Nuclear engineering summer camp
27 Jul 2012
Manchester, UK - Nuclear engineering was on the curriculum for a group of 50 teenagers taking part in a four-day residential course at the University of Manchester.
The course was organised by The Smallpeice Trust, in collaboration with the Engineering Construction Industry Training Board (ECITB) and URENCO.
The teenagers were given a chance to get a hands-on experience, looking at the work being done in the field of nuclear engineering and the career opportunities available.
The four-day summer camp with a difference took place from the 23-26 July. The focus was the practical project to ‘design and make’ a working centrifuge to time and budget, supported by presentations and workshops.
Students also learnt aspects of team and project management as well as the physics behind centrifuge separation.
“We weren’t exactly sure exactly what to expect from the course,” said one student who attended. “But we learnt considerably more than we had hoped about nuclear physics and engineering skills.”
The course gave the students practical experience of working with others to solve problems, according to David Edwards, chief executive, ECITB.
“Feedback from the students is highly positive, this is due to the mix of learning and provision of team building activities,” said Edwards. “Our partnership with The Smallpeice Trust is helping to create engineers of the future.”
The nuclear engineering course is run by independent charity, The Smallpeice Trust and is part of a programme of residential courses to help people aged 13 to 18 learn and develop skills in engineering, design, technology and manufacturing.
The Trust says it has reached out to 18,175 students across the UK in the past year through its residential courses and ‘STEM enrichment’ days,