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Engineering
skills shortage – fact or fiction?
As second semester commences, the light
at the end of the tunnel is in sight for those of you finishing your
course this year.
But what are the job prospects and what is it
like within industry at the moment?
There has been lots of
discussion in the media and by our politicians about low unemployment
and the number of government and Public Private Partnership (PPP)
engineering projects currently under way or in the pipeline. Many
companies and businesses are crying out, stating that they can’t find
people with the necessary engineering skills or experience for the job.
Therefore, surely there is a skills shortage in the Australian
engineering sector, which puts (soon to be) graduate engineers in the
perfect position?
However, a number of engineering disciplines
have been removed from the Skilled Occupation List (SOL). The government
advises that the new SOL (as of 1 July 2010), which is used to help
determine which overseas migrants will be granted a particular category
of visa, is “a more targeted list of occupations to better meet the
medium and long-term future skill needs of the Australian economy. The
new SOL [is] based on advice from ‘Skills Australia’ and it [delivers] a
General Skilled Migration (GSM) Program more focused on high-value
skills across the professions and trades.” Current overseas students
will need to be aware of the implications of the change to the SOL.
For
instance, robotics and mechatronics engineers as well as some types of
computer engineers have been removed from the SOL. The government
apparently believes that these disciplines will not be needed in the
medium and long-term in Australia and that these skills are not highly
valued in the profession. Or is it that the government considers that
there will be enough students coming through those courses to fill the
gaps?
With the continued rollout of the National Broadband
Network, many in the industry consider that there is a big gap between
the number of people qualified to construct and install the network and
the number needed to build it. So what should (soon to be) graduate
engineers think – skills shortage or not? Carla Cher is chair of
the Young Engineers Australia National Committee.
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Students present projects to industry
and peers
Engineering students due to graduate presented their final year
projects to an audience of their community, families and potential
employers during CQUniversity’s 2010 Graduating Engineers Conference
(GeCon).
While GeCon allows graduating engineers to present their
final year projects, it also enables the engineering industry to learn
more about the level of knowledge, skills, and abilities of engineering
students for recruitment purposes, and assist those still studying or
considering studying engineering.
At GeCon this year was John
Holland operations manager David Abbott who was interviewing some of the
engineering students at GeCon.
"I am very impressed by this
year's crop. I have seen a number of them on co-op placement working
with us,” he said.
One of the students presenting their project
was CQUniversity civil engineering student Stuart Harvey. His project,
undertaken in conjunction with Main Roads, involved the upgrade of the
Bruce Highway between Boundary Road and Olive Street in Rockhampton.
"The
project involved analysing each intersection in its current state and
under future traffic flows and determining what upgrades were required. I
then designed and produced technical drawings for the highway and the
intersections," he said.
“I also performed an integrated
transport study in the area looking at the integration of public
transport, cycling paths and walking paths in an attempt to reduce the
traffic in the area.”
Rockhampton Regional Council recently
employed Harvey in its transport department and he looks forward to
working on similar projects.
Other projects presented at GeCon
included:
- the
development of a prototype device to monitor locomotive wheel and track
interactions and arc flash detection and analysis (Samuel Moohin)
- a triple bottom line comparison of glue
laminate bamboo beams and structural hardwood (Robert Jones)
- an upgrade to the Barwon Highway
(Matthew Hamilton)
- a
coal plant strategy for Tarong North Power Station (Fabian Murray)
- a comparative study of engine
performance and emissions (Wayne Sherry).
A video interview of Harvey and Abbot is available online.
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Students race to the UK
Monash University engineering students will
battle it out at the Silverstone racing circuit this month, flying to
the UK and pitting their single-seat Formula 1-style race car they’ve
built from scratch against 85 student motorsport teams from around the
world in a four-day competition.
The Formula Student Association
of Engineers competition is one of
10 competitions held
annually on four continents. Each of the competitions are almost
identical, consisting of three static and five dynamic autocross style
events to allow teams to compare their performance. Combined, 450 teams
compete worldwide.
This
year’s Monash Motorsports team consists of 29 members who have been
involved in all aspects of the race car’s design, manufacture, and
testing. Students must build each car from the ground up every year,
volunteering thousands of hours of work to be competitive.
Second
year aerospace engineering student Simon Bicknell said: "We set some
really fast times at the local competition in December so we're
confident we can cut it with the best teams in the world and have a
successful competition."
Bicknell
and his colleagues are supported by Monash University and have enlisted
over 50 sponsors from a range of industries to assist the team. Like a
professional Formula 1 team, the students must learn the networking and
time and resource management skills required of a professional race team
on top of the demands of building the race car.
The team is now
making the final preparations to ensure that everything runs smoothly
and that they are prepared to deal with any hiccups along the way.
"We
have a thoroughly tested, reliable package that has the performance to
succeed. The hard work has been done and we're ready to improve on our
number seven world ranking," Bicknell said.

Students
from the Monash Motorsports team … We can cut it with
the best teams in the world.
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Australia
makes it to World Cup final – for robots
The University of New South Wales
has placed second in an international World Cup-style soccer match
designed for robots – the 2010 RoboCup.
The six-day competition,
held in Singapore last month, pitted three-robot teams against one
another in automated soccer matches. This year, 500 teams from 40
countries fought for the cup. Of the three Australian teams to enter
(the University of Technology Sydney and the University of Newcastle
also took to the field), UNSW’s rUNSWift team was the only one to
qualify past the preliminary rounds.
RUNSWift competed in the
standard platform league of the competition, which dictates that every
team compete with identical near-60cm tall robots, allowing the teams to
focus on software as opposed to hardware development. The robots are
required to function autonomously, and no external interference beyond
the referee is permitted.
In the past, these matches were
enacted by four-legged robo-dogs. However, advances in robotics
technology have allowed the league to upgrade to two-legged humanoid
designs.
“There have been great advances in bipedal robots over
the last few years and this will continue,” said associate professor and
rUNSWift team leader Maurice Pagnucco.
“We will have smooth and
stable walks in less than 20 years.”
RUNSWift defeated
Carnegie-Mellon University 6-0 in the semi-finals, but lost 6-1 against
Germany’s University of Bremen in the grand final, which ironically
echoes the recent performance of the Socceroos against Germany in the
World Cup.
The rUNSWift team, consisting of four UNSW academics,
five undergraduate students and two assistants, were disappointed but
still proud of their efforts.
“We had some extremely talented
students working on the team,” said Pagnucco.
The team’s success
in making it to the grand final was a result of many hours of coding and
testing since late 2009.
“As a software engineering exercise,
the team produced 30,000 to 40,000 lines of code,” Pagnucco said.
Established
in 1997, the vision of the RoboCup competition is to create a team of
humanoid robots that, by 2050, can defeat the World Cup champion team in
a sanctioned FIFA soccer match.
Since then, there have been
several branches to the RoboCup, including RoboCup Rescue. Another UNSW
team, named CASualty, recently won the Best Autonomous Robot award for
its disaster response capabilities, and went on to win the Mobility
Challenge designed to measure a robot’s ability to navigate rough
terrain.
A video of rUNSWift scoring against a competitor is available online.
 Socceroo-bots:
at play in the 2010 RoboCup.
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Resource
scholarships awarded for excellence
The University of Queensland (UQ), in
conjunction with the Queensland Resources Council (QRC), has awarded
scholarships worth up to $40,000 to engineering students Peter Stephan
and Ian Desouza.
The UQ Excellence Scholarship, valued at $6000
per year for up to four years, recognises students who during their
senior studies have demonstrated outstanding academic excellence and/or
exceptional leadership achievements and/or community service.
The
QRC scholarship provides an additional $4000 per year to the UQ
Excellence Scholarship and the opportunity for the holder to join the
QRC Scholarship ambassador program. The program enables them to attend
resources sector networking events and conferences and gain assistance
in vacation work placement, and further media opportunities.
Stephan
made the decision to become an engineer after recognising the impact
engineering has in different aspects of ordinary life.
“We are
living in the information and digital age and I see myself enjoying a
career where I’m working with and developing exciting, new
technologies,” he said.
While he is undecided in which discipline
he wants to specialise, Stephan is aiming towards the resources sector.
“When
people think about someone who works in the industry, an image of a
miner covered in coaldust probably comes to mind, but the range of
careers on offer is far, far wider,” he said.
Desouza is aiming
towards a career in the energy sector. He is also completing a science
degree.
“Around the beginning of Year 12 I started to like the
idea of being a petroleum engineer,” he said.
“I wish to make a
significant contribution to the development of the industry and help
develop the way we harness and use energy.”
Stephan and Desouza
will graduate in 2013 and 2014, respectively.
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Scholarship for railway engineering
conference
The
Railway Technical Society of Australasia (RTSA), in conjunction with
Faiveley Transport, is providing scholarship opportunities for 50
engineering students interested or studying in a field related to the
rail industry to attend the biennial Conference on Railway Engineering
(CORE) in Wellington, New Zealand in September.
Under the theme
of Rail – Rejuvenation & Renaissance, the conference aims to
highlight the reemergence of rail as a solution for sustainable, high
capacity infrastructure to support economic development around the
world.
It will provide students with the opportunity to increase
their technical knowledge and learn more about the different areas of
rail including track, signalling and electrification; rolling stock;
planning; policy and regulations; asset management; maintenance;
structures; and rail projects.
The scholarship includes passes
for both days of the conference; attendance at a technical tour; lunch,
morning and afternoon teas during the conference/tour; social and
networking sessions; and an attendance certificate for students’ CV
portfolios.
Applications should be made online at the CORE2010 website
and include a personal statement relevant to rail as well as supporting
information on existing academic studies and any relevant work
experience.
Applications close Sunday 25 July, with successful
applicants notified by Monday 9 August.
The scholarships do not
include an allowance for accommodation or travel.
Video
highlights from the last CORE conference, CORE2008, are available online.
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Computational modelling tools on the rise
Employers’ demand for graduates with
experience with computational modelling tools is continuing to grow,
with academic institutions lagging behind, according to Mathworks
managing director Andrew Clay.
Speaking at the Matlab and
Simulink Academic Tour in Sydney at the University of NSW earlier this
month, he said the engineering industry is increasing its use of
computational modelling tools across all disciplines and more employers
are placing increased value on previous experience with tools such as
Matlab when advertising for new job openings.
In a November 2009
study “Controls Curriculum Survey: A CSS Outreach Task Force Report”
conducted by the IEEE Control Systems Society, employers were asked what
they considered essential and academic institutes were asked what they
included in their curriculum.
The study found that what industry
thought to be important or essential in relation to mathematical models
of physical systems was being included in university curriculums at a
much lower rate.
83.9% of employers surveyed considered
control-oriented models for system design to be important or essential,
while 66.2% of universities surveyed included it in their curriculum. A
further 14.3% of employers considered it useful.
Similarly, 67%
of employers surveyed placed simulation models for system verification
or product development as important or essential, while 48.5% of
universities surveyed included it in their curriculum. A further 27.3%
of employers considered it useful.
“There’s a significant
difference between what industry considers essential, important and
useful and what’s currently being taught to graduates,” Clay said.
The
wider adoption of these tools in the engineering industry is thought to
be due to the availability of high-level programming tools and the need
to manage information that is available from an increasing amount of
sources.
He said that organisations were aware of the value of
information, but were often challenged in determining what to do with
that information now that it was available and what questions they
should be asking to get meaningful results.
Clay believes that
the engineering industry has changed its approach to the design process,
opting for greater use of simulation and modelling tools to develop
appropriate solutions to problems, for example when using an external
organisation for a part of a project.
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