Pennsylvania Transportation and Ethics 24 PDH Discount Package 3
Courses in this Package
Road Diet Informational Guide (C04-061)
Ramp Planning and Design Considerations (C04-005)
Roundabout Planning, Design, and Operations Manual (C07-019)
Improved Urban Freight Mobility and Delivery (C07-020)
Determining Negligence in Engineering Failures (LE2-012)
This online engineering PDH course provides information on the design and post-implementation evaluation of Road Diets, and presents the decision-making process that helps practitioners determine whether Road Diets are a good fit for a certain corridor.
Four-lane undivided highways have a history of relatively high crash rates as traffic volumes increase and as the inside lane is shared by higher speed through traffic and left-turning vehicles. One option for addressing this safety concern is a “Road Diet.” A Road Diet involves converting an existing four-lane undivided roadway segment to a three-lane segment consisting of two through lanes and a center two-way left-turn lane (TWLTL). The reduction of lanes allows the roadway cross section to be reallocated for other uses such as bike lanes, pedestrian refuge islands, transit stops, or parking.
A Road Diet improves safety by including a protected left-turn lane for mid-block left-turning motorists, reducing crossing distance for pedestrians, and reducing travel speeds that decrease crash severity. Additionally, the Road Diet provides an opportunity to allocate excess roadway width to other purposes, including bicycle lanes, on-street parking, or transit stops.
This 4 PDH online course is applicable to transportation engineers who are interested in improving safety and reducing highway fatalities through the use of proven safety countermeasures including Road Diets.
This PE continuing education course is intended to provide you with the following specific knowledge and skills:
- Familiarizing with the basics of Road Diets
- Understanding the multidimensional benefits of Road Diets
- Learning about the geometric and operational designs of Road Diets
- Gaining a general overview on how to conduct a safety and an operational analysis to determine if the Road Diet is effective
- Exploring various case studies on feasibility determination decision-making
Upon successful completion of the quiz, print your Certificate of Completion instantly. (Note: if you are paying by check or money order, you will be able to print it after we receive your payment.) For your convenience, we will also email it to you. Please note that you can log in to your account at any time to access and print your Certificate of Completion.
This online engineering PDH course provides guidance and recommended practices on planning and designing ramps with freeway facilities. The overriding objectives of effective planning and design are to minimize congestion, improve safety and enhance overall mobility.
This course also describes in greater depth the issues and concepts specific to ramp planning and design. This information will help practitioners develop a comprehensive understanding of project planning and design, and it will help ensure that projects are implemented successfully.
This 4 PDH online course is applicable to traffic engineers, transportation planners, managers, and other technical professionals who are involved in ramp planning and design in support of the overall ramp management strategy.
This PE continuing education course is intended to provide you with the following specific knowledge and skills:
- Knowing the environmental review process
- Understanding the design considerations for ramp closures
- Understanding the design considerations for special-use ramps
- Understanding the design considerations for terminal treatments
- Understanding the design considerations for ramp metering
- Planning and design for ITS technology and electronic infrastructure
In this professional engineering CEU course, you need to review Chapter 10, "Planning and Design Considerations" of the Federal Highway Administration Publication FHWA-HOP-06-001, "Ramp Management and Control Handbook".
Upon successful completion of the quiz, print your Certificate of Completion instantly. (Note: if you are paying by check or money order, you will be able to print it after we receive your payment.) For your convenience, we will also email it to you. Please note that you can log in to your account at any time to access and print your Certificate of Completion.
This online engineering PDH course provides information on roundabout at the planning, design, construction, operations and maintenance levels. It also includes the procedures considered for selecting and assessing the appropriateness of a roundabout.
A modern roundabout is one of the three types of circular intersections. However, roundabouts have demonstrated substantial safety and operational performance over other forms of intersection control. This course focuses on two categories of roundabouts: single-lane and multilane roundabouts. It is intended to ensure consistency across the State in the implementation of roundabouts at new installations and to provide safe and efficient traffic operations in the case of retrofit/redesign or reconstruction of existing intersections.
This 7 PDH online course is applicable to transportation engineers, road designers, planners, contractors and professionals who are interested in the design, operation, construction and maintenance of roundabouts.
This PE continuing education course is intended to provide you with the following specific knowledge and skills:
- Familiarizing with the roundabout planning at signalized and un-signalized at-grade intersections
- Knowing the effect public participation and education on the safety and performance of roundabouts
- Understanding the methods and parameters used in the geometric design of roundabouts, positioning of signs, landscaping, poles, and other roadside furniture
- Learning the considerations taken for pedestrian and cyclists while designing a roundabout
- Knowing the traffic control devices such as traffic signing and pavement markings
- Understanding the general principals and recommendations for roundabout lightening and landscaping
- Learning about the construction stages and the traffic control in the work zone
- Familiarizing with the maintenance special provisions of watering and drainage systems in the central islands of roundabouts
Upon successful completion of the quiz, print your Certificate of Completion instantly. (Note: if you are paying by check or money order, you will be able to print it after we receive your payment.) For your convenience, we will also email it to you. Please note that you can log in to your account at any time to access and print your Certificate of Completion.
This online engineering PDH course provides an overview of the main operations, logistics, and technology strategies for improving urban freight mobility and delivery.
The course covers the challenges and opportunities associated with urban freight transport, as well as various strategies and technologies that can be used to improve freight mobility in urban areas or to minimize its impacts on others. Operations, logistics, and technology (OLT) strategies represent a set of practices that can be applied to improve the movement of goods and the quality of life of urban residents.
The course will help in understanding potential applications of OLT strategies in order to improve urban freight management and mobility through sharing noteworthy practices that have been implemented successfully.
This 7 PDH online course is applicable to transportation planners, traffic engineers, agency personnel as well as design and construction personnel involved in the improvement of urban freight mobility and delivery.
This PE continuing education course is intended to provide you with the following specific knowledge and skills:
- Familiarizing with operations strategies and noteworthy practices
- Understanding logistics strategies and noteworthy practices such as off-hour delivery, reservation systems for pick-up and delivery locations, modal shifts, freight consolidation
- Learning about technology strategies and noteworthy practices
- Learning about planning and funding operations, logistics, and technology strategies
- Understanding federal funding opportunities for freight
Upon successful completion of the quiz, print your Certificate of Completion instantly. (Note: if you are paying by check or money order, you will be able to print it after we receive your payment.) For your convenience, we will also email it to you. Please note that you can log in to your account at any time to access and print your Certificate of Completion.
This engineering online PDH course will establish conditions under which, when an engineering failure has occurred, it can be attributed to negligence.
Five causes of failure are proposed: negligence, rare failure mode, overlooked failure mode, new (previously unrecognized) failure mode, and incorrect assessment of a known risk. Negligence is the only cause that involves failing in an ethical duty. These concepts are illustrated with five case studies of failures ranging from gross negligence to absolutely unforeseeable events: 1) the Great Boston Molasses Flood of 1919, for which a new possible cause was identified 95 years later (2014); 2) a building collapse in Bangladesh in which over 1,000 people died—one of the worst structural engineering disasters in history; 3) a meteorite strike of a private residence; 4) the crash of the British-French Concorde supersonic airliner, caused by an unlikely tire blow-out; and 5) radiation overdoses received by patients treated by the Thorac-25 medical linear accelerator, caused by errors in the software controlling the machine.
The 2 PDH online course is intended for engineers concerned with ethical behavior in engineering practice.
This PE continuing education course is intended to provide you with the following specific knowledge and skills:
- Understanding the definitions of negligence and standard of care
- Relating safety to risk
- Knowing the principle of Knightian uncertainty
- Avoiding the retrospective fallacy in accident investigations
- Avoiding the fallacy, in accident investigations, of assuming perfect engineering practice
- Using the results of failure investigations appropriately
- Being aware of the negative effects of punishment on learning from accidents
- Categorizing the general causes of engineering failures
Upon successful completion of the quiz, print your Certificate of Completion instantly. (Note: if you are paying by check or money order, you will be able to print it after we receive your payment.) For your convenience, we will also email it to you. Please note that you can log in to your account at any time to access and print your Certificate of Completion.