Hands On Engineering and IT

Introduce your Year 10 students to engineering and technology concepts and issues through our interactive workshops.

2024 dates

Day 1: Thursday 4 April 2024

Register for Day 1

Day 2: Friday 5 April 2024

Register for Day 2

September sessions

Wednesday 25 September - Thursday 26 September 2024

Workshops

Work with us to create a tailor-made schedule for your classroom needs. The below workshops are available:

  • Explore your neighbourhood with a Digital Twin

    In this workshop you will explore your neighbourhood with a state-of-the-art Digital Twin platform. This platform integrates spatial, social and economic data, historic, real-time, and future. This workshop has 2 parts.

  • Making an impact with engineering

    An introductory workshop for those who are interested in engineering. Hear from our current mechanical and electrical engineering students about their studies, the impact they are making through internships and work on a case study using engineering problem-solving techniques.

  • Ethics of artificial intelligence

    Imagine a runaway trolley raging down the tracks toward five people. You stand at a railway switch with the power to divert the trolley to another track, where just one person stands. Do you do it? What if there is a computer automated to make the decision? Professor Tim Miller discusses the ethics of autonomy using this and other examples.

  • So you think you know maths?

    Professor Andrew Ooi, Mechanical Engineer, and Dr Jillian Kenny, Civil Engineer, demonstrate how mathematics has been used in the fight against COVID 19.

  • Bridge building

    Participants will learn the engineering concepts of bridge building guided by our resident bridge building expert. Materials required: paper, straws and sticky tape and tin-can weights.

  • Demystifying cryptography

    In this session we will look into cryptographic techniques behind secure communication and privacy-preserving data analysis. You will get a chance to “break” simple encryption methods and participate in a protocol for protecting personal information.

  • What makes a good IT Professional? Lessons from my experience in the IT industry

    Step into the world of tomorrow with our masterclass! Discover the thrilling landscape of software engineering and AI, and unlock insights into high-demand IT careers that will shape industries for years to come. Join us as we uncover the magic of algorithms, artificial intelligence, virtual reality, games, and their real-world applications.

  • A Career in Engineering: the ‘real world’ problems supercomputers can’t solve

    Professor Andrew Ooi, Mechanical Engineer at the University of Melbourne will take you through an introduction of engineering and encourage students to creatively develop a concept for re-engineering a common object. Engineers need to use creativity and critical thinking to solve problems

  • How can we engineer it better?

    See how computer simulations can be used to address many engineering problems such as minimising noise from an aircraft, controlling temperature in a high rise building and optimising the design of stents to minimise the occurrence of heart attacks. In this session, an explanation is given on why these simulations are so expensive and why solving “real world” problems is still beyond the capability of the fastest supercomputers available today.

  • Light, lasers and Nanotechnology.

    What is light? How do engineers utilise light? In this session we'll explore the fundamentals of lasers and their applications. You'll be able to dive into some of the research being conducted at Melbourne, including nanotechnology and the manufacturing of nanoscale materials and products.

  • Prosthetic Limb Workshop (produced by Engineers Without Borders)

    The Prosthetic Leg workshop focuses on promoting the medical side of engineering and provides students with the knowledge and opportunity to think laterally and innovatively.  Students learn about the social issues influencing the work of biomedical engineers in Cambodia and nations whose public health similarly deal with the repercussions of war. Students will acquire a general understanding on the importance of connectivity, load, and stability when designing a robust and fully functional mechanism. The activity also requires students to undergo a process of material selection while assessing them on cost, resources and effectiveness of design. In pairs, students in this workshop are provided with a specific time frame and limited resources in order to construct a prosthetic leg suitable for an amputee. Once the construction process has been finalised, one student of each pair will volunteer to test the design.

  • Water bottle rockets

    What makes rockets fly straight? What makes rockets fly far? Why use water to make the rocket fly? Students are challenged to design and build rockets from two-liter plastic soda bottles that travel as far and straight as possible or stay aloft as long as possible.

  • The Terrestrial Laser Scanner workshop

    Terrestrial laser scanning is like using a special tool on the ground to make really detailed maps of the land and surroundings. It's similar to how planes use LIDAR to map from the sky, but this one works from the ground. This technology is relatively new and gives us super clear maps. Our Melbourne University Geomatics Student club (MUGS) will take students through the laser scanning workshop.

  • Building the Future: Exploring New Technologies and Opportunities in Civil Engineering Building Services

    This session provides an introduction to the field of civil engineering building services, with a focus on new technologies and opportunities. Students will have the opportunity to practice with equipment and participate in a design challenge activity, with the aim of inspiring and equipping them with practical knowledge and experience in this field.

Venue

Parkville Campus

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A student experiences the Computer Assisted Rehabilitation Environment (CAREN)
Students participate in the Hands on Engineering Motorsports workshop.

Enquiries

Email our Recruitment Coordinator: schoolsengagement-engit@unimelb.edu.au

Students participate in the Hands on Engineering robotics workshop.

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