CREATE
  • Technology
    • BIOTECH
    • COMMUNICATIONS
    • COMPUTING
    • IMAGING
    • MATERIALS
    • ROBOTICS
    • SOFTWARE
  • Industry
    • DEFENCE
    • INFRASTRUCTURE
    • INNOVATION
    • MANUFACTURING
    • POLICY
    • PROJECTS
    • TRANSPORT
  • Sustainability
    • ENERGY
    • ENVIRONMENT
    • RESOURCES
  • Community
    • CULTURE
    • PEOPLE
  • Career
    • EDUCATION
    • INSPIRATION
    • LEADERSHIP
    • TRENDS
  • About
    • CONTACT
    • SUBSCRIBE
No Result
View All Result
CREATE
  • Technology
    • BIOTECH
    • COMMUNICATIONS
    • COMPUTING
    • IMAGING
    • MATERIALS
    • ROBOTICS
    • SOFTWARE
  • Industry
    • DEFENCE
    • INFRASTRUCTURE
    • INNOVATION
    • MANUFACTURING
    • POLICY
    • PROJECTS
    • TRANSPORT
  • Sustainability
    • ENERGY
    • ENVIRONMENT
    • RESOURCES
  • Community
    • CULTURE
    • PEOPLE
  • Career
    • EDUCATION
    • INSPIRATION
    • LEADERSHIP
    • TRENDS
  • About
    • CONTACT
    • SUBSCRIBE
No Result
View All Result
CREATE
No Result
View All Result
Home Sponsored

Online training for engineers during the 21/22 break

create by create
15 December 2021
in Sponsored
5 min read
0
Online training for engineers during the 21/22 break
Sponsored by

Whether engineers want to get a head start on next year, explore a career adjustment, or they’re looking to fulfil CPD hours, these courses and webinars can help.

Remote working has been a hot topic since the beginning of COVID-19 – it’s been the enforced reality that many have tried to make an opportunity. But it’s remote learning that might have experienced the more lasting transformation. Increasingly, professional education has shifted partly or totally online.

This does present its challenges. A study published in PLOS ONE looked at US engineering students learning online during COVID-19. It found that “30 per cent of engineering students had work-life balance issues, while 55 per cent of students lacked motivation, and 50 per cent did not have access to a private space to attend classes”.

Reflecting the global change, 2021 was the year Engineering Education Australia launched EEA Online. It’s a suite of training courses designed to support engineers throughout their careers that addresses the above issues by being self-paced and flexible.

Numerous studies have found the key to successful self-directed learning is the empowerment of the individual. For example, research from 2016 published in Cogent Education found that the most important factor for successful self-directed online learning was the “freedom to learn”. 

The courses offered by EEA allow engineers to pick what they want to learn, learn where they want and structure their education around work, family commitments and recreation, rather than having to choose between them. 

Additionally, all EEA courses and webinars contribute to continuing professional development (CPD) hours. This makes them suitable for engineers who are chartered with Engineers Australia (or looking to become so), as they are required to lodge 150 CPD hours over a three year period.

For those who only have an hour or two to commit to learning over the next few months, EEA is also offering on-demand webinar recordings on a variety of interesting topics.

Below is a selection of what’s available over the 21/22 break, separated by format and focus.

Self-paced short courses

With approximately eight hours of learning, these EEA courses are designed to give you a more comprehensive understanding across a host of disciplines.

There are eight technical skills short courses available.

  • AS/NZS 3000 – The Wiring Rules
  • Concrete Technology for Civil Engineering
  • Fundamentals of Geotechnical Engineering
  • Introduction to Rail Engineering
  • Safety in Design 
  • Solar Battery Storage
  • Solar Power System Fundamentals 
  • The Engineering and Design Lifecycle

There are three project management short courses. 

  • Enhancing Project Performance 
  • Project Planning, Scheduling and Control 
  • Systems Thinking in Engineering

There are also three short courses dedicated to soft skills and business acumen.

  • Contract Foundations 
  • Risk in Engineering 
  • Starting in the Australian Engineering Workplace

On-demand webinars

If you don’t have the time for a short course, or there are just specific areas you’d like to learn more about, these webinars are useful. 

There are five dedicated to technical skills.

  • Demystifying Continuous Flight Auger (CFA) Piles
  • Performance Solutions – Compliance with the NCC
  • Practical Design Applications of Temporary Works
  • Underground Utilities in Construction Projects
  • Understanding your Electrical Load 

For those interested in project management, there are two webinars available.

  • Understanding the 7th Edition of the Project Management Institute’s Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK 7)
  • Managing Project Baseline Changes

Finally, for those who want to improve their soft skills and business acumen, EEA has six on-demand webinars.

  • Building Resilient Teams
  • Communicating with Impact
  • Criminal Manslaughter – Positively Demonstrating Safety Due Diligence
  • Cyber-Attack and Defence in Engineering
  • Dealing with Conflict: a toolkit to identify and resolve workplace conflict
  • Driving Positive Outcomes through Negotiation and Dispute Resolution

To find out more learning opportunities that can support your engineering career, whether they’re on-demand or live courses in 2022, visit Engineering Education Australia.

Previous Post

New National Construction Code course builds engineers’ knowledge

Next Post

Engineers share what 2021 taught them — and what they hope the next year brings

create

create

create tells the stories behind the latest trends, innovations and people shaping the engineering profession. Through our magazine, website, enewsletters and social media, we spread the word about all the ways engineers help create the world around us.

Next Post
Engineers share what 2021 taught them  — and what they hope the next year brings

Engineers share what 2021 taught them — and what they hope the next year brings

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    WANT CREATE DELIVERED DIRECT TO YOUR INBOX? SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER.

    By subscribing to create you are also subscribing to Engineers Australia content. Please find our Terms and conditions here

    create is brought to you by Engineers Australia, Australia's national body for engineers and the voice of more than 120,000 members. Backing today's problem-solvers so they can shape a better tomorrow.
    • ABOUT US
    • CONTACT US
    • SITEMAP
    • PRIVACY POLICY
    • TERMS
    • SUBSCRIBE

    © 2024 Engineers Australia

    No Result
    View All Result
    • Technology
      • BIOTECH
      • COMMUNICATIONS
      • COMPUTING
      • IMAGING
      • MATERIALS
      • ROBOTICS
      • SOFTWARE
    • Industry
      • DEFENCE
      • INFRASTRUCTURE
      • INNOVATION
      • MANUFACTURING
      • POLICY
      • PROJECTS
      • TRANSPORT
    • Sustainability
      • ENERGY
      • ENVIRONMENT
      • RESOURCES
    • Community
      • CULTURE
      • PEOPLE
    • Career
      • EDUCATION
      • INSPIRATION
      • LEADERSHIP
      • TRENDS
    • About
      • CONTACT
      • SUBSCRIBE
    preload imagepreload image