Student ID:__________________________ Student name:_______________________ Advisor/Supervisor name:_______________________ Calendar: 2016-2017 Undergraduate Academic Calendar Program: Automotive Engineering and Management Minimum credits required:__________________

Automotive Engineering and Management

General information

UOIT’s Automotive Engineering program is unique in Canada. The automotive engineering curriculum provides an understanding of the principles and application of automotive engineering, while strengthening each student’s ability to think independently and take a systematic approach to problem solving. Courses such as automotive structural design, vehicle dynamics and control, and advanced solid mechanics and stress analysis, prepare graduates for employment directly within the automotive industry, or within the many related automotive fields.

Engineering and Management

The Engineering and Management combination programs meet the rapidly increasing need for engineers with the leadership skills to succeed in business and management.

Students study the complete engineering program, and also gain critical management skills in key areas of business including accounting, finance, operations, human resources and marketing.

Students in these programs normally take two semesters of business and management courses for 30 credit hours after successfully completing third year. The regular fourth year of the engineering program is then taken in Year 5 of the program. 

Admission requirements

Applications to the Bachelor of Engineering and Management will be accepted in the winter semester of a student’s third year of study. A minimum CGPA of 2.3 is required to be eligible to apply to the program and to continue in the program. This program may have limited space and applications are considered on a competitive basis. Successful applicants will be notified by the Registrar’s office by the end of May after the term of application.

Work placement/internship/co-op opportunities

The university’s proximity to some of the largest automotive and manufacturing companies in Canada provides many opportunities for work placements. In addition, a 12- to 16-month optional Engineering Internship program is available for students completing third year, and students may participate in two- to four-month work placements through the Engineering Co-op program. See course descriptions for ENGR 0998U – Engineering Internship Program and ENGR 0999U – Engineering Co-op Program for details.

Professional designation

All UOIT undergraduate engineering programs in the Faculty of Engineering and Applied Science have been fully accredited by the Canadian Engineering Accreditation Board. (Note: The new Mechatronics Engineering program will be reviewed for accreditation in 2019-2020, to coincide with the first graduating class, as per CEAB requirements.) Each graduate is eligible to apply for licensing as a professional engineer (PEng) in any province or territory in Canada.

Program details and degree requirements

The Engineering and Management program follows the five-year program map below. Please note the Business electives are subject to availability of space and not all electives are offered each semester.

Year 1

Semester 1 (15 credit hours)

Course NameTerm takenGrade
COMM 1050U – Technical Communications
ENGR 1015U – Introduction to Engineering
MATH 1010U – Calculus I
MATH 1850U – Linear Algebra for Engineers
PHY 1010U – Physics I

Semester 2 (18 credit hours)

Course NameTerm takenGrade
CHEM 1800U – Chemistry for Engineers
ENGR 1200U – Introduction to Programming for Engineers
ENGR 1025U – Engineering Design
MATH 1020U – Calculus II
PHY 1020U – Physics II
SSCI 1470U – Impact of Science and Technology on Society

Year 2

Semester 1 (18 credit hours)

Course NameTerm takenGrade

Liberal Studies elective*

MANE 2220U – Structure and Properties of Materials
MATH 2860U – Differential Equations for Engineers
MECE 2230U – Statics +
MECE 2310U – Concurrent Engineering and Design
MECE 2640U – Thermodynamic and Heat Transfer

Semester 2 (18 credit hours)

Course NameTerm takenGrade
ELEE 2790U – Electric Circuits
MATH 2070U – Numerical Methods
MECE 2420U – Solid Mechanics +
MECE 2430U – Dynamics
MECE 2860U – Fluid Mechanics
STAT 2800U – Statistics and Probability for Engineers

 

+Students who have completed ENGR 2260U are not required to take MECE 2230U or MECE 2420U.

Year 3

Semester 1 (18 credit hours)

Course NameTerm takenGrade
AUTE 3010U – Introduction to Automotive Engineering
MANE 3120U – Thermo-mechanical Processing of Materials
MANE 3190U – Manufacturing and Production Processes
MECE 3030U – Computer-Aided Design
MECE 3270U – Kinematics and Dynamics of Machines
MECE 3350U – Control Systems

Semester 2 (18 credit hours)

Course NameTerm takenGrade
AUTE 3290U – Powertrain Design
AUTE 3450U – Combustion and Engines
ENGR 3360U – Engineering Economics
MECE 3210U – Mechanical Vibrations
MECE 3220U – Machine Design
MECE 3390U – Mechatronics

 

Approved students may opt to spend 12 to 16 months as an intern in an engineering setting in industry or elsewhere after Year 3, and do so by registering in the course ENGR 0998U – Engineering Internship Program.

Year 4

Semester 1 (15 credit hours)

Course NameTerm takenGrade
BUSI 1101U – Financial Accounting
BUSI 2050U – Managerial Economics
BUSI 2311U – Organizational Behaviour
BUSI 3700U – Strategic Management for Professionals
ENGR 3160U – Engineering Operations and Project Management +

Semester 2 (15 credit hours)

Course NameTerm takenGrade
BUSI 2170U – Managerial Accounting
BUSI 2205U – Principles of Marketing
BUSI 2410U – Managerial Finance
BUSI 2603U – Introduction to Operations Management

One additional Business elective selected from:

BUSI 1700U – Introduction to Entrepreneurship
BUSI 3330U – The Management of Change
BUSI 3650U – Innovation Management
BUSI 3710U – Small Business Management
BUSI 3930U – Leadership, Negotiation and Teamwork

 

+Students may not receive credit for BUSI 2550U and ENGR 3160U nor for BUSI 2603U and ENGR 3170U.

Year 5

Semester 1 (18 credit hours)

Course NameTerm takenGrade

Engineering elective*

AUTE 4010U – Vehicle Dynamics and Control
AUTE 4060U – Automotive Structural Design
AUTE 4070U – Chassis Systems Design
ENGR 4950U – Capstone Systems Design for Mechanical, Automotive, Mechatronics and Manufacturing Engineering I
MECE 4210U – Advanced Solid Mechanics and Stress Analysis

Semester 2 (18 credit hours)

Course NameTerm takenGrade

Two Engineering electives*

Liberal Studies elective*

ENGR 4760U – Ethics, Law and Professionalism for Engineers
ENGR 4951U – Capstone Systems Design for Mechanical, Automotive, Mechatronics and Manufacturing Engineering II
MANE 4045U – Quality Control

*Electives

Engineering electives

Courses selected for the Engineering elective must be approved by the Faculty of Engineering and Applied Science. Engineering courses from other engineering programs may be allowed as engineering electives provided students have the prerequisites and the courses extend the students’ knowledge through greater depth in an advanced area, or greater breadth in a complementary field. Not all of the listed Engineering electives will be necessarily be offered every year.

The following are approved courses as Engineering electives:

Course NameTerm takenGrade
ELEE 4350U – Microprocessors
ENGR 3160U – Engineering Operations and Project Management
ENGR 3170U – Engineering Production Management
MANE 3300U – Integrated Manufacturing Systems
MANE 3460U – Industrial Ergonomics
MANE 4160U – Artificial Intelligence in Engineering
MANE 4190U – Principals of Material Removal Processes
MANE 4380U – Life Cycle Engineering
MECE 3260U – Introduction to Energy Systems
MECE 3410U – Electro-Mechanical Energy Conversion
MECE 4240U – Applied Thermal and Fluids Engineering
MECE 4250U – Advanced Materials Engineering
MECE 4290U – Finite Element Methods

Note:

ENGR 3160U and ENGR 3170U are not Engineering electives for students in Automotive Engineering and Management.

Liberal Studies electives

Complementary studies, including courses in humanities, social sciences, arts, management, engineering economics, ethics and communication, are included in engineering programs to complement the technical content of the curriculum and thereby provide graduates with a broader perspective of their role in society. Inclusion of complementary studies also satisfies several accreditation criteria of the Canadian Engineering Accreditation Board. Courses or parts of courses covering engineering economics, ethics, and the impact of technology on society, as well as courses that develop the student’s capability to communicate orally, visually and in writing, are essential to the education of an engineer and therefore are included in all engineering programs at UOIT.

Liberal studies electives are included in each engineering program to ensure adequate coverage of subject matter that deals with central issues, methodologies and thought processes of the humanities and social sciences. Such material is required in the education of an engineer. Liberal studies electives can include, but are not limited to, courses dealing with cultural analysis; historical analysis; literature and the arts; knowledge, cognition, and moral reasoning; and social and behavioural analysis.

Foreign language and business courses may not be used as liberal studies. Courses can be approved as liberal studies electives for students in engineering programs at UOIT by the dean of the Faculty of Engineering and Applied Science (or designate), in accordance with these principles.

Courses selected for the liberal studies electives must be approved by the Faculty of Engineering and Applied Science. Liberal studies electives are subject to change. An updated list of liberal studies electives will be maintained online at engineering.uoit.ca.

Notes: