Course Title: Introduction to Engineering for the Human Body

Part A: Course Overview

Course Title: Introduction to Engineering for the Human Body

Credit Points: 12.00

Terms

Course Code

Campus

Career

School

Learning Mode

Teaching Period(s)

OENG1210

City Campus

Undergraduate

172H School of Engineering

Face-to-Face

Sem 2 2020,
Sem 2 2021,
Sem 2 2022

Course Coordinator: Assoc. Prof. David J. Garrett

Course Coordinator Phone: +61 403353730

Course Coordinator Email: david.garrett@rmit.edu.au

Course Coordinator Location: email for appointment

Course Coordinator Availability: email for appointment


Pre-requisite Courses and Assumed Knowledge and Capabilities

None


Course Description

In this course, you will begin to develop the skills to design and develop equipment and technologies that improve the lives of people affected by medical conditions. This course introduces the interface between engineering and the human body and the basic principles of anatomy and physiology. It will provide the foundational knowledge required for the program-specific application of biomedical engineering in the human body.

The course provides a broad introduction, as it applies, to future specialisation into biomedical electronics, lab on a chip, biosensors, implant engineering, assistive technologies and medical materials.


Objectives/Learning Outcomes/Capability Development

Upon successful completion of this course, you will be able to:

  1. Broadly understand the foundation of biomedical engineering and how it applies to the human body;
  2. Apply specialist terms and language associated with anatomy and physiology to describe the human body;
  3. Understand the interdisciplinary skills required to practice biomedical engineering.


This course contributes to the following Program Learning Outcomes (PLOs) for:
BH069 Bachelor of Engineering (Biomedical Engineering) (Honours)
BH073P22 Bachelor of Engineering (Electronic and Computer Systems Engineering) (Honours)

1 Knowledge and Skill Base
1.1. Comprehensive, theory-based understanding of the underpinning natural and physical sciences and the engineering fundamentals applicable to the engineering discipline.
1.3. In-depth understanding of specialist bodies of knowledge within the engineering discipline.
3 Professional and Personal Attributes
3.2.  Effective oral and written communication in professional and lay domains.

For more information on the program learning outcomes for your program, please see the program guide.


Overview of Learning Activities

This Course will use a range of learning activities including Pre-recorded lectures, workshop/practical sessions, online resources and self-directed learning.


Overview of Learning Resources

Learning resources in this course include:

  • Online learning activities;
  • Recommended readings from textbooks, online sources, and designated references; and
  • Workshop/tutorial activities.

Online resources will be made available via the RMIT Learning Management System (LMS).


Overview of Assessment

This course has no hurdle requirements.

Assessment Tasks

Assessment Task 1: Online Quizzes
Weighting 15%
This assessment task supports CLOs 1 and 2.

Assessment Task 2: Workshop/practical learning activities and student reflection (WK1, WK2, WK3)
Weighting 45%
This assessment task supports CLOs 1, 2 and 3.

Assessment Task 3: Project + Group Presentations  (30%+10%) 
Weighting 40%
This assessment task supports CLOs 1, 2 and 3.