ATAR Notes: Forum
Uni Stuff => Engineering => Faculties => Electrical => Topic started by: Flaming_Arrow on August 04, 2008, 08:42:38 pm
-
RMIT or UoM?
RMIT only requires 70 enter whereas UoM is 85
which is better?
-
RMIT FOR THE WIN, it's more practical!
-
yeh i would also say RMIT, i've heard UoM engineering is far too theory based and not enough prac
-
what would employers prefer UoM or RMIT?
-
well thats hard to say, i was speaking to one of my teachers whose brother is a civil engineer and she said he would employ people from swinburne and RMIT over other universities because the people who come from UoM no all about the theory and not alot on the practical side where as swinburne and RMIT seem to have a nice balance of both.
-
I don't know about electrical... but for Civil 98% of all graduates find employment straight away with an average wage of $50 000 to $60 000... this is RMIT Uni by the way and is stated by them
-
I don't know about electrical... but for Civil 98% of all graduates find employment straight away with an average wage of $50 000 to $60 000... this is RMIT Uni by the way and is stated by them
awesome thanks
-
what do civil engineers do? can anybody give me the job in a nutshell? what jobs would you be doing straight out of uni? looking at buildings or something?
-
Civil engineers plan, design, construct, operate and maintain roads, bridges, dams, water supply schemes, sewerage systems, transportation, harbours, canals, dockyards, airports, railways, factories and large buildings.
Civil engineers may perform the following tasks:
investigate sites to work out the most suitable foundation for a proposed construction
research and advise on the best engineering solution to meet with a client's needs and budget
produce detailed designs and documentation for the construction and implementation of civil engineering projects
organise the delivery of materials, plant and equipment needed for the construction project and supervise labour
develop detailed programs for the coordination of site activities
talk to other engineers, architects, landscape architects and environmental scientists
assist government bodies in preparing yearly works programs within set budgets (e.g. for works on car parks, drainage, roads, aerodromes or sewerage)
prepare engineering calculations required for the design of projects and supervise the drafting
operate computers to assist with the design of civil engineering projects
coordinate and direct research development and testing of materials, processes or systems related to civil engineering works
research, advise on and plan the control and minimisation of air, water and solid waste pollution, and the management of water
supervise the testing and commissioning of completed works
analyse and interpret reports on loading, labour, productivity, quality, materials and performance
analyse risks associated with natural disasters including wind, earthquake, fire and floods, and design structures and services to meet appropriate standards
arrange for geological and geophysical investigations and carry out feasibility studies.
all this according to the job guide. Not really in a nut shell but oh well lol
-
oh and when you finish uni i think you start off as a project engineer where you work with a senior engineer. Work is often a mix of inside and outside work and its not always buildings
-
is it lots of physics or maths? or theory?
-
well maths is a given thats a large area in the degree as for physics im not really too sure and whether there is a lot of theory is dependant on the university. RMIT and Swinburne are more prac based where as melb uni is more theory based.
-
well at melb uni, in order to do civil engineering you can choose to do either chem or physics in 1st year.
but with other disciplines such as electrical and mechanical its physics.
while chem eng is obviously chem.
-
Why have you excluded Monash? It's a fairly good Engineering faculty I've heard.
-
Why have you excluded Monash? It's a fairly good Engineering faculty I've heard.
its too far for me so its not an option
-
how much work do u have to do a night? are there exams u have to do? are they long and hard? or like vce exams? i have NO clue what u study/how u study at uni! someone xplain!
-
well the general thing is you don't study at all until it hits you 1 week before the exams that you don't know any of the coursework.
you then proceed to cram for the full week - promising that you will work your ass off next semester so this doesn't happen next time.
you pass your exams.
it happens next time.
-
phagist speaks the truth
-
well the general thing is you don't study at all until it hits you 1 week before the exams that you don't know any of the coursework.
you then proceed to cram for the full week - promising that you will work your ass off next semester so this doesn't happen next time.
you pass your exams.
it happens next time.
amen.
and the clubbing and drinking every week.. and the wagging of lectures and tutes cos they aint compulsory..
-
yeh, actually went to my first esd lecture today and first physics tute since week 4 of sem 1.
good times.
-
wow sounds like life##
-
wow sounds like life##
what?
-
wow sounds like life##
what?
yeh im not following that either
-
lol soz, i meant ur actually livin life in uni not no life studying which is pro
-
what's the best uni pathway to get into investment banking through engineering?
-
what's the best uni pathway to get into investment banking through engineering?
I didn't even know that was possible
-
well the general thing is you don't study at all until it hits you 1 week before the exams that you don't know any of the coursework.
you then proceed to cram for the full week - promising that you will work your ass off next semester so this doesn't happen next time.
you pass your exams.
it happens next time.
amen.
and the clubbing and drinking every week.. and the wagging of lectures and tutes cos they aint compulsory..
You don't need 70-80ish% attendance rate to tutes to pass the unit over there?
All of my labs for all of my units have some form of weekly assessment. Even the 1% a lab ones add up, free 8-10% lulz.
-
well the general thing is you don't study at all until it hits you 1 week before the exams that you don't know any of the coursework.
you then proceed to cram for the full week - promising that you will work your ass off next semester so this doesn't happen next time.
you pass your exams.
it happens next time.
amen.
and the clubbing and drinking every week.. and the wagging of lectures and tutes cos they aint compulsory..
You don't need 70-80ish% attendance rate to tutes to pass the unit over there?
All of my labs for all of my units have some form of weekly assessment. Even the 1% a lab ones add up, free 8-10% lulz.
tutes aint compulsory at all, no rolls or anything and even if they do mark the roll it's just for the tutor's personal records.
unless your doing a economics sub for breadth which attendance and [participation in tutes count for 10%.
but labs are compulsory (80% attendance). so basically just go to labs ( 6 hours a week, 3 hr each for physics and esd).