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BEng Civil and Environmental Engineering (Industrial)

Year 4

(Award available for year: Bachelor of Engineering)

Learning outcomes

Knowledge and Understanding of:
- the mathematical principles necessary to underpin their education environmental engineering and to enable them to apply mathematical methods, tools and notations proficiently in the analysis and solution of multi-disciplinary engineering problems;
- properties, behaviour and use of relevant materials in environmental engineering;
- management techniques which may be used to achieve environmental engineering objectives within that context;
- the role of codes of practice in design;
- principles and implementation of advanced design techniques specific to civil and environmental engineering;
- mathematical and computer models relevant to civil and environmental engineering, and an appreciation of their limitations;
- the role of the professional engineer in society, including health, safety, environmental, sustainability, ethical issues and risk assessment;
- the wider multidisciplinary engineering context and its underlying principles (an awareness of);
- developing technologies related to civil and environmental engineering and the ability to develop critiques of them;
- the framework of relevant legal requirements governing civil engineering activities, including personnel, health, safety, and risk issues, including environmental risk (an awareness of).

The Cognitive Skills to:
- demonstrate competence in identifying, defining and solving civil and environmental engineering problems;
- apply appropriate mathematical and computer-cased methods for modelling and analysing civil and environmental engineering problems and appreciate their limitations;
- extract data pertinent to an unfamiliar problem, and apply its solution using computer based engineering tools where appropriate;
- evaluate and integrate information and processes in project work;
- understand the use of technical literature and other information sources;
- realise that current research or equivalent scholarship that may be relevant in design problem solving;
- comprehend the broad picture and thus work with an appropriate level of detail;
- use creativity to establish innovative solutions.

The Practical Skills to:
- use laboratory and field equipment competently and safely;
- observe, record, process and analyse data from the laboratory and field;
- use computational tools and packages to optimise design solutions;
- prepare technical reports and give technical presentations to communicate information to both specialist and non-specialist audiences;
- prepare technical drawings, both manually and using CAD.

The Key Skills to:
- communicate effectively using written, oral and graphical skills and to be able to sustain arguments;
- use mathematical skills appropriate to a civil and environmental engineer;
- work independently and be capable of self-learning;
- work in a team environment;
- manage workloads and time effectively;
- work with limited or contradictory information and have an appreciation on the limits of knowledge;
- monitor, plan and reflect upon personal, educational and career development (Personal Development Planning)

Transferable (key) skills

Students will have had the opportunity to acquire, as defined in the modules specified for the programme:
- the transferable/key/generic skills necessary for employment related to the area(s) studied;
- the exercise of initiative and personal responsibility;
- the deployment of decision making skills in complex and unpredictable situations;
- the communication of information, ideas, problems and solutions in a variety of ways to a variety of audiences;
- the ability to undertake appropriate further training of a professional or equivalent nature.

Assessment

Achievement will be assessed by a variety of methods in accordance with the learning outcomes of the modules specified for the year/programme and will include:
- demonstrating the ability to apply a broad range of aspects of the discipline;
- work that draws on a wide variety of material;
- the ability to evaluate and criticise received opinion;
- evidence of an ability to conduct independent, in depth enquiry within the discipline;
- work that is typically both evaluative and creative.

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