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Teaching Integrated Land Use-Transportation Planning

Topics, Readings, and Strategies

Kevin Krizek

University of Minnesota

David Levinson

University of Minnesota

Planning pedagogy is increasingly focused on teaching interdisciplinary topics in an integrated and synergistic manner. The intersection of land use and transportation is that of two topics that have risen to be front and center for the planning profession. This article focuses on the manner in which planning programs and, in particular, specific courses address land use and transportation planning. After describing the context in which such courses exist, this article analyzes syllabi from fifteen courses in North American planning programs in two respects. The first examines the list of topics covered within each course by discussing the nature of primary, secondary, and peripheral topics. Second, the analysis uncovers the frequency with which specific readings are employed in each course. The article closes by discussing the nature of a land use-transportation course from the University of Minnesota in which there is a lecture and laboratory component.

Key Words: transportation planning • land use planning • teaching • interdisciplinary • pedagogy

Journal of Planning Education and Research, Vol. 24, No. 3, 304-316 (2005)
DOI: 10.1177/0739456X04267731


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