Sec71 60
Sec71 60
Sec71 60
Section 71.60
ENCS 393 Social and Ethical Dimensions of Information and Communication Technologies (3credits)
Prerequisite: ENCS 282; 40 credits in BCompSc program. Ethics in an information society; surveillance and privacy; economic
globalization and intellectual property in a digital world: the digital divide; computerbased profiling and hacking; electronic
democracy; computermediated experience; and information productivity and the work/life balance. Lectures: three hours per week.
ENCS 483 Creativity, Innovation and Critical Thinking in Science and Technology (3credits)
Prerequisite: Minimum of 60 credits in an engineering program or minimum of 45 credits in a nonengineering program.
Understanding, thinking, arguing, and creativity in science and technology; analyzing and critiquing complex problems using
multidisciplinary theories of creativity; exploring the processes of invention and innovation and their impact on economics,
popularmedia, and social and cultural structures; case studies of why some inventions fail and others succeed. Students will
beevaluated on case studies, assignments, and a project. Lectures: three hours per week.
NOTE: Students who have received credit for ENCS 283 may not take this course for credit.
ENGINEERING
ENGR 108 Engineering Industrial Experience Reflective LearningI (3credits)
Prerequisite: Permission of the Faculty. This course is a reflective learning module for students in their related field which is based
on their academic requirements and their first industrial experience.
AEROSPACE ENGINEERING
AERO 201 Introduction to Flight and Aerospace Systems (3.5credits)
Prerequisite: ENGR 213; ENGR 233 previously or concurrently. Introduction to flight vehicles in the atmosphere and in space;
elements of aerodynamics, airfoils and wings; aerospace technologies including structures, materials and propulsion systems;
elements of aircraft performance; basic principles of flight stability, control and systems integration; aspects of aircraft conceptual
design. Lectures: three hours per week. Laboratory: two hours per week, alternate weeks.
BUILDING ENGINEERING
BLDG 212 Building Engineering Drawing and Introduction to Design (3credits)
Fundamentals of technical drawing, dimensioning practices, orthographic projections, auxiliary and sectional views of buildings.
Theory and applications of descriptive geometry in building design. Computeraided building drawing. Building subsystems
and related graphics standards; architectural and building engineering drawing at preliminary and final stages. Introduction to
the design of lightframe buildings. Project: representation of a building and its subsystems. Introduction to conceptual design.
Lectures: three hours per week. Tutorial: two hours per week.
CIVIL ENGINEERING
CIVI 212 Civil Engineering Drawing and Introduction to Design (3credits)
Fundamentals of technical drawing, orthographic projections, sectional views. Computeraided drawing; slabs, beams, and
columns; steel structures; building trusses and bridges, wood and masonry structures. Working drawing and dimensioning
practice. Introduction to the design process. Lectures: three hours per week. Tutorial: two hours per week.
COMPUTER ENGINEERING
COEN 212 Digital Systems Design I (3.5credits)
Prerequisite: COEN 231. Logic gates and their use in the realization of Boolean algebra statements; logic minimization, multiple
output circuits. Designing with MSI and LSI chips, decoders, multiplexers, adders, multipliers, programmable logic devices.
Introduction to sequential circuits; flipflops. Completely specified sequential machines. Machine equivalence and minimization.
Implementation of clock mode sequential circuits. Lectures: three hours per week. Tutorial: two hours per week. Laboratory:
15hours total.
NOTE: Students who have received credit for COEN 312 may not take this course for credit.
ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING
ELEC 251 Fundamentals of Applied Electromagnetics (3credits)
Prerequisite: ELEC 273 or ENGR 273; ENGR233 previously or concurrently. Electric charge, Coulombs law, electrostatic forces,
electric field, Gauss law, electric potential, stored energy. Dielectrics, properties of materials in electric fields. Electric current,
conduction in a vacuum and in material media, displacement current, magnetic field of a current, force on a currentcarrying wire,
magnetic induction, electromotive force, energy stored in a magnetic field. Magnetism in material media, magnetic circuits.
Timevarying fields. Capacitance, resistance, inductance, elements of electric circuits. Lectures: three hours per week. Tutorial:
one hour per week.
INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING
INDU 211 Introduction to Production and Manufacturing Systems (3credits)
History of industrial engineering. Role of industrial engineers. Types of manufacturing and production systems. Material flow
systems. Job design and work measurement. Introduction to solution methodologies for problems which relate to the design and
operation of integrated production systems of humans, machines, information, and materials. Lectures: three hours per week.
Tutorial: one hour per week.
INDU 311 Simulation of Industrial Systems (3.5 credits)
Prerequisite: ENGR 371. Modelling techniques in simulation; application of discrete simulation techniques to model industrial
systems; random number generation and testing; design of simulation experiments using different simulation languages; output
data analysis. Lectures: three hours per week. Laboratory: two hours per week, alternate weeks. Tutorial: one hour per week.
INDU 421 Facilities Design and Material Handling Systems (3.5 credits)
Prerequisite: INDU 311 previously or concurrently; INDU 320. An introduction to planning and design of production and
manufacturing. Facility layout and location. Material handling systems and equipment specifications. Computeraided facilities
planning. Lectures: three hours per week. Tutorial: one hour per week. Laboratory: two hours per week, alternate weeks.
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING
MECH 211 Mechanical Engineering Drawing (3.5credits)
Introduction to graphic language anddesign means and techniques. The third and the first angle projections. Orthographic
projection of points, lines, planes and solids. Principal and auxiliary views. Views in a given direction. Sectional views. Intersection
of lines, planes and solids. Development of surfaces. Drafting practices. Dimensioning, fits and tolerancing. Computeraided
drawing and solid modelling. Working drawings detail and assembly drawing. Design practice. Machine elements representation.
Lectures: three hours per week. Tutorial: two hours per week includes learning of a CAD software. Laboratory: two hours per
week, alternate weeks.
MECH 415 Advanced Programming for Mechanical and Industrial Engineers (3credits)
Prerequisite: MECH 215. Class definitions. Designing classes and member functions. Constructors and destructors. Class
libraries and their uses. Input and output. Data abstraction and encapsulation. Introduction to software engineering. Computer
graphics and visualization. Numerical methods. Advanced mechanical and industrial engineering applications. This course
includes a substantial project. Lectures: three hours per week. Tutorial: one hour per week.
MECH 423 Casting, Welding, Heat Treating, and NonDestructive Testing (3.5credits)
Prerequisite: MECH 221. Comparative analysis of the various techniques of casting, welding, powder fabrication, finishing, and
nondestructive testing. Consideration of the control parameters that are essential to define both automation and robot application.
Materials behaviour which determines product microstructure and properties. Technology and theory of solidification, normalizing,
quenching, surface hardening, tempering, aging, and thermomechanical processing for steels, cast irons and Al, Cu, Ni and Ti
alloys. Energy conservation, worker safety, quality control, and product liability. Lectures: three hours per week. Tutorial: one hour
per week. Laboratory: two hours per week, alternate weeks.