Master of Infrastructure Engineering and Management (Professional)
2020 Deakin University Handbook
Year | 2020 course information |
---|---|
Award granted | Master of Infrastructure Engineering and Management (Professional) |
Campus | Offered at Waurn Ponds (Geelong), Cloud Campus |
Duration | 2 years full-time or part-time equivalent |
CRICOS course code | 0101803 Waurn Ponds (Geelong) |
Deakin course code | S759 |
Approval status | This course is approved by the University under the Higher Education Standards Framework. |
Australian Qualifications Framework (AQF) recognition | The award conferred upon completion is recognised in the Australian Qualifications Framework at Level 9. |
New course commencing Trimester 1, 2021. This course will be offered in Trimester 1, Trimester 2 and Trimester 3, 2021. Students enrolled at Waurn Ponds (Geelong) may be required to undertake units of study at both Waurn Ponds (Geelong) and Waterfront (Geelong). |
Course sub-headings
- Course overview
- Indicative student workload
- Career opportunities
- Participation requirements
- Mandatory student checks
- Pathways
- Alternative exits
- Fees and charges
- Course Learning Outcomes
- Course rules
- Course structure
- Other learning experiences
Course overview
Engineering offers an exciting future with an increasing demand for graduates both in Australia and internationally. Study the Infrastructure Engineering and Management and your learning will focus on practical and real-world problems that blend project-based and workplace learning.
This two-year Professional Program extends your knowledge in infrastructure engineering through a unique blend of engineering and architecture units. Upon graduation, you will be equipped with knowledge and skills to plan and engineer significant infrastructure projects through the consideration of technological, economic and social impacts in both regional and metropolitan profiles.
The program also provides a pathway for further postgraduate qualifications (eg. PhD) through the completion of specific research units in your final year of study.
You will develop unique strengths to work collaboratively in professional teams in order to develop evidence-based engineering solutions. Throughout the degree you will acquire critical-thinking, innovative problem-solving and entrepreneurial skills that employers are looking for in order to recognise the unique challenges faced in urban, regional and rural settings and devising longer-term engineering solutions, while considering how people use infrastructure and essential services at the present time.
You will have world-class facilities and equipment at your fingertips with access to the Centre for Advanced Design in Engineering Training (CADET) and the Geelong Future Economy Precinct (GFEP) – home to the Institute for Frontier Materials (IFM), Institute for Intelligent Systems Research and Innovation (IISRI), Renewable Energy Microgrid, CSIRO Materials Science and Engineering and the Australian Future Fibre Research and Innovation Centre (AFFRIC).
Units in the course may include assessment hurdle requirements.
Indicative student workload
Successful students typically spend about 150 hours in learning and assessment for each one credit point unit. The time required to prepare evidence for credential assessment varies based on the student’s existing documentation.
Career opportunities
The combined skill sets in engineering and management will provide graduates a variety of industry opportunities related to infrastructure systems design, operation, management, and maintenance operations. Such works are undertaken both at federal/state/local government agencies and global infrastructure engineering and management consulting groups.
Example career opportunities include:
- Infrastructure design (including road, rail, roadside)
- Infrastructure construction and operation including maintenance
- Quantity and cost estimation in construction and management
- Management of the removal of railway crossings
- Design and management of tunnelling and excavation work/s
Participation requirements
Reasonable adjustments to participation and other course requirements will be made for students with a disability. Click here for more information.
Mandatory student checks
Any unit which contains work integrated learning, a community placement or interaction with the community may require a police check, Working with Children Check or other check.
Pathways
There are currently no pathway or credit arrangements.
Alternative exits
Graduate Diploma of Engineering (S652) |
Fees and charges
Fees and charges vary depending on your course, your fee category and the year you started. To find out about the fees and charges that apply to you, visit www.deakin.edu.au/fees.
Course Learning Outcomes
Deakin Graduate Learning Outcomes | Course Learning Outcomes |
Discipline-specific knowledge and capabilities | Advocate engineering ideas and make engineering decisions from conception through to implementation by properly evaluating and integrating technical and non-technical considerations as desirable outcomes of infrastructure engineering projects and practice, while assessing the technological, economic and social impact. Apply knowledge of infrastructure engineering principles and techniques, and use research, project design and management skills and approaches to systematically investigate, interpret, analyse and generate solutions for infrastructure provision in different development settings and regional and metropolitan profiles. Manage engineering solutions, projects and programs, and ensure reliable functioning of all materials, components, sub-systems and technologies as well as all interactions between the technical system and the context within which it functions to form a complete, sustainable and self-consistent system that optimises social, environmental and economic outcomes over its full lifetime. Respond to or initiate research concerned with advancing infrastructure engineering and developing new principles and technologies within this specialist engineering discipline using appropriate methodologies and thereby contribute to continual improvement in the practice and scholarship of engineering. |
Communication | Prepare high quality engineering documents and present information including approaches, procedures, concepts, solutions, and technical details in oral, written and/or visual forms appropriate to the context, in a professional manner. Use reasoning skills to critically and fairly analyse the viewpoints of stakeholders and specialists, and consult in a professional manner when presenting an engineering viewpoint, arguments, justifications or solutions to engage technical and non-technical audience in discussions, debate and negotiations. |
Digital literacy | Use a wide range of digital engineering and scientific tools and techniques to analyse, simulate, visualise, synthesise and critically assess information and methodically and systematically differentiate between assertion, personal opinion and evidence for engineering decision-making. Demonstrate the ability to independently and systematically locate and share information, standards and regulations that pertain to the specialist engineering discipline. |
Critical thinking | Identify, discern, and characterise salient issues, determine and analyse causes and effects, justify and apply appropriate assumptions, predict performance and behaviour, conceptualise engineering approaches and evaluate potential outcomes against appropriate criteria to synthesise solution strategies for complex engineering problems. |
Problem solving | Use research-based knowledge and research methods to identify, reveal and define complex engineering problems which involve uncertainty, ambiguity, imprecise information, conflicting technical or non-technical factors and safety and other contextual risks associated with engineering application within an engineering discipline. Apply technical knowledge, problem solving skills, appropriate tools and resources to design components, elements, systems, plant, facilities, processes and services to satisfy user requirements taking in to account broad contextual constraints such as social, cultural, economic, environmental, legal, political and human factors as an integral factor in the process of developing responsible engineering solutions. Identify recent developments, develop alternative concepts, solutions and procedures, appropriately challenge engineering practice from technical and non-technical viewpoints and thereby demonstrate capacity for creating new technological opportunities, approaches and solutions. |
Self-management | Regularly undertake self-review and take notice of feedback to reflect on achievements, plan professional development needs, learn from the knowledge and standards of a professional and intellectual community and contribute to its maintenance and advancement. Commit to and uphold codes of ethics, established norms, standards, and conduct that characterises accountability and responsibility as a professional engineer, while ensuring safety of other people and protection of the environment. |
Teamwork | Function effectively as a team member, take various team roles, consistently complete all assigned tasks within agreed deadlines, proactively assist, contribute to ideas, respect opinions and value contribution made by others when working collaboratively in learning activities to realise shared team objectives and outcomes. Apply people and personal skills to resolve any teamwork issues, provide constructive feedback that recognises the value of alternative and diverse viewpoints, and contribute to team cohesiveness, bringing to the fore and discussing shared individual and collective knowledge and creative capacity to develop optimal solutions to complex engineering problems. |
Global citizenship | Demonstrate an advanced understanding of the global, cultural and social diversity and complex needs of communities and cultures through the assessment of qualitative and quantitative interactions between engineering practices, the environment and the community, the implications of the law, relevant codes, regulations and standards. Actively seek traditional, current and new information to assess trends and emerging practice from local, national and global sources and appraise the diversity, equity and ethical implications for professional practice. |
Approved by Faculty Board 21 November 2019
Course rules
To complete the Master of Infrastructure Engineering and Management (Professional), students must attain 16 credit points. Most units (think of units as ‘subjects’) are equal to 1 or 2 credit point, sometimes abbreviated as 'cps'. Most students choose to study 4 units per trimester, and usually undertake two trimesters each year.
The course comprises a total of 16 credit points, which must include the following:
- 15 core units (totalling 16 credit points)
- Completion of STP710 Career Tools for Employability (0-credit point compulsory unit)
- Completion of SEE700 Safety Induction Program (0-credit point compulsory unit)
- Completion of STP050 Academic Integrity (0-credit point compulsory unit)
Students are required to meet the University's academic progress and conduct requirements. Click here for more information.
Course structure
Core
STP050 | Academic Integrity (0 credit points) |
STP710 | Career Tools for Employability (0 credit points) |
SEE700 | Safety Induction Program (0 credit points) |
SET721 | Engineering Sustainability |
SEN723 | Managing Engineering Projects |
SEM721 | Product Development |
SEN728 | Transportation Infrastructure Systems |
SEN729 | Railway Infrastructure Design and Management |
SEN725 | Urban Stormwater Management |
SEN769 | Advanced Structural Design |
SEN727 | Advanced Geomechanics |
SEN700 | Research Methodology |
SEN710 | Engineering Project Initiation # |
SEN720 | Project Implementation and Evaluation (2 credit points) |
Plus one unit in:
SEP701 | Introduction to Engineering Professional Practice |
SEL703 | Internship - Engineering # |
Plus three units in:
SRQ745 | Construction Company Management |
SRQ774 | Construction Measurement and Estimating |
SRQ762 | Cost Planning and Economics |
SRQ780 | Strategic Construction Procurement |
# Must have successfully completed STP710 Career Tools for Employability (0 credit-point compulsory unit)
Other course information
Course duration - additional information
Course duration may be affected by delays in completing course requirements, such as accessing or completing work placements.
Further information
Student Central can help you with course planning, choosing the right units and explaining course rules and requirements.
- Contact Student Central
Other learning experiences
You may choose to use one of your elective units to undertake an internship or participate in an overseas study tour to enhance your global awareness and experience.