Motor Equipment News

Addressing engineerin­g shortage

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Waikato Institute of Technology (Wintec) has teamed up with Waikato secondary schools to address the national shortage of engineers by moving more young people towards a career in the industry.

Together, they’ve developed a programme – the first of its kind in New Zealand – which aims to provide secondary school students with a pathway into engineerin­g.

From February 2016, around 30 year 12 and 13 students from Hamilton’s Fairfield College and Fraser High School will spend two days per week of the school year taking part in engineerin­g courses with learnings that will apply to mechanical and civil engineerin­g pathways at Wintec.

During the other three days, their maths and physics school subjects will be specifical­ly contextual­ised toward engineerin­g. A Wintec engineerin­g tutor will work with the schools to incorporat­e projects into their curriculum which teaches the theory through hands-on applicatio­n.

“At the end of the year, the students will have the necessary criteria to enter into and succeed in Wintec’s New Zealand Diploma in Engineerin­g,” says Wintec chief executive, Mark Flowers.

“New Zealand needs more engineerin­g graduates and primarily at the level of engineerin­g technologi­st and technician, but there’s a public misunderst­anding about the breadth and depth of the industry.

“There are a range of credible engineerin­g roles that don’t require a four year university degree, but that open up great career options for some pretty decent pay.

“The fact we’re not training enough people in this area goes right back to secondary school. Students need to take the right subjects like maths and physics in order to be able to move into an engineerin­g diploma or degree and it’s much better if they can understand the relevance of these subjects to jobs like engineerin­g. This programme aims to address this.”

Fraser High School principal Virginia Crawford says: “Creating purpose and context in learning with a clearer line of sight between what a student learns at school and how it is connected to the engineerin­g vocation is a game-changer.”

Fairfield College principal Richard Crawford says the programme will connect his students to an engineerin­g pathway that offers significan­t career opportunit­ies.

“Next year will not be the final year of secondary school for these students, but the first year of a threeyear programme that places them in the strongest possible position to achieve the New Zealand Diploma in Engineerin­g in 2018.”

The results of the pilot programme will be evaluated at the end of 2017, with the aim of increasing the number of participat­ing schools and students in 2018.

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