: 4:00 pm – 5:30 pm Tuesdays
and Thursdays; 2095 Science West
Course Description:
This graduate course provides students theoretical knowledge and technical
skills on environmental sampling. This should help ensure consideration of the
many variables and special techniques that are needed to plan and carry out
sampling activities that will provide representative environmental samples for
analysis. A number of field sampling techniques will be covered for the
sampling of soil, air, water, vegetation, and biota. Students will have the opportunity for hands-on experience with most of the sampling
techniques. Students will be
encouraged to explore current and emerging technologies in environmental
sampling and analyses.
Course Prerequisites: A basic understanding of statistics, or consent of the instructor.
Text Book: Site
Characterization: Sampling and Analysis.
1997, by HMTRI/Intelecom, Van Nostrand
Reinhold, New York.
Reference Books: (1) Fundamentals of Environmental Sampling and
Analysis. 2007, by C. Zhang, Wiley-Interscience.
(2) Fundamentals of Environmental
Sampling. 2003, by K. Bodger, Government
Institutes.
Additional scientific articles will
be given as supplemental reading materials.
Course Objectives:
1). To understand basic environmental sampling principles; 2) To become familiar with the basics of environmental sampling techniques; 3) To obtain hands-on environmental sampling experience.
Grading Policy:
Class exams (one midterm and final): Material presented in class lectures and required readings will form the basis for examination questions. Class examinations will require an understanding of lecture and reading materials and result in applications of the knowledge to practical situations. Each student will need to develop and present a research sampling plan on a selected topic during the class.
Grading: One midterm exam: 40%; Field/lab practice: 10%; Research project (the Sampling and Analysis Plan): 10%; Final exam: 40%. Total Points: 100. A: 90-100; B: 80-89; C: 70-79; D: 60-69; F:< 60. Note: Credit earned in a course in which a D or F grade is recorded cannot be used to satisfy the requirements for a graduate degree.
Attendance Policy:
Regular prompt attendance is required for success in this course. Only University approved absences will be accepted. Because classroom or group discussion will form an important part of class lectures, excessive absences may result in a 10% reduction of your overall grade or being dropped from the course.
Field participation is essential for successful completion of the course. Students will be responsible for their transportation to and from the location of the sampling event.
Students with
Disabilities
Students with disabilities should visit the Disability Support Services (DDS) located in the Student Success Center, Room 1270, at their earliest convenience to meet the director and discuss available services. The student with a documented disability and a disability ID card from DSS should also notify the instructor as soon as possible to make any necessary arrangements.
Academic Misconduct:
"Acts of academic misconduct for which students are subject to sanctions include, without limitation, plagiarism, cheating, failure or refusal to follow clinical practice standards, falsifying or manufacturing scientific or educational data and/or representing manufactured data to be the result of scientific or scholarly experiment or research, and soliciting, aiding, abetting, concealing, or attempting such act. Plagiarism is defined as including, without limitation, the act of representing the work of another as one's own. Plagiarism may consist of copying, paraphrasing, or otherwise using the written, electronic, or oral work of another without proper acknowledgement or consent of the source or presenting oral, electronic, or written material prepared by another as one's own. Plagiarism also includes using information from electronic resources, including the Internet, without the use of proper citations." (SIUE Student Academic Code, Spring 2003)
In the event of academic misconduct, the student is subject to a number of penalties, including a failing grade for a plagiarized assignment or for a course.
Lecture Schedule:
Lecture 1 (July 8): Course introduction; Site investigation; Sampling plan development
Lecture 2 (July 10): Quality control
and quality assurance in environmental sampling
Lecture 3 (July 15): Statistics in
environmental sampling; Data analysis; Sampling equipment and materials
preparations
Lecture 4 (July 17): Case
studies/discussion; Midterm exam (Lectures 1-3)
Field Sampling Trip 1
(July 19, Saturday): Soil, plant, and soil invertebrate sampling
Lecture 5 (July 22): Air Sampling (both indoor and outdoor): Sampling equipment and sample preparations
Lecture 6 (July 24): Soils and
Sediment Sampling: Sampling equipment and sample preparations
Field Sampling Trip 2
(July 26, Saturday): Airborne particulates, flying insects sampling
Lecture 7 (July 29): Water Sampling: Sampling equipment and sample preparations
Lecture 8 (July 31): Biological samples collection: Sampling equipment and sample preparations
Field Sampling Trip 3
(August 2, Saturday): Water, sediment, and aquatic organisms sampling
Lecture 9 (August 5): Student
research presentations; Special topics
Lecture 10 (August 7): Case
studies/discussion; Final examination (Lectures 5-8)