6 EC
Semester 2, period 5
5132WAMA6Y
Freshwater is one of the most important resources for mankind, and the amount of fresh water on Earth is limited. Furthermore water is not equally distributed both in time and space. Consequently, some places have too much water, while others have too little water. Water on Earth is also heavily impacted by anthropogenic activity, both quantitatively and qualitatively. Humans have altered global hydrology, through many local and regional, small and large interventions, such as the construction of dams, the change of river flows, water transfers, groundwater use and irrigation. Managing chemical pollution, e.g. via the treatment of wastewater, is often necessary to preserve essential resources. This course will focus on aspects of water management in both humid and dryland regions, hence in areas with excess water and in areas with water shortages. You will work on examples involving practical cases directly related to water management issues from the Netherlands, Europe and other parts of the world.
The course is structured in two parts.
Part 1 has two sections, the learned contents of which will be assessed in the final exam:
Part 1a: Human alterations of hydrology: local and global perspectives. Humans have significantly altered hydrology: locally through the construction of infrastructure and extraction of water resources. These alterations have accumulated and multiplied at the global scale. We will learn about how water is managed - both in terms of quantity and quality - and the impacts this has at local and global scales.
At the end of part 1a) there will be a field excursion on urban water supply & sanitation.
Part 1b: Climate change and desertification. Desertification is advancing in Spain. Rainfall and evaporation dynamics are used to evaluate the water balance for various land use strategies.
Part 2 (model application) will be assessed in the form of a group report and presentation:
Part 2. Global change and catchment hydrology. A catchment model of the Rhine basin is used to discuss the potential risks of floods associated with climate change. Students use this model to evaluate their own management solution.
J. Holden: Water Resources - An Integrated Approach; We will read several of the books chapter (same book as for Challenges for the Blue Planet).
Additional reading materials will be provided through Canvas.
will be provided during the course
R
Aquacrop
10 lectures of 2-4 hours each
8 (computer)practicals of 2 hours
Participation in lectures and practicals is mandatory.
Independent preparation of assignments
The course is divided into three separate modules:
1) Human alterations of hydrology (E.H. Krueger) - lectures and exercises; field excursion (A Praetorius)
2) Climate change and desertification (E.H. Cammeraat)
3) Global change and catchment hydrology (L.H. Cammeraat and E.H. Krueger ) (group assignment). In each group should be 3 students of which at least two did the R BSc course). Before the actual simulation of the catchment model will be carried out, ALL students in each group are supposed to have done the HBV model tutorial so everyone understands how the model works, also those with limited knowledge of R.
Course Schedule: Please check locations and time in www.datanose.nl
The blocks of 4 or 6 hours of lectures and practicals contain both instruction and practical work and are mandatory. Computer practicals are also mandatory
|
|
Amount |
Duration |
Total |
|
Presence lectures, practicals part 1 |
8 |
2 hrs |
16 |
|
Self-study, preparation of lectures and test part 1 |
|
34 hrs |
34 |
|
Test part 1 |
|
2 hrs |
2 |
|
Presence lectures, practicals part 2 |
8 |
2 hrs |
16 |
|
Self-study ,Preparation of lectures, assignments and |
|
34 hrs |
34 |
|
Test part 2 |
|
3 hrs |
3 |
|
Lectures and practicals part 3 |
12 |
2 hrs |
24 |
|
Presentations |
1 |
4 hrs |
4 |
|
Self-study and writing report |
|
|
27 |
|
Preparation of presentation |
|
8 hrs |
8 |
|
Total |
|
|
168 |
Programme's requirements concerning attendance (OER-B):
Additional requirements for this course:
All sessions of this course are mandatory.
If you miss more than 1 class unexcused* (for each of part 1 or 2) you will fail for that part.
The exam and presentation are also mandatory. If you miss these then you will fail for that part.
For the second part the assignments is done in small groups of 3 persons. Each group should contain (at least) two students who did the BSc course Programming in R, and one who did not this course.
*If you cannot join a session of this course, you must email the coordinator BEFORE the beginning of the class. Excuses received after the class count as 'missed unexcused'.
| Item and weight | Details |
|
Final grade | |
|
0.55 (55%) Tentamen digitaal | Must be ≥ 0.5 |
|
0.15 (15%) class participation & assignments | Mandatory |
|
0.45 (45%) group project (presentation & report) | Must be ≥ 0.5 |
| Item and weight | Details |
|
Final grade |
|
|
Tentamen digitaal |
Must be ≥ 5, Mandatory |
|
Class participation, assignments & peer reviewing |
Must be pass, Mandatory |
|
Group project |
Must be ≥ 5, Mandatory |
You will complete exercises/assignments given during the practicals and the respective teacher will inform you about which ones to upload to Canvas. There will be peer-reviewing of those materials.
There will be an exam on the lectures, materials and practicals of Part 1.
For part 2 there will be a written report and a presentation on your project to be completed as a group.
If you do not pass (the final mark is less than 5.5), then there is a re-take. If deadlines for assignments are not met then the mark will be 1.0 for that assessment. Any missed assignments will be marked as 0.
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If you did not pass last year's course, you can retake the exam. If you passed last year's part 2 (computer practical), but failed the exam, you can take the exam at the end of part 1 this year. Alternatively (e.g., if you cannot make it to the exam at the end of part 1, or if you failed both parts), you can take this year's retake exam, which will cover this year's material of part 1 and 2 (lectures/seminars and computer practicals).
If your mark for Part 2 (Report and Presentation) was larger than 5.0 in the previous year, this mark can be used for the final grading. Part 1 has to be followed again, and completed in such a way that the final mark based on the new partial mark of Part 1 and the old mark of part 2 add up to at least a 5.5.
There will be reading assignments in preparation of the classes, and exercises to be completed during and/or after the class (assessed).
Feedback will be given orally, in the form of in-class discussion and questions & answers.
The assignment of part 2 will be described in a separate document, published on Canvas.
The 'Regulations governing fraud and plagiarism for UvA students' applies to this course. This will be monitored carefully. Upon suspicion of fraud or plagiarism the Examinations Board of the programme will be informed. For the 'Regulations governing fraud and plagiarism for UvA students' see: www.student.uva.nl
| Weeknummer | Onderwerpen | Studiestof |
| 1 | Human alterations of hydrology | Lectures and exercises, material provided by lecturer |
| 2 | Human alterations of hydrology | Lectures and exercises, material provided by lecturer |
| 3 | Climate change and desertification | Lectures and practical material, material provided by lecturer |
| 4 | no lectures | |
| 5 | no lectures | |
| 6 | no lectures | |
| 7 | Global Change and Catchment Hydrology | Lectures and practical material, material provided by lecturer, project related literature |
| 8 | Global Change and Catchment Hydrology | Project related literature |
| 9 | Global Change and Catchment Hydrology | Project related literature |
The schedule for this course is published on DataNose.
Knowledge of R is strongly recommended, e.g. obtained from the course Programming in R.
If you don't have knowledge of R, completion of the R primer, available on Canvas, should be completed
R should be installed and running on your computer prior to the start of the course
It is important that everyone feels safe at the UvA and Future Planet Studies. We are committed to provide social safety and we offer various forms of support for people experiencing inappropriate or unsafe situations. Consult the UvA website or Future Planet Studies Canvas page for more information and contact info.
In order to provide students some insight how we use the feedback of student evaluations to enhance the quality of education, we decided to include the table below in all course guides.
| Water Management (6EC) | N=57 | Av mark = 6.9 |
Strengths
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Notes for improvement
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Response lecturer:
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dr. E.H. Krueger