ENFE682-18W (C) Whole Year 2018

Fire Project

30 points

Details:
Start Date: Monday, 19 February 2018
End Date: Sunday, 18 November 2018
Withdrawal Dates
Last Day to withdraw from this course:
  • Without financial penalty (full fee refund): Friday, 2 March 2018
  • Without academic penalty (including no fee refund): Friday, 7 September 2018

Description

A fire engineering project to be undertaken within one of the Departments of Engineering.

The project is very different to other courses in the fire engineering programme. It is not based on formal lectures, laboratories and tutorials, but instead allows the student to explore a problem that interests them under the supervision of an academic staff member. The project is one alternative to completing the MEngSt(Fire) programme; it is an individual two-semester-long research exercise equivalent to two 15-point courses.

Learning Outcomes

  • Objectives

    The fire engineering project is designed to provide students with an opportunity to:
  • undertake a substantial and challenging fire engineering project,
  • develop independent research and problem solving skills,
  • derive an appropriate methodology for the chosen problem,
  • individually plan, perform and deliver, within project and budget constraints,
  • analyse and interpret data from literature, survey, or experimental work and
  • sharpen communication skills through the writing of a project report, writing a conference paper and through an oral presentation to peers.

Prerequisites

Subject to approval of the Director of Studies.

Timetable Note

There is one block of two days in 2018 and another block of two days in 2019. The blocks allow new students to observe senior students present their research papers at a Fire Engineering Student Conference while learning about research components, techniques, practices and technical writing. For senior students, an oral defence and presentation of their research paper at the conference is the culmination of each fire engineering project. Attendance at the first block course is a pre-requisite to enrolling in the fire engineering project.

Course Administrators

Anthony Abu and Charles Fleischmann

Assessment

Assessment Due Date Percentage 
Oral exam 10%
concerence presentation 15%
conference paper 25%
Progres report 20%
technical report 15%
project proposal 15%


The project assessments are structured to follow the process of completing a research project and presenting your results at a conference: “The University of Canterbury Fire Engineering Conference 2019”. You will be assessed in various activities.

Project Proposal

The project proposal should clearly describe the specific research being undertaken, state its relevance and outline the steps to achieving it. It should be at least six pages in length, but not exceed ten pages. It should comprise an introduction or background to the study, its aims and objectives, a methodology and a provisional project implementation plan that clearly identifies the tasks that need to be completed for a successful project, with an assessment of potential obstacles. The proposal should also state the costs involved in the project, present a timeline for completion and state potential outputs of the study. A reference list should also be included.

Progress Report
At the end of the first semester after enrolment (November 2018) students should submit a progress report, not exceeding fourteen pages. This is to ascertain smooth running of projects and to address problems that may have developed since the proposal. The report should expand on the background to the study and provide a more comprehensive literature review on the research topic. It should clearly state changes to the scope or objectives of the project and subsequent changes in methodology and output, if necessary. A progress summary should also be included; typically, this includes preliminary analysis, results and deductions.

Technical Report
The technical report is a compilation of the technical content of the project. It is primarily to serve as a reference document for future research. It should comprise an executive summary (one-page), a brief introduction to the project (two-pages), brief conclusions and recommendations for future studies (two-pages) and descriptions of the adopted methodology, analyses, results and discussions (up to 30 pages).

Full Conference Paper
The full conference paper for the fire engineering project (ENFE682) should be limited to a maximum of ten pages. It should include an abstract, introduction, methodology, results, discussion, conclusions and references. Two digital copies (one Microsoft word and one PDF) must be uploaded via LEARN on the due date. Full papers will be published in the Fire Engineering Conference 2019 Proceedings.

Microsoft Word templates for the proposal, the progress report and the full conference paper will be supplied and you will need to strictly adhere to these templates/formats.

The Fire Engineering Conference 2019 Programme Committee (i.e., two or more reviewers from the engineering academic staff) will grade the full paper. Each reviewer will base their marks on the standard of the report organisation, layout, and design, grammar and spelling, and, most importantly, the overall ability of the student to communicate their ideas in a written form.

Oral Presentation
All oral presentations will be 20 minutes long with 5 minutes for questions. The Fire Engineering Conference 2019 Programme Committee will assess the quality of the oral presentation. Marks will be allocated for pace, clarity and length of presentation, use of audio-visual aids, organisation of the presentation, confidence and knowledge in answering questions from the floor.

Oral Exam
As a requirement to completing the fire engineering project, students will defend their individual projects in an oral examination, which would normally be on the day after the Fire Engineering Conference 2019.

Additional Course Outline Information

Notes

Enrolment for ENFE682 is not until 16th July 2018. However, guidance on research practices and technical writing is scheduled for April 2018. Interested students should attend the first block course, as it is a pre-requisite to enrolment and will aid the preparation of the project proposals, due on 16th July 2018. There may be circumstances in which a full-time campus-based student can complete their project to a shorter time-scale and deadlines will need to be revised as appropriate.

There may be opportunities for the conference papers to be presented in a public forum (e.g. the annual FPANZ conference) and/or technical reports to be submitted as papers to journals. In such situations it is expected that such submissions would be completed with direct involvement of the project supervisor/s and that credit be appropriately shared between the contributors.

Indicative Fees

Domestic fee $2,118.00

* All fees are inclusive of NZ GST or any equivalent overseas tax, and do not include any programme level discount or additional course-related expenses.

Limited Entry Course

Maximum enrolment is 15

For further information see Civil and Natural Resources Engineering .

All ENFE682 Occurrences