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14 INSTRUMENTATION IN MECHANICAL ENGINEERING LABORATORIES

W.A. Pullman Ph.D., M.Sc., A.M.I.Mech.E. (Head of Department of Mechanical Engineering, Rugby College of Engineering Technology)

Education + Training

ISSN: 0040-0912

Article publication date: 1 August 1963

352

Abstract

During a recent meeting on Teaching Design at the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, there was considerable discussion as to whether the universities trained embryo engineers or ‘thinking‐machines’. For students following a sandwich course leading to a Dip. Tech. or degree there is no point in this distinction. For half the course, the student is in industry doing real engineering and he regards himself as a potential engineer. A college must recognise this and plan its courses accordingly. Thus, whereas a university student may well graduate without any knowledge of instrumentation as used in modern industry, his counterpart on a sandwich course is well aware of what is used. If he is to take his college studies seriously and regard laboratory work as a challenge and not a chore, then the associated instrumentation must be as modern as he uses outside the college.

Citation

Pullman, W.A. (1963), "14 INSTRUMENTATION IN MECHANICAL ENGINEERING LABORATORIES", Education + Training, Vol. 5 No. 8, pp. 371-371. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb015325

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1963, MCB UP Limited

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