Practical Field Training
Rules and Guidelines
- Students must complete an 8-week field training in an industrial or service facility related to their program, under the full supervision of the faculty. Training may also be conducted within the college in a similar environment.
- The academic advisor is responsible for overseeing the field training.
- A contact person at the company providing the training must be designated.
- The student must submit a technical report to their academic advisor at the end of the training period.
- The field training is divided into 4 weeks at the end of the second and third levels, and it may also be completed during the fourth level of study.
- Students in interdisciplinary programs can start field training after completing at least 70% of the credited hours for the freshman level, with the training period not exceeding two weeks.
- By any means, training for a period of 6 weeks at any level is allowed for only one time during the study duration.
- Field training is evaluated on a pass/fail basis and does not affect the cumulative GPA.
- Students in interdisciplinary programs should pay the supervision fees for the field training at a rate of 2 Credit Hours each academic year during which the student is trained.
- For specialized programs, if the student benefits from training opportunities provided by the college, they must pay fees for field training supervision as determined by the faculty council at the beginning of the academic year in which the student undertakes the training.
- The college council, based on the recommendation of the Education and Student Affairs Committee, issues a list of internationally recognized professional certifications (such as OSHA, NDT, LEED AP, IASP, IPMAC, CCNA, etc.) and the corresponding practical load. If a student obtains one of these certifications, it is counted as a training program equivalent to the corresponding practical load.
- The Faculty Council issues - based on the recommendation of the Education and Student Affairs Committee issues a list of internationally recognized professional certifications (such as OSHA, NDT, LEED AP, IASP, IPMAC, CCNA, etc.) and the corresponding working load. If a student obtains one of these certifications, it is counted as a training program equivalent to the corresponding working load.
- Training Handbook
- Student Guide for Training Application on IMS