Engineering Technology/Electrical Certificate

Pathway:

Electrical

Certificate Type:

Basic

Curriculum Code:

ENT.ELC.CERT (C446I)

Total Program Credits: 16

The Engineering Technology/Electrical Certificate program provides students with electrical skills in an industry setting. Students are taught electrical processes and safety such as OSHA general requirements for electrical work and equipment, electrical equipment, grounding, electrical standards and codes, electrical installation, and wiring. In addition, students will learn blueprints/schematics and specification reading, and other electrical processes needed for employability. Graduates will find entry-level employment as electrical technicians, industrial maintenance technicians, as well as apprentice level electricians, architecture, or journeymen.

Program Learning Outcomes

Upon successful completion of the Engineering Technology/Electrical Certificate, the graduate will be able to:

  • identify electronic and electrical parts, both single and three-phase;
  • interpret electrical wiring diagrams and symbols;
  • prevent hazards on a construction site in accordance with OSHA 10-hour training guidelines;
  • use the current National Electrical Code (NEC) for residential wiring in class projects;
  • explain the principal operations of an electrical system components;
  • demonstrate safety practices required for operation of an electrical system; and
  • present as part of a design team the ethics that should be practiced in designing a product.

(Fall 2021)

Placement Measures

Program Map for Students

Semester One: Fall

CourseCategoryCredits
ARC 102 OSHA 10-Hour Construction Training

Core Course

1

COT 107 Codes, Specifications and Print Reading

Core Course

3

ENT 104 Electricity Basic Fundamentals

Core Course

3

ENT 201 # Electrical Residential Wiring

Core Course

3

ENT 202 # Electricity Sustainable Applications

Core Course

4

ENT 203 # Electrical Codes and Standards

Core Course

2

Total Semester Credits:16

See ENT course descriptions; ARC course descriptions and COT course descriptions.

Chairperson: Antigone Sharris, Ext. 3622; email: antigonesharris@triton.edu; Cell Phone: (773) 580-8807

 KEY
(AAS/CERT)
General Education Communications, Fine Arts, Humanities, Life Science, Mathematics, Physical Science, Social and Behavioral Science (see individual degree requirements).
Core Course Course(s) listed in a semester the student is required to take.
Program Elective Course(s) that faculty recommend and are listed in the ‘Program Electives’ section (if any) for this program. If intending to transfer, choose courses accepted by your transfer institution.
General Elective Course(s) chosen by the student, if needed, above and beyond core courses and program electives (if any), to complete the Program Total Credits.
◊ symbol This course is articulated. (course transfers to 3 or more Illinois State schools, as an elective or equal course-to-course)
# symbol This course has a prerequisite. (course(s) student takes prior to taking this course)