LULEÅ UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY

 

 

 

                                                                                       2000-09-14

 

 

Chemical Engineering and  Metallurgy : A case study of placement evaluation.

 

There are two requirements that should be fulfilled by a student following a civilingenjör degree programme (4.5 years):

 

1.     He/she should spend at least 12 weeks in industry doing blue-collar work, preferably on the shop floor. This used to be 17 weeks, but the minimum time has recently been reduced in most universities.

2.     He/she should write a final thesis. His thesis is assumed to correspond to 20 weeks of full-time work. It is not formally required that this final year project be conducted in industry, but this is almost always the case.

3.     In addition to these standard requirements, students following certain curricula at Luleå University of Technology have to do an industrial placement period of at least 6 months.

 

For the programme leading to the title of högskoleingenjör (2- 4.5 years) an industrial placement of the forst type of 6-12 weeks is compulsory in most curricula.

 

Description of the six months long industrial placement at the Chemical Engineering and Metallurgy.

 

The six month long industrial placement in the Chemical Engineering curriculum in Luleå is unique for this school. No other Swedish university or institute of technology requires that sort of long duration internship for an engineering degree. This long term industrial placement takes place in the autumn of the fourth year of the student’s study programme.

 

Objectives of placement

 

The main objective is to give the student the possibility to use the problem solving skills obtained at the university. That means that the student should encounter problems and tasks within totally new working areas, analyse the problems as well as solving them in a constructive way. In other words: the tasks have to be in line with the level of the studies and be connected to the student’s study programme.

 

This objective is mentioned in the letter from the university to the enterprise in question.

 

 

 

The placement process and the preparation of student for placements

 

The planning of the placement starts the preceding year by the study counsellor or director of studies and the student. The university proposes a list of current enterprises with which the university has been in contact. This list is the result of a wide network of enterprises established  by the Department of Chemical Engineering and Metallurgy during several years, since the start of the programme in 1995. The students also have access to a list of all the students and their hosts, so that they take contact with their precursors.

 

The students themselves then apply for their placement, as for a job. They enclose a CV and a description of themselves, of their interests and of their educational profile. They enclose a document from the Department, describing what the Department wishes the student to do and the purpose of the placement  Students are told to enclose their study programme syllabus.

 

Critical success factors in the partnership between employers and university.

 

Two critical success factors are mentioned by the Department of Chemical Engineering and Metallurgy. One is the length of the placement: The employer has to prepare thoroughly the six months period, which is less important for a short term placement. The other success factor is that the placement takes place late in the curriculum, which makes it possible for the student to perform fairly advanced tasks. Another factor of success is that an older student can express what they want in a job situation more clearly, which both the employee and the student benefit from.

 

Economic conditions

 

The document from the department states the expected salary, which is roughly the same amount as the student’s grants and loans - and that should be a minimum. Generally a student gets paid about 12,000 SEK per month and many of them get free housing (especially outside Sweden).

 

The student is covered by his or her normal insurance, settled by the Students Unions.

 

Monitoring placements and supporting students on placement

 

The university never checks up with the employee the behaviour of an individual student during the placement period. Only after having finished the placement, the employer writes a certificate of employment and the student is obliged to write a report. The university relies on the fact that the student himself/herself and the employee make every possible effort to make the placement a success.

 

Evaluation and assessment

 

In order to get the proposed placement beforehand approved by the study counsellor or director of studies the student has to:

 

-       write a short description of the planned industrial placement

-       state the length of the placement

-       give the name of the contact person at the enterprise

 

The above mentioned rules are supposed to ensure a good standard of the placement and a relevant level for the student.

 

After their placement period the students have to

 

-       provide the university with  a certificate showing the length of the placement as well as the main tasks.

-       write a report of 1-2 pages describing the placement period.

-       do an oral presentation of the placement in the second period of their forth study year.

-       attend the oral presentations of the other students.

 

Pros and cons

 

The main advantage of this kind of industrial placement is that the students get motivated to their final studies. Their studies are put in a context. Sometimes, however, especially at the beginning of their period or in very small enterprises it happens that the company does not take full advantage of the skill and knowlwdge of the students.

 

Placements abroad

 

Normally the placements take place in Swedish enterprises. About 2-3 students ( out of 20 students in Chemical Engineering) every year get a placement abroad, Germany and Australia being the most popular countries.