1 / 18

Developing New ITS Professional Capacity - a South African perspective

Developing New ITS Professional Capacity - a South African perspective. Johann Andersen University of Stellenbosch ITS World 2012, Vienna. Overview. ITS in South Africa – relevance of subject area The ITS professional ITS programme at Stellenbosch University Academic programme

kiaria
Download Presentation

Developing New ITS Professional Capacity - a South African perspective

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Developing New ITS Professional Capacity- a South African perspective Johann Andersen University of Stellenbosch ITS World 2012, Vienna IBEC Sunday Workshop: ITS Professional Capacity Building 21 October 2012

  2. Overview • ITS in South Africa – relevance of subject area • The ITS professional • ITS programme at Stellenbosch University • Academic programme • Research programme • Industry training

  3. ITS in South Africa • Extensive transport technology investment in major cities since 2008 • Freeway management systems • Rapid Rail Systems • Bus Rapid Transit Systems • Urban Traffic Control

  4. ITS in South Africa • Establishment of Transport Management Centres • Value of ITS systems deployed > R4.0 billion

  5. ITS in South Africa • Deployment ongoing • Major challenge: ensure sustainability of systems deployed • Operations • Maintenance • Industry need: • Education • Training

  6. The ITS Professional • Today’s ITS professional: • Either Civil Engineer (Transport) with some technology “know-how” and IT skills, or • Electric/Electronic engineer picking up on transport engineering • But what should he/she look like?

  7. The ITS Professional • Some thoughts w.r.t. developing this professional: • Why don’t we just teach transport with a strong ITS focus? • Why not devise a single university course in ITS? • Can a novice jump into this field with no previous exposure? • Is formal teaching alone enough?

  8. Stellenbosch ITS Programme • Three components: • Engineering education • Research • Industry training • Multidisciplinary approach • Civil Engineering (Transportation) • E & E Engineering • Industrial Engineering • Geographic Information Systems

  9. Academic Programme: Engineering Education • Undergraduate • Formal teaching: • Selected classes in ITS as part of traffic engineering & transportation planning courses (Civil Engineering) • To be expanded to guest lecturing at E&E undergraduates • Research: • Fourth year projects in ITS • Civil engineering and E&E engineering • Continue awareness

  10. Academic Programme: Engineering Education • Post-graduate • Course in ITS (also attended by industry professionals) • Duration: one week • Contents • Systems design approach, technology, communications, operations, maintenance, legal and contractual, procurement • Exposure in related disciplines (including communications, database development, GIS applications) • Homework and project requirement for registered students

  11. Academic Programme: Engineering Education – typical graduate course programme

  12. Academic Programme: Engineering Education • Post-graduate • Masters in Civil Engineering (ITS) • Courses: • ITS, various transportation, some industrial engineering (OR, database development etc) • E&E focus? • Filling the gap from a transportation engineering perspective • Industrial engineers do Masters in Civil Engineering • E&E engineers – interact on projects and informally • Some administrative challenges

  13. Academic Programme: Engineering Education • Short courses • Duration: 1-2 days • Typical topics: • ITS Tools for analysis • Incident Management and ITS • Electronic Payment in Transport • Aimed at professionals • Needs driven

  14. ITS Research Programme • Partnership with implementating authorities and ITS industry • Emphasis on developing country environment • Research areas: • Centralised Database development to facilitate Sustainable Modal Integrated Systems • Enhanced Incident Management Systems through technology deployment • Reliability of Travel time measurement • Use of cellular platforms for traffic information. • Use of cellular networks for real-time data collection • Minibus occupancy sensor development • Vehicular ad-hoc networks (connected vehicle) • Intersection collision detection with Radar • Vehicle-based remote (image and video) sensing

  15. ITS Research Programme • Local Industry collaboration • Establishment of “Smart Travel Lab” • Hardware & software, Traffic controllers, microscopic simulation software • Access to real time data from Freeway Management Systems and BRT data • Laboratory environment for students • Expose undergraduates to ITS field • Invited industry to become partners • Sponsor equipment/software /hardware • Sponsor research

  16. ITS Industry Training • Address industry needs • Establishment of training programme for non-engineering ITS industry • 5-day Certificate course in ITS operations • 3-day course in Incident Management Systems • Response to needs of industry to ensure sustainability

  17. Some random final thoughts • Should we think wider than the ITS programme? • We need special people to make this work • Form an ITS interest group at the University • Be flexible in putting a programme together (different entry routes) • Do not push or align the programme with a specific department

  18. Thank You! jandersen@sun.ac.za

More Related