Overview
Overview
Take the next step in your engineering career and learn how to design and optimise complex systems that power modern industry. This course is ideal if you’re ready to move beyond technical execution and into roles where you can improve performance, enhance productivity and influence how organisations operate.
Industrial engineers integrate engineering principles, data analytics and decision-making to improve the performance of complex systems. On this course, you’ll develop the expertise to analyse systems, streamline operations and solve real-world challenges across areas such as manufacturing, logistics and supply chains. With a strong focus on advanced modelling and optimisation, you’ll learn how to turn data into practical and measurable outcomes.
This course opens up career opportunities across sectors such as energy, transport, manufacturing and finance. Whether you’re aiming to step into a specialist engineering role or progress into project, operations or systems management, you’ll graduate with the skills to lead system improvements and deliver operational impact.
What you'll learn
- have demonstrated knowledge and understanding that is founded upon and extends and/or enhances that typically associated with the bachelor-level, and that provides a basis or opportunity for originality in developing and/or applying ideas, often within a research context.
- can apply their knowledge and understanding, and problem-solving abilities in new or unfamiliar environments within broader (or multidisciplinary) contexts related to industrial engineering.
- can communicate their conclusions, and the knowledge and rationale underpinning these, to specialist and non-specialist audiences clearly and unambiguously.
- can integrate knowledge and handle complexity, and formulate judgements with incomplete or limited information, but that include reflecting on social and ethical responsibilities linked to the application of their knowledge and judgements.
- comprehend that industrial engineering is an international discipline with varying perspectives as demonstrated in the diversity of opinion identified while undertaking this course.
- have the learning skills to allow them to continue to study and practice in a manner that may be largely self-directed or autonomous.