On the historical nature of engineering practice. Towards a theoretical framework for engineering practice. The practical confrontation of engineers with a new design endeavour: The case of digital humanities. Engineering design teams: Considering the forests and the trees. Working together across disciplines. Engineering problem-solving in social contexts: ‘Collective wisdom’ and ‘ba’. Finding workable solutions: Portuguese engineering experience. Going back to heterogeneous engineering: The case of micro and nanotechnologies. Professional lock-in: Structural engineers, architects and the disconnect between discourse and practice. Observations of South Asian engineering practice. Mathematics in engineering practice: Tacit trumps tangible. Engineers’ professional learning: Through the lens of practice.
Bill Williams originally trained as a chemist at the National
University of Ireland and went on to work in education in Ireland,
UK, Eritrea, Kenya, Mozambique and Portugal and to run
international distance courses for the International Labour
Organization in various African countries.
He is a lecturer at the Barreiro School of Technology of Setubal
Polytechnic Institute in Portugal, where he teaches technical
communication to civil engineering and construction management
undergraduates. He has been an invited lecturer at IST, University
of Lisbon and the Technical University of Madrid.
He is an associate member of the Engineering Management and
Management Science Research Centre at IST, Lisbon (CEG-IST), has
been an active member of the European Working Group on Engineering
Education Research of SEFI since its inception in 2009 and is a
founder member of the Portuguese Society for Engineering Education
(SPEE).
José Figueiredo is a Professor in the Engineering and Management
Department of IST – University of Lisbon and a member of the
Engineering Management and Management Science Research Centre at
IST, Lisbon (CEG-IST). He is an Electronics Engineer with an MBA in
Information Management and a PhD in Industrial Engineering. He
currently teaches project management and communication skills. His
papers in conference proceedings, international journals and
international edition book chapters have focused principally on
project management and on Actor Network Theory.
In addition to his long-standing involvement with university
teaching he also set up two small companies in the information
technologies sector. He has been involved in consultancy work with
a number of Portuguese and international companies.
Professor James Trevelyan is a Winthrop Professor in the Mechanical
and Chemical Engineering School at The University of Western
Australia. His main area of research is engineering practice, and
he teaches design, sustainability, engineering practice and project
management.
He and his students produced the first industrial robot that can be
remotely operated via the internet in 1994. The robot has been
controlled by a conservatively estimated 500,000 people in dozens
of countries.
He was presented with the 1993 Engelberger Science and Technology
Award in Tokyo in recognition of his work, and has twice been
presented with the Japan Industrial Robot Association award for
best papers at ISIR conferences. His teaching has also been well
recognised: he was presented with the ASME Award for Mechanical and
Mechatronics Teaching at the 2003 AAEE Conference in Melbourne. He
has earned four distinguished teaching awards at UWA, and received
a further best paper award at the 2004 International Conference on
Engineering Education Research conference in the Czech Republic.
From 1996 till 2002 he researched landmine clearance methods and
his web site is an internationally respected reference point for
information on landmines. He was awarded with honorary membership
of the Society of Counter Ordnance Technology in 2002 for his
efforts, and was also elected a Fellow of the Institution of
Engineers Australia.
His recent work on engineering practice aims to understand how
engineering work is actually performed, an aspect of engineering
that was not previously researched in great depth. This research
has helped explain why engineering services in the developed world
seem to cost much more than they should, often much more than in
industrialised countries, a significant factor inhibiting poverty
reduction. Professor Trevelyan is working on education initiatives
to enable engineers everywhere to benefit from the insights
emerging from this research.
Professor Trevelyan’s web page is: http://www.mech.uwa.edu.au/jpt/
and this has a large amount of supplementary information on his
research and teaching.
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |