James Trevelyan
The Making of an Expert Engineer (eBook, PDF)
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James Trevelyan
The Making of an Expert Engineer (eBook, PDF)
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This book sets out the principles of engineering practice, knowledge that has come to light through more than a decade of research by the author and his students studying engineers at work. Until now, this knowledge has been almost entirely unwritten, passed on invisibly from one generation of engineers to the next, what engineers refer to asexpe
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This book sets out the principles of engineering practice, knowledge that has come to light through more than a decade of research by the author and his students studying engineers at work. Until now, this knowledge has been almost entirely unwritten, passed on invisibly from one generation of engineers to the next, what engineers refer to asexpe
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Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis eBooks
- Seitenzahl: 612
- Erscheinungstermin: 22. September 2014
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781315742281
- Artikelnr.: 42619384
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis eBooks
- Seitenzahl: 612
- Erscheinungstermin: 22. September 2014
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781315742281
- Artikelnr.: 42619384
- Herstellerkennzeichnung Die Herstellerinformationen sind derzeit nicht verfügbar.
Professor James Trevelyan is a Winthrop Professor in the Mechanical and Chemical Engineering School at The University of Western Australia. His main area of research is on engineering practice, and he teaches design, sustainability, engineering practice and project management.
He is well known internationally for pioneering research that resulted in sheep shearing robots (1975-1993).
He and his students produced the first industrial robot that can be remotely operated via the internet in 1994. The robot has been controlled by a conservatively estimated 500,000 people in dozens of countries.
He was presented with the 1993 Engelberger Science and Technology Award in Tokyo in recognition of his work, and has twice been presented with the Japan Industrial Robot Association award for best papers at ISIR conferences. These are the leading international awards for robotics research.
His teaching has also been well recognised: he was presented with the ASME Award for Mechanical and Mechatronics Teaching at the 2003 AAEE Conference in Melbourne. He has earned four distinguished teaching awards at UWA, and received a further best paper award at the 2004 International Conference on Engineering Education Research conference in the Czech Republic.
From 1996 till 2002 he researched landmine clearance methods and his web site is an internationally respected reference point for information on landmines. He was awarded with honorary membership of the Society of Counter Ordnance Technology in 2002 for his efforts, and was also elected a Fellow of the Institution of Engineers Australia.
His most recent work is research on engineering practice that aims to understand how engineering work is actually performed, an aspect of engineering that has not been researched before. This work is helping to explain why engineering and process-oriented companies can typically lose 30% of their turnover from engineering, maintenance and operation mistakes. It also helps to explain why engineering services in the developed world seem to cost much more than they should, often much more than in industrialised countries, and is a significant factor inhibiting poverty reduction. Professor Trevelyan is working on education programs that could help overcome shortcomings in engineering training programmes in developing countries.
Professor Trevelyan?EUR?s web page is: http://www.mech.uwa.edu.au/jpt/ and this has a large amount of supplementary information on his research and teaching.
He is well known internationally for pioneering research that resulted in sheep shearing robots (1975-1993).
He and his students produced the first industrial robot that can be remotely operated via the internet in 1994. The robot has been controlled by a conservatively estimated 500,000 people in dozens of countries.
He was presented with the 1993 Engelberger Science and Technology Award in Tokyo in recognition of his work, and has twice been presented with the Japan Industrial Robot Association award for best papers at ISIR conferences. These are the leading international awards for robotics research.
His teaching has also been well recognised: he was presented with the ASME Award for Mechanical and Mechatronics Teaching at the 2003 AAEE Conference in Melbourne. He has earned four distinguished teaching awards at UWA, and received a further best paper award at the 2004 International Conference on Engineering Education Research conference in the Czech Republic.
From 1996 till 2002 he researched landmine clearance methods and his web site is an internationally respected reference point for information on landmines. He was awarded with honorary membership of the Society of Counter Ordnance Technology in 2002 for his efforts, and was also elected a Fellow of the Institution of Engineers Australia.
His most recent work is research on engineering practice that aims to understand how engineering work is actually performed, an aspect of engineering that has not been researched before. This work is helping to explain why engineering and process-oriented companies can typically lose 30% of their turnover from engineering, maintenance and operation mistakes. It also helps to explain why engineering services in the developed world seem to cost much more than they should, often much more than in industrialised countries, and is a significant factor inhibiting poverty reduction. Professor Trevelyan is working on education programs that could help overcome shortcomings in engineering training programmes in developing countries.
Professor Trevelyan?EUR?s web page is: http://www.mech.uwa.edu.au/jpt/ and this has a large amount of supplementary information on his research and teaching.
Preface: Engineering practice has been invisible 1. Why engineer? 2. What type of engineer? 3. Flying start, no wings, wrong direction 4. Becoming an expert 5. What engineers know 6. Three neglected skills: Listening, seeing and reading 7. Collaboration in engineering 8. Informal teaching: More than an interpreter 9. Technical coordination: Informal leadership 10. Managing a project 11. Understanding investment decisions 12. Negotiating sustainability 13. Great expectations 14. Seeking work 15. Conclusion; Guide to online appendices; References; Keyword Index; Index of People and Organisations.
Preface: Engineering practice has been invisible 1. Why engineer? 2. What type of engineer? 3. Flying start, no wings, wrong direction 4. Becoming an expert 5. What engineers know 6. Three neglected skills: Listening, seeing and reading 7. Collaboration in engineering 8. Informal teaching: More than an interpreter 9. Technical coordination: Informal leadership 10. Managing a project 11. Understanding investment decisions 12. Negotiating sustainability 13. Great expectations 14. Seeking work 15. Conclusion; Guide to online appendices; References; Keyword Index; Index of People and Organisations.







