CB1. Students have demonstrated possession and understanding of knowledge in an area of study that builds on the foundation of general secondary education, and is usually at a level that, while relying on advanced textbooks, also includes some aspects that involve knowledge from the cutting edge of their field of study.
CB2. Students are able to apply their knowledge to their work or vocation in a professional manner and possess the competences usually demonstrated through the development and defence of arguments and problem solving within their field of study.
CB3. Students have the ability to gather and interpret relevant data (usually within their field of study) in order to make judgements which include reflection on relevant social, scientific or ethical issues.
CB4. Students should be able to communicate information, ideas, problems and solutions to both specialist and non-specialist audiences.
CB5. Students will have developed the learning skills necessary to undertake further study with a high degree of autonomy.
CG3. Acquire the abilities to draft, sign and develop projects in the area of energy engineering for construction, renovation, repair, preservation, demolition, manufacture, installation, assembly or utilization of: structures, mechanical equipment and energetic facilities and to represent and understand technical documentation.
CG5. Acquire the ability to lead and organize energy engineering project activities.
CG8. Know and deal with current legislation in addition to mandatory specifications, regulations and norms within the energy engineering field.
CG10. Being able to work in a multi-lingual and multidisciplinary environment
CE16 Módulo CRI. Knowledge of the organizational structure and functions of a project office.
TFG1. Original individual work presented and defended in the presence of a university examining committee. It should consist of a project in the area of energy engineering technologies, and be of a professional nature, synthesizing and integrating the competences acquired in the program
CT1. Ability to communicate knowledge orally as well as in writing to a specialized and non-specialized public.
CT2. Ability to establish good interpersonal communication and to work in multidisciplinary and international teams.
CT3. Ability to organize and plan work, making appropriate decisions based on available information, gathering and interpreting relevant data to make sound judgement within the study area.
CT4. Motivation and ability to commit to lifelong autonomous learning to enable graduates to adapt to any new situation.
By the end of this content area, students will be able to have:
RA1.2 a systematic understanding of the key aspects and concepts of their branch of engineering;
RA2.1 the ability to apply their knowledge and understanding to identify, formulate and solve engineering problems using established methods;
RA3.2 an understanding of design methodologies, and an ability to use them.
RA4.1 the ability to conduct searches of literature, and to use data bases and other sources of information;
RA5.1 the ability to select and use appropriate equipment, tools and methods;
RA5.3 an understanding of applicable techniques and methods, and of their limitations;
RA5.4 an awareness of the non-technical implications of engineering practice.
RA6.2 use diverse methods to communicate effectively with the engineering community and with society at large;
RA6.3 demonstrate awareness of the health, safety and legal issues and responsibilities of engineering practice, the impact of engineering solutions in a societal and environmental context, and commit to professional ethics, responsibilities and norms of engineering practice;
RA6.5. recognise the need for, and have the ability to engage in independent, life-long learning.