DIT School of Electrical & Electronic Engineering
CEBE engineering school From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
CEBE engineering school From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Dublin Institute of Technology (DIT) School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering (SEEE) is the largest and one of the longest established Schools of Electrical and Electronic Engineering in Ireland. It is located at the DIT Kevin Street Campus in Dublin City, as part of the College of Engineering & Built Environment (CEBE).
Parts of this article (those related to All parts) need to be updated. The reason given is: No longer in this form, needs to be either made historical or built into the TUD article set.. (August 2023) |
Irish: Scoil na hInnealtóireachta Leictrí agus Leictreonaí | |
Parent institution | College of Engineering & Built Environment Dublin Institute of Technology |
---|---|
Head of School | Prof. Michael Conlon[1] |
Academic staff | 87[2] |
Students | 1,200+[3] |
Location | Dublin 8 , |
Campus | Kevin Street |
Affiliations | IEI SEFI EUA IAU Cisco Systems |
Website | http://www.dit.ie/electricalelectronicengineering/ |
The DIT School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering is the largest education provider of Electrical and Electronic Engineering in Ireland in terms of programme diversity, staff and student numbers, covering a wide range of engineering disciplines including; Communications Engineering, Computer Engineering, Power Engineering, Electrical Services Engineering, Control Engineering, Energy Management and Electronic Engineering.[4] The school includes well established research centres in areas such as photonics, energy, antennas, communications and electrical power, with research outputs in; biomedical engineering, audio engineering, sustainable design, assistive technology and health informatics.[3]
Educational courses in technical engineering commenced at Kevin St. Dublin 8 in 1887. The school seeks accreditation for its programmes from the appropriate Irish and international professional body organisations, such as the Institution of Engineers of Ireland, offering education across the full range of third level National Framework of Qualifications (NFQ) Levels, from Level 6 to Level 10 (apprenticeships to post-doctoral degrees).[4][5]
The school currently delivers 23 individual programmes to over 1,200 students and has an output of approximately 350 graduates per year.[3]
The head of the school is Professor Michael Conlon.[1]
Electrical & Electronic Engineering is expected to be the first School from the College of Engineering and Built Environment to move to the new multibillion-euro DIT Grangegorman Campus in September 2018.[6][7]
The college has strong industry links, and many programmes offer placement periods in the industry, allowing students to gain valuable real-world experience. The school focuses on research with a strong emphasis on producing relevant ideas to help Irish industry compete globally. Each year SEEE research produces patents and technologies to license, this includes a successful spin-off company in the field of mobile communications.[8] The school hosts four research centres;
The school also has two research groups – the tPOT Research Group and Energy Resource Group – as well as involvement with the Dublin Energy Lab.[9]
DIT SEEE research is recognised internationally for its impact and quality. Researchers in the school have built strong collaborations with worldwide renowned groups in Europe, China, India, and elsewhere, allowing the school's researchers unique access to research knowledge and facilities.[8] DIT is an accredited Cisco Networking Academy, Instructor Training Center (ITC) and Academy Support Center (ASC).[10]
Full-Time Level 8 (Honours Degree Programmes)
Full-Time Level 7 (Ordinary Degree Programmes)
Part-Time Level 8 (Honours Degree Programmes)
Part-Time Level 7 (Ordinary Degree Programmes)
Full-Time Level 9
Part-Time Level 9
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.
Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.