Title: CASE STUDY RESEARCH INTO AUSTRALIAN MECHANICAL ENGINEER ATTRIBUTES
1CASE STUDY RESEARCH INTO AUSTRALIAN MECHANICAL
ENGINEER ATTRIBUTES
- Clive Ferguson
- Deakin University
- Australia
2Johnson Report - 1996
- Stakeholder Review of Engineering Education
recommended - a broader engineering education
- development of a number of graduate attributes
- 1997 Engineers Australia response graduate
attribute (10) outcome focused course
accreditation. - functional analysis development of CBET.
- Loosely defined Engineering school advisory
panel industry members to provide greater
definition. - Subjective - influenced by own education and
experience. -
3Context
- Associated historical and contemporary study
- Ref Ferguson, C (2006) Defining the Australian
Mechanical Engineer European Journal of
Engineering Education. Vol.31, No.4, August 2006,
pp.471 - 485 Taylor and Francis Ltd. London.
4Case Study Based Research
- Determination of
- range of attributes,
- employment profile of Australian mechanical
engineers - industry/roles to base case studies
- Analysis of attribute significance for each role
5Determination of Attributes (84)
- IEAust attributes (10) expanded by
- Breaking attributes down e. g. communication
skills broken down into various forms of written
and oral communication - Adding attributes more related to mechanical
engineering e.g. 3D visioning, dynamic visioning. - Including a wide range of attributes from
numerous surveys and studies into both
engineering graduates and graduates in general. - Including the main subject specialisms within
mechanical engineering courses (and the various
mathematics specialisms) - Including personal attributes (e.g. interpersonal
skills and time management)
6Industry profile data All mechanical
engineers
- Based on multiple years of APESMA Professional
Remuneration Survey raw data adjusted for public
sector bias. - FOUND 6 Industries - Consulting, Transport
equipment manufacturing, electricity and gas
supply, mining and quarrying, construction
contract and maintenance, and defence - employ
more than 50 of all Australian mechanical
engineers. - FOUND Mechanical engineer manufacturing industry
employment dominated by transport equipment -
automobile industry.
7Industry profile data graduate engineers
- Two sources
- APESMA/IEAust Graduate Engineer survey (raw data
over a number of years) - Careers Council of Australia Graduate Destination
Surveys which publish the public sector
separately from the industries they serve.
Adjusted using data from the APESMA salary survey.
8Industry Employment Profile
All Mechanical Engineers All Mechanical Engineers Graduate Mechanical Engineers Graduate Mechanical Engineers Graduate Mechanical Engineers
Industry (APESMA Salary survey) Industry (APESMA. Grad. Eng. survey) (Graduate Careers Council)
Consulting and technical Services 16.2 Consulting 15.6 16.4
Transport equipment manufacture 12.6 Mining 9.7 8.5
Electricity and gas supply 8.1 Transport equipment manufacture 9.2 -
Mining and quarrying 6.7 Defence - 9.2
Construction contract and maintenance 6.3 Financial insurance property and business - 8.5
Defence 5.6 Construction 8.1 5.9
Industrial equipment manufacturing 4.7 Electricity and gas 6.0 2.18
9Adjusted Comparison with US and UK
10Selection of companies or organisations
- 6 industries - companies with greatest numbers
of mechanical engineering respondents to the
IEAust/APESMA graduate engineer surveys. - Global attribute significance - all operate
internationally, have international partnerships
or are part of global organisations.
116 industries - 17 Roles (several generic)
- Role based attributes
- Stage 1 engineer a qualified engineer without
the professional experience to become chartered. - Stage 2 engineer sufficient experience to
become chartered. - New graduate ability
12The survey instrument
- Attribute significance - 5 point Likert scales
from no use to essential. - Significance versus ability.
-
- Graduate ability 5 point Likert scale from
none to excellent - relative to required
level of attribute. - Next sheet key grouped results (to present an
overall perspective).
13(No Transcript)
14Personal skills
- Personal attributes group excluding foreign
languages were considered essential for most
stage 2 roles (time management,
social/interpersonal skills, flexibility,
conscientiousness, reliability and the
expectation and ability to undertake lifelong
learning). - Except for time management, all graduates
abilities were considered significant or better.
15Management and Communication
- Planning and organisational skills - essential
for all stage 2 engineering roles. - Others essential for most stage 2 roles
- OHS (also stage 1)
- Team skills (also for stage 1)
- Leadership
- Project management
- Ethics
- Graduate abilities less than moderate were OHS,
project management and political awareness
16Problem solving /design
- Recognition formulation of a problem
essential all stage 2 - Application of standards and statutory
regulations essential in virtually all stage 2
but worst rated graduate attribute. - Essential for stage 2 in most roles (those
underlined are rated less than moderate for
graduate ability) - Application of Science and Engineering
Fundamentals - Broad Engineering Knowledge Base
- Recognise when to use engineering analysis
- Documentation
- Ability to sense the design looks sound
- The ability to know when to call in a specialist
17Key Findings
- Competency focus in secondary and higher
education graduate abilities of previous concern
such as team skills have improved significantly. - Graduate ability in engineering knowledge base is
generally rated moderate or less. - Few roles have every mechanical engineering
subject specialism highly rated but attributes
requiring a broad engineering knowledge base
-highly ranked.
18Recommendation
- Mechanical engineering courses
- 1st degree develop a broader engineering
knowledge base. - 2nd degree develop advanced knowledge in selected
specialist topics appropriate to the career role.