Module overview
This module is designed to enhance your understanding of what it means to be a Professional Chemical Engineer.
Aims and Objectives
Learning Outcomes
Engineering practice
Having successfully completed this module you will be able to:
- Explain relevant commercial, social and environment contexts, constraints, and challenges faced by Chartered Engineers.
- Explain relevant legal, regulatory, and ethical frameworks which Chartered Engineers must operate.
- Describe and explain the application of relevant practises related to business (including risk evaluation and management, budgeting and financial management), management (including project and people management) and leadership (including change management).
- Critically evaluate real-world professional engineering scenarios (e.g. in terms of ethics, risk, sustainability and legal compliance) and potential solutions.
- Demonstrate an ability to evaluate the health and safety risks associated with Chemical Engineering practices and the legal context of risk assessment.
Knowledge and Understanding
Having successfully completed this module, you will be able to demonstrate knowledge and understanding of:
- The means to assess the environmental and safety aspects of chemical processing and operations.
- Management techniques and practices, and business techniques, including project and change management, that may be used to achieve engineering objectives, their limitations, and how they may be applied appropriately.
Syllabus
Ethics, sustainability and management
- Business and management techniques, project, people and change management, budgeting and finances.
- Risk evaluation and management
- Ethical engineering (honesty, integrity, respect for: law, life and the environment)
- Sustainability - environmental impacts and the associated legal frameworks, engineering design for sustainability within the prevailing economic and social context.
Safety
- Application of HSE as an inherent part of process plant design and the procedures for its implementation.
- Reflection on Incidents, which have been significant in achieving changes in culture from both safety and environmental viewpoints.
- Explore present-day requirements of engineering for safety and the environment, including the methodology for establishing necessary criteria, implementation and monitoring, verification and validation of safety systems, and responsibility for auditing.
Learning and Teaching
Teaching and learning methods
This is a semester one course. Some of these will be held in CLS workstation rooms to facilitate computer tutorial sessions, others will take the form of group workshop.
Ethics and Business Practice: This will be taught through lectures, augmented with discussions.
Safety: This will be taught through lectures, enhanced with discussions and seminar classes.
Independent study as required to study the online material and to complete the rest of the coursework.
Type | Hours |
---|---|
Seminar | 8 |
Lecture | 18 |
Independent Study | 60 |
Completion of assessment task | 50 |
Total study time | 136 |
Assessment
Summative
This is how we’ll formally assess what you have learned in this module.
Method | Percentage contribution |
---|---|
Assessment | 50% |
Case study report | 50% |
Referral
This is how we’ll assess you if you don’t meet the criteria to pass this module.
Method | Percentage contribution |
---|---|
Assessment | 50% |
Case study report | 50% |
Repeat
An internal repeat is where you take all of your modules again, including any you passed. An external repeat is where you only re-take the modules you failed.
Method | Percentage contribution |
---|---|
Assessment | 50% |
Case study report | 50% |
Repeat Information
Repeat type: Internal & External