Overview

Instrumentation and Control Engineering is concerned with the design, construction, testing and management of tools and equipment for monitoring, control and performance assessment of a wide range of manufacturing and industrial processes. Areas of application will cover virtually all processes that require specialised control and monitoring systems. Often, such automation … For more content click the Read More button below.

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Academic Chair

Structure
96 credit points

Spine Units6 credit points
Core90 credit points

Admission requirements

Special requirements
Entry requirements (onshore)
English language requirements

Learning outcomes

1.
Apply theoretical knowledge of mathematical and physical sciences to investigate, and formulate solutions to engineering problems
2.
Demonstrate fluency in the use of practical tools such as computer programming, mathematical modelling and discipline-specific software as a way of creating artefacts in a systematic way
3.
Synthesize and design solutions to complex engineering problems based on research and discipline-specific knowledge
4.
Analyse and evaluate solutions to problems to allow their efficacy to be measured against multiple criteria such as technical performance, safety, ethical norms, social justice and sustainable practices
5.
Interact in an ethical, professional and accountable fashion when working in teams and customers within a professional setting
6.
Assess both knowledge development and research directions within the engineering discipline
7.
Express ideas, technical information, arguments and justification effectively and succinctly both through written and oral communication media
8.
Manage engineering projects in an orderly manner considering operational, commercial, safety and environmental factors

Professional outcomes

Professional recognition
Other information