Description
Western Aerospace Centre Prize 2016
Prize competition deadline is 9th March 2015. Note the presentation evening date and time are to be decided.
The purpose of
the prize is to encourage the further professional development of young
engineers living and working in the West of England and South Wales,
following graduation with a first
degree.
The format of the
competition is designed to test the entrant’s communication skills when
delivering technical information on their subject and the potential
benefit to the business / aviation
industry, to a technical audience.
A
750 word abstract, summarising the author’s work on an aerospace
related research or development industrial project, must be submitted to
the Western Aerospace Centre no later than 9th March 2016. The
competition is open to self-employed individuals, as well as those
employed by or studying with engineering organisations. Qualifying
entries on any aviation related topic will be accepted. The detailed
rules are presented below.
The selected finalists will be invited to
give a 20 minute presentation at the Presentation Evening scheduled for
April 2016 at the University of Bristol, in front of a panel including
engineering directors from the region’s leading Aerospace organisations.
Subject
to confirmation, the four finalists may have a full day with the Red
Arrows. The overall winner will receive a £500 first
prize, runner up cash prizes will also be awarded.
This is a chance to represent your company or organisation, to
gain exposure to senior aerospace representatives from industry
and academia, and for employers to encourage professional
development amongst their engineers.
COMPETITION RULES
1.
The competition is open to practising graduate engineers and
post-graduate engineering students who are living, studying or working
in IMechE Region 9 (Wessex), 10 (Western) or 12 (South Wales) and who
are aged 35 or under on 31st January 2016.
2. Submissions could be
based on work that is being carried out on an industrial engineering
project or for a further qualification e.g. MSc, PhD, EngD or any other
formal professional development programme completed in the recent past.
Undergraduate (including MEng) project work is NOT eligible for
consideration.
3.
Submissions can be based upon the author’s individual project, or part
of a group project providing the author’s contribution to the project is
made clear.
4. An abstract of not more than 750 words in the main
body (excluding title, contact details etc), summarising the author’s
work on an aerospace related research or development project, should be
submitted to the Western Aerospace Centre by 31st January 2016.
Candidates are encouraged to have entries reviewed prior to submission
by a suitable technical authority in your company or university, to
provide assurance that entries are of sufficiently high standard.
5. More than one entry per organisation is permitted.
6.
Each submission must be entirely the work of its author and be based on
current or recent activities in the field of Aerospace. Abstracts must
not have been previously submitted for any other prize competition,
published in the proceedings of professional bodies or publicly
presented. [Abstracts or papers that have been presented internally, as
academic assignments or reports of professional activity, are considered
not to have been formally published or presented.]
7. The candidate
abstracts from each organisation are to be submitted in soft copy to
Pauli Markkanen (Hon Secretary of the WAC) at
wacsec@imeche.org. They
should include contact details of the entrant, date of birth, and a
statement that the submission is entirely the work of the author and has
not previously been published elsewhere.
8. All authors must obtain permission from their employers/tutors, where appropriate, to publish any work
that is considered proprietary. Gaining such permission is entirely the responsibility of the candidate.
9.
The adjudicating panel, appointed by the WAC Committee, will consist of
senior people drawn from both academic and industrial backgrounds.
10. Up to 4 finalists will be invited to proceed to the presentation evening, where they will make an oral
presentation of no more than 20 minutes duration, plus 10 minutes for questions.
11.
The panel will be looking for a well written and structured abstract
and presentation, also giving an appreciation of how the project relates
to the wider organisation’s business goals. The competition will test
the author’s technical knowledge and communication skills.
12. The
adjudicating panel will assess each presentation and the winner will be
announced at the Presentation Evening. A photograph and short biography
of the Winner, together with an abstract of their presentation, will be
published in IMechE literature and on the website. Submission of an
entry to
the competition is assumed as permission to publish associated photographs and abstracts on the website.
13.
The first prize of £500 will be awarded to the overall winner for the
best combined written abstract and oral presentation. Additionally,
there will be cash prizes for the runners-up.
14. The finalists may,
subject to confirmation, have a chance to visit the Red Arrows, which
includes the Squadron presentation, pilots’ inbrief for a training
sortie, watching the practice display at RAF Scampton (weather
permitting), followed by the in-depth debriefing. The finalists will
enjoy lunch with the pilots, and will have plenty of opportunities for
photographs, rounding off with an Engineering tour of the hangar.