Professional Experience in Engineering
Overview
This unit of study aims to provide you with practical engineering experience in an environment outside the university and improve your awareness of the issues associated with professional practice. In so doing, it will ensure your perceptions of engineering during your studies develop alongside the realities of practice.
Requisites
Rule
Attendance at a Professional Experience in Engineering Introductory Seminar
27-October-2024
Learning outcomes
Students who successfully complete this unit will be able to:
- Apply degree studies in engineering practice as demonstrated by the evidential portfolio (K5, K6, A1, A2, A5, A6, A7)
- Appreciate the broader issues associated with professional practice as reported in the reflective journal (K5, A1, A2, A5)
- Identify insights gained from your practical experiences and demonstrate how each observation or case study improved your understanding of any engineering issues associated with professional practice (K5, K6, A1, A2, A5, A6, A7)
- Identify how the activities and experiences improved your development of Swinburne Engineering Competencies (K5, K6, A1, A2, A5, A6, A7)
- Compare and contrast your perceptions of engineering while at university with the realities of practice (K5, K6, A1, A2, A5, A6, A7)
Teaching methods
Hawthorn
Type | Hours per week | Number of weeks | Total (number of hours) |
---|---|---|---|
Specified Activities Various | 40.00 | 12 weeks | 480 |
TOTAL | 480 |
Assessment
Type | Task | Weighting | ULO's |
---|---|---|---|
Professional Experience Portfolio | Individual | 100% | 1,2,3,4,5 |
Hurdle
As the minimum requirements of assessment to pass a unit and meet all ULOs to a minimum standard, an undergraduate student must have achieved:
As the minimum requirements of assessment to pass the unit and meet all Unit Learning Outcomes to a minimum standard, a student must achieve:A Pass grade
Content
Students undertake a minimum of 12 weeks (or equivalent) of approved relevant engineering-practice experience, which may include one or more of:
- Practical experience (paid or unpaid) in an engineering environment outside the teaching establishment
- Classes and activities on professional ethics and conduct
- Participation in classes conducted by guest presenters with industry experience
- Industry visits and inspections
- Industry based projects (including but not only final year projects)
- Industry research for feasibility studies
- Study of industry policies, processes, practices and benchmarks
- Direct industry input of data and advice to problem solving, projects and evaluation tasks
- Other activities approved by Convenor
Study resources
Reading materials
A list of reading materials and/or required textbooks will be available in the Unit Outline on Canvas.