GE Introduction to the Engineering Profession

Similar documents
EECS 700: Computer Modeling, Simulation, and Visualization Fall 2014

Corporate Communication

Financial Accounting Concepts and Research

Syllabus - ESET 369 Embedded Systems Software, Fall 2016

JN2000: Introduction to Journalism Syllabus Fall 2016 Tuesdays and Thursdays 12:30 1:45 p.m., Arrupe Hall 222

Social Media Journalism J336F Unique ID CMA Fall 2012

MKT ADVERTISING. Fall 2016

SPM 5309: SPORT MARKETING Fall 2017 (SEC. 8695; 3 credits)

BUS Computer Concepts and Applications for Business Fall 2012

GEOG Introduction to GIS - Fall 2015

FINANCE 3320 Financial Management Syllabus May-Term 2016 *

Math 181, Calculus I

Department of Anthropology ANTH 1027A/001: Introduction to Linguistics Dr. Olga Kharytonava Course Outline Fall 2017

Social Media Marketing BUS COURSE OUTLINE

THE UNIVERSITY OF WESTERN ONTARIO. Department of Psychology

Please read this entire syllabus, keep it as reference and is subject to change by the instructor.

FISK. 2016/2018 Undergraduate Bulletin

CTE Teacher Preparation Class Schedule Career and Technical Education Business and Industry Route Teacher Preparation Program

WE ARE EXCITED TO HAVE ALL OF OUR FFG KIDS BACK FOR OUR SCHOOL YEAR PROGRAM! WE APPRECIATE YOUR CONTINUED SUPPORT AS WE HEAD INTO OUR 8 TH SEASON!

CHEM:1070 Sections A, B, and C General Chemistry I (Fall 2017)

Examination Timetables Series to Series

McKendree University School of Education Methods of Teaching Elementary Language Arts EDU 445/545-(W) (3 Credit Hours) Fall 2011

SOC 175. Australian Society. Contents. S3 External Sociology

Stochastic Calculus for Finance I (46-944) Spring 2008 Syllabus

Design and Creation of Games GAME

Bergen Community College Division of English Department Of Composition and Literature. Course Syllabus. WRT 206: Memoir and Creative Nonfiction

COMM370, Social Media Advertising Fall 2017

THE UNIVERSITY OF SYDNEY Semester 2, Information Sheet for MATH2068/2988 Number Theory and Cryptography

Theory of Probability

ANCIENT GREEK HISTORY MWF 8:30-9:20 Main 326. Frances B. Titchener Main 310 (435)

Table of Contents. Fall 2014 Semester Calendar

SAT & ACT PREP. Evening classes at GBS - open to all Juniors!


CALCULUS I Math mclauh/classes/calculusi/ SYLLABUS Fall, 2003

CIS 2 Computers and the Internet in Society -

Welcome to the University of Hertfordshire and the MSc Environmental Management programme, which includes the following pathways:

Biology 1 General Biology, Lecture Sections: 47231, and Fall 2017

CBMS103. Organic and Biological Chemistry - The Chemistry of Life. Contents. S2 Day Chemistry and Biomolecular Sciences

SPCH 1315: Public Speaking Course Syllabus: SPRING 2014

Coding II: Server side web development, databases and analytics ACAD 276 (4 Units)

MinE 382 Mine Power Systems Fall Semester, 2014

COURSE NUMBER: COURSE NUMBER: SECTION: 01 SECTION: 01. Office Location: WSQ 104. (preferred contact)

CIS Introduction to Digital Forensics 12:30pm--1:50pm, Tuesday/Thursday, SERC 206, Fall 2015

Course Policies and Syllabus BUL3130 The Legal, Ethical, and Social Aspects of Business Syllabus Spring A 2017 ONLINE

Instructor Dr. Kimberly D. Schurmeier

COMP 3601 Social Networking Fall 2016

Social Gerontology: 920:303:01 Department of Sociology Rutgers University Fall 2017 Tuesday & Thursday, 6:40 8:00 pm Beck Hall 251

Class Tuesdays & Thursdays 12:30-1:45 pm Friday 107. Office Tuesdays 9:30 am - 10:30 am, Friday 352-B (3 rd floor) or by appointment

STUDENT HANDBOOK ACCA

Master of Social Work Field Education University of New Hampshire. Policy and Procedure Manual

COURSE BAPA 550 (816): Foundations of Managerial Economics Course Outline

Required Materials: The Elements of Design, Third Edition; Poppy Evans & Mark A. Thomas; ISBN GB+ flash/jump drive

Valdosta State University Master of Library and Information Science MLIS 7130 Humanities Information Services Syllabus Fall 2011 Three Credit Hours

Executive Programmes 2013

SOUTHERN MAINE COMMUNITY COLLEGE South Portland, Maine 04106

CS 3516: Computer Networks

Pitching Accounts & Advertising Sales ADV /PR

The Policymaking Process Course Syllabus

Scottsdale Community College Spring 2016 CIS190 Intro to LANs CIS105 or permission of Instructor

The University of Texas at Tyler College of Business and Technology Department of Management and Marketing SPRING 2015

Post-16 Level 1/Level 2 Diploma (Pilot)

LEAD 612 Advanced Qualitative Research Fall 2015 Dr. Lea Hubbard Camino Hall 101A

UNDERGRADUATE SEMINAR

AS SYLLABUS. 2 nd Year Arabic COURSE DESCRIPTION

Beginners French FREN 101 University Studies Program. Course Outline

ECON492 Senior Capstone Seminar: Cost-Benefit and Local Economic Policy Analysis Fall 2017 Instructor: Dr. Anita Alves Pena

CHEMISTRY 104 FALL Lecture 1: TR 9:30-10:45 a.m. in Chem 1351 Lecture 2: TR 1:00-2:15 p.m. in Chem 1361

Applied Trumpet V VIII

HCI 440: Introduction to User-Centered Design Winter Instructor Ugochi Acholonu, Ph.D. College of Computing & Digital Media, DePaul University

Medical Terminology - Mdca 1313 Course Syllabus: Summer 2017

STANDARDIZED COURSE SYLLABUS

Phys4051: Methods of Experimental Physics I

THE FIELD LEARNING PLAN

MTH 215: Introduction to Linear Algebra

Office Hours: Day Time Location TR 12:00pm - 2:00pm Main Campus Carl DeSantis Building 5136

University of Waterloo School of Accountancy. AFM 102: Introductory Management Accounting. Fall Term 2004: Section 4

INTERNATIONAL STUDENT TIMETABLE BRISBANE CAMPUS

Mental Health Law. LAW credit hours Course Policies & Tentative Syllabus: Fall 2017

Department of Statistics. STAT399 Statistical Consulting. Semester 2, Unit Outline. Unit Convener: Dr Ayse Bilgin

Jeff Walker Office location: Science 476C (I have a phone but is preferred) 1 Course Information. 2 Course Description

Syllabus CHEM 2230L (Organic Chemistry I Laboratory) Fall Semester 2017, 1 semester hour (revised August 24, 2017)

Prerequisite: General Biology 107 (UE) and 107L (UE) with a grade of C- or better. Chemistry 118 (UE) and 118L (UE) or permission of instructor.

Mktg 315 Marketing Research Spring 2015 Sec. 003 W 6:00-8:45 p.m. MBEB 1110

FINANCIAL STRATEGIES. Employee Hand Book

Master's degree students

INTRODUCTION TO HEALTH PROFESSIONS HHS CREDITS FALL 2012 SYLLABUS

CS 100: Principles of Computing

A minimum of six (6) T1 or T2 Team Leaders and thirty (30) L1 or L2 Leadership Facilitators (see Facil. app.)

Is there a limit to how often I can attempt the Irish Language Requirement by this method?

VSAC Financial Aid Night is scheduled for Thursday, October 6 from 6:30 PM 7:30 PM here at CVU. Senior and junior families are encouraged to attend.

Course Syllabus It is the responsibility of each student to carefully review the course syllabus. The content is subject to revision with notice.

SYLLABUS. EC 322 Intermediate Macroeconomics Fall 2012

ASTRONOMY 2801A: Stars, Galaxies & Cosmology : Fall term

MGMT 3362 Human Resource Management Course Syllabus Spring 2016 (Interactive Video) Business Administration 222D (Edinburg Campus)

Records and Information Management Spring Semester 2016

Penn State University - University Park MATH 140 Instructor Syllabus, Calculus with Analytic Geometry I Fall 2010

Graduate Calendar. Graduate Calendar. Fall Semester 2015

MGMT 4750: Strategic Management

Syllabus for ART 365 Digital Photography 3 Credit Hours Spring 2013

AGN 331 Soil Science. Lecture & Laboratory. Face to Face Version, Spring, Syllabus

Transcription:

GE 101.1 Introduction to the Engineering Profession College of Engineering Fall 2017 Instructors: Bruce Sparling, Ph.D., P.Eng., (Course Coordinator, Associate Dean Academic) ENG 2A01 Phone: 966-4190 Email: bruce.sparling@usask.ca Prof. Sean Maw, P.Eng. (Jerry G. Huff Chair in Innovative Teaching) ENG 2A20.1 Phone: 966-3200 Email: sean.maw@usask.ca Lectures: Section 01*: Tuesday, Thursday 4:00-4:50pm THORV 105 Section 03*: Tuesday, Thursday 5:00-5:50pm THORV 105 Section 97: Offered at St. Peter s College in Muenster, SK. * Tuesday lectures occur every week over Term 1. * Thursday lectures are held on specified dates only. Lectures and tutorials may be recorded by the instructor. Students may not record class presentations without the express consent of an instructor. Website: bblearn.usask.ca OR paws.usask.ca TOP HAT Student Response System The TOP HAT Student Response System will be used to take attendance each week, assess students understanding of lecture content, and to encourage participation in the class. It does not cost anything and allows you to use your smart phones and/or laptops to respond to queries during the lectures. Students are required to create a TOP HAT account through the University of Saskatchewan TOP HAT Single Sign-On Account Setup. A link to this site and instructions are provided on the course website. Once you have a TOP HAT account, please join the course associated with your GE 101 section using the appropriate Join Code. Section 01: Tuesday, Thursday 4:00-4:50pm Join Code - 532491 Section 03: Tuesday, Thursday 5:00-5:50pm Join Code - 684578 Section 97: Offered at St. Peter s College Join Code 142239 Textbook: There is no textbook for GE 101. Other course materials will be posted periodically on the course web site. All posted course material will comply with applicable copyright laws. GE 101 Course Outline Fall Term, 2017 Page 1 of 5

Assessment: GE 101 is graded on a pass/fail basis, depending on weekly attendance and lecture reflection submissions, the successful completion of an on-line WHMIS test, and participation in an on-line professional test. Attendance will be taken at all lectures! If you arrive late (after attendance has been taken) you must sign in. If you have a legitimate reason for not attending (or for being late), you must email the course coordinator and provide an appropriate explanation. Pass/Fail Criteria - A grade of Fail will be issued for any of the following reasons: Lectures (Tuesdays & Thursdays): Being absent more than three times or late more than five times without permission from the course coordinator; Lecture Reflections: Failing to submit an on-line lecture reflection more than four times without permission from the course coordinator; WHMIS Safety Course: Failing to complete and submit a record of your successful completion of the online WHMIS Course; or On-line Exams: Failing to complete the term end professional test. During or after each lecture, students must submit a Lecture Reflection either provided through Top Hat or found in the Lecture folder of the BBLearn course website. This is a simple set of questions requiring you to reflect, in one or two sentences, on the content covered. Each student in GE101 must complete the University of Saskatchewan on-line WHMIS (Workplace Hazardous Materials Information System) course and test by Thursday, December 7, 2017. Registration instructions for the WHMIS course will be provided on the course website. Upon successful completion of the course, the university will email you a certificate. You must submit a PDF version of this certificate as your WHMIS assignment on the BBLearn course website. The on-line professional test will be open to students on the BBLearn course website during the last week of classes and should take no more than 20-30 minutes of your time. It is a survey to see how much you retained from the course and to evaluate your basic understanding of engineering ethics, professionalism and the roles that engineers play in society. There will not be a mid-term or final examination in this course. Prerequisites and/or Corequisites: None Description: This class will introduce you to the engineering profession, as well as to the policies and procedures of the College of Engineering and the University. Aspects of engineering to be addressed include the engineer s role in society related to upholding public health and safety, as well as encouraging sustainability, academic and professional ethics, and an overview of different engineering disciplines. Lectures will also cover such topics as career services, time management, study skills, exam preparation and writing, and financial management. GE 101 Course Outline Fall Term, 2017 Page 2 of 5

Lecture Schedule: Tuesday Thursday Week Date Topic Date Topic 1 Sept. 7 Introduction to GE 101 2 Sept. 12 Student support resources Sept. 14 College welcome event - Location: Hardy lab 3 Sept. 19 Overview of Engineering program; Academic processes and regulations Sept. 21 Time management 4 Sept. 26 Overview of Engineering profession Sept. 28 Student Employment & Career Centre 5 Oct. 3 Engineering Ethics Part I Oct. 5 Study skills 6 Oct. 10 Engineering Ethics Part II Oct. 12 Exam writing strategies 7 Oct. 17 8 Oct. 24 9 Oct. 31 10 Nov. 7 Risk Management Part I: Health and safety Risk Management Part II: Environmental sustainability Chemical and Mechanical Civil, Geological and Environmental Oct. 19 Oct. 26 Nov. 2 Nov. 9 11 Nov. 14 Mid-term Break Nov. 16 Mid-term Break 12 Nov. 21 Computer, Electrical and Engineering Physics Nov. 23 Financial management 13 Nov. 28 Engineering Options: Professional Communication, Entrepreneurship, and Professional Internship Nov. 30 Inter-cultural awareness 14 Dec. 5 Association of Professional Engineers and Geoscientists of Saskatchewan (APEGS) Dec. 7 Wrap-up session Note: The lecture schedule may change based upon the availability of guest speakers. Note: Optional facilitated study sessions for first year engineering students will be offered every Monday from 4:30-6:30pm and Thursday from 4:00-6:00pm in the Engineering Library, starting on Sept. 18. GE 101 Course Outline Fall Term, 2017 Page 3 of 5

Policies on Academic Dishonesty, Academic Appeals and Course Delivery: Engineering students are expected to undertake all aspects of their academic work in an ethical manner. Signing in or submitting responses for an absent student, or somebody other than yourself, will be considered academic misconduct, as will submitting the work of others as your own. If any form of academic misconduct is discovered, appropriate disciplinary action will be taken. Actions may lead to failure of the class and/or expulsion from the College and/or University. For more information on what constitutes academic misconduct, please consult the University Council Regulations on Student Academic Misconduct (www.usask.ca/secretariat/student-conduct-appeals/studentacademicmisconduct.pdf). For information regarding appeals of a final grade or other academic matters, please consult the University Council document on Student Appeals of Evaluation, Grading and Academic Standing (http://policies.usask.ca/policies/student-affairs-and-activities/student-appeals.php). Additional policies and procedures related to student conduct and appeals are provided on the University Secretariat website (www.usask.ca/secretariat/student-conduct-appeals). A summary of University of Saskatchewan polices relating to academic courses is provided in the document: Academic Courses Policy on Class Delivery, Examinations, and Assessment of Student Learning (http://policies.usask.ca/policies/academic-affairs/academic-courses.php). Safety: Safety is of paramount importance in the College of Engineering. Students are expected to work in a safe and responsible manner, and to follow all safety instructions. Students failing to behave in a safe manner will be asked to leave. Important Dates (Fall Term, 2017): Wed., Sept. 6 Tues., Sept. 19 Mon. Oct. 9 Sat., Nov. 11 Nov. 13-17 Wed., Nov. 15 Thu., Dec. 7 Fri. Dec. 8 - Fri. Dec. 22 First day of classes. Last day for making changes in registration for first-term courses (100% tuition credit). Thanksgiving Day (University closed) Remembrance Day (University closed) Fall Mid-Term Break (No classes) Last day to drop first-term courses without academic penalty Last day of classes Final examination period GE 101 Course Outline Fall Term, 2017 Page 4 of 5

Learning Outcomes: By the end of this course, students should: 1. Be aware of the academic policies and procedures of the College of Engineering that relate to academic promotion and academic integrity. 2. Be aware of strategies for success and available resources with respect to career development/planning, time management, study skills, exam writing and financial management. 3. Be aware of the roles and responsibilities of professional engineers as they relate to the code of conduct, the Association of Professional Engineers and Geoscientists of Saskatchewan (APEGS), health and safety, and environmental sustainability. 4. Be aware of the different engineering programs and options offered by the College, as well as the variety of job opportunities that exist for engineers graduating from these programs. Attribute Mapping: Learning Outcome Level of Performance Attribute A1 A2 A3 A4 A5 A6 A7 A8 A9 A10 A11 A12 1 1 2 1 3 1 1 1 4 1 1 Attributes: A1 A knowledge base for engineering A2 Problem analysis A3 Investigation A4 Design A5 Use of engineering tools A6 Individual and team work A7 Communication skills A8 Professionalism A9 Impact of engineering on society and the environment A10 Ethics and equity A11 Economics and project management A12 Life-long learning Levels of Performance: 1 - Knowledge of the skills/concepts/tools (S/C/T) but not needing to directly apply them to solve problems. 2 - Application of the skills/concepts/tools to directed problems. ( Directed indicates that students are told what tools to use.) 3 - Selecting and Using the skills/concepts/tools to solve nondirected, non-open-ended problems. (Students have a number of S/C/T to choose from and need to decide which to employ. Problems will have a definite solution.) 4 - Problem Solving using the appropriate skills/concepts/tools for open-ended problems. (Students have a number of S/C/T to choose from and need to decide which to employ. Problems will have multiple solution paths leading to possibly more than one acceptable solution.) Accreditation Unit (AU) Mapping: (% of total class AU) Complementary Engineering Engineering Math Natural Science Studies Science Design - - 100% - - GE 101 Course Outline Fall Term, 2017 Page 5 of 5