2020-2021 / TSTG0571-1

Placement

Duration

150h Internship

Number of credits

 Master in architecture (120 ECTS)2 crédits 

Lecturer

Jean-Claude Donneau, Karl Simon

Coordinator

N...

Language(s) of instruction

French language

Organisation and examination

All year long

Schedule

Schedule online

Units courses prerequisite and corequisite

Prerequisite or corequisite units are presented within each program

Learning unit contents

By the end of the second term of the second year of the Masters, students should have completed a fifteen day work placement at an ARCHITECT'S OFFICE. This experience aims to make the link between the classes and reality of exercising the profession. Students should participate in the work of the office following the instructions given by the internship supervisor who must, in this regard, be registered with the ORDRE DES ARCHITECTES in Belgium.
Students may propose other forms of office internship (internships in architects' offices abroad, in a company, etc.) on condition that this has been approved by the course leader with at least ten days spent in an architect's office.
The internship should result in a REPORT to be submitted at the end of the 2nd term of the second year of the Mastersn in week 15 (date, place and time to be specified in advance by the teaching staff) ; the document will be graded in the same way as other courses and is worth 2 ECTS. The report will be at least 25 A4 pages long, in portrait format, in standard, legible 12pt font.

It consists of:
- completing the classes through observations which illustrate what has been observed or discovering what has not yet been observed.
- taking account of the logical succession of stages in construction and the concept of the time required to accomplish these tasks
- asking questions likely to clarify, specify, and consolidate theoretical concepts: understanding working methods, implementation, how a site is organised, etc.
- experiencing and observing life in an architect's office
- reporting on the experience

In this context, students may address the following tasks:
Ø Meetings with clients, entrepreneurs, public authorities, partners, etc.
Ø Pre-project and project sketches, etc.
Ø Town planning applications
Ø Descriptive surveying and specifications
Ø Technical details
Ø On-site work
Ø ...

On the understanding that some tasks cannot be addressed in a short time internship.
 
N.B.:
An internship in drawing and CAD alone is insufficient. It Is likely that students will have to become involved in projects which are already underway and the student will be forbidden from copying, in any form, documents from the office without the permission of the internship supervisor. Students are obliged to behave unobtrusively and to respect the intellectual property of the office in which they are based.

Learning outcomes of the learning unit

By the end of the year, students should be able to demonstrate their ability to:

- integrate into an existing working team in a professional manner
- master the art of observation, analysis and summary of various subjects addressed during training
- appropriately read internal and/or external phenomena which affect practical implementation as opposed to the theoretical concepts covered in class.
- to have an objective opinioin, for example, on the construction techniques taught and the reality "on the ground".
- preparing schedules of quantities and specifications in relation to practival projects in also an interesting and very educational approach.
- in their report, students must avoid listing tasks they carried out on a day-to-day basis, but should summarise these.

Particular merit will be awarded to reports which explore, through detailed sketches and/or explicit reasoning, valid mediation procedures which can correct, adapt or solve inadequate and/or imperfect technological situations.
In their reports, students must incorporate convincing elements from site visits including photos, sketches, objective opniions on the situations they experienced, corrections and/or comparisons with subjects which are taught and illustrated primarily through sketches.

Prerequisite knowledge and skills

None

Planned learning activities and teaching methods

Appointments can be organised on student request to enable them to ask any questions relevant to the next stage of their work.

Mode of delivery (face to face, distance learning, hybrid learning)

Organised meetings.

Organisational adjustments related to the current health context

Internship documents:
10 days before the start of your internship, you must have completed and signed with the internship supervisor, the agreement and the risk analysis in a copy, and send everything by email to the secretariat to Ms. Joëlle VANCRAYWINKEL (jvancraywinkel @ uliege .be) for signature by the Faculty Director. They will be returned to you by post in duplicate (one for you and one for your internship supervisor).
Filing of the report:
Report to be submitted at the start of the twentieth week, i.e. Monday June 14, 2021 via e-campus, PDF format (file name: Name_Firstname_TSTG571-1).
Reminders:
- As soon as the internship documents signed by the parties are returned, a copy will be placed by you on e-campus under the heading "conventions" - The internship certificate is only to be completed at the end of the internship and is the only document to be attached to the report. - If the place of internship is abroad, an authorization request from the rector is required. https://my.student.uliege.be/cms/c_11156513/fr/myetudiant-demande-d-autori

Recommended or required readings

None.

Assessment methods and criteria

Below you will find information on the evaluation methods planned for in-person and remote exams as well as those planned for hybrid sessions. Depending on how the health crisis evolves, the chosen method will be communicated to you no later than one month before the start of the exam session.

Any session :

- In-person

written exam

- Remote

written work

- If evaluation in "hybrid"

preferred remote


Additional information:

The content of the report should take into account in a relevant way all observations made on site; the report is a critical illustration of the student's participation in the tasks they have encountered. The report must be clear and well-structured. The style of the text must be adapted to the subject: it should be precise and thorough, and remain on the subject without being reduced to shorthand.
The report will be assessed on:
- its form: clarity, legibility, care, quality of formatting,
- its content: relevance and precision of comments, accuracy of observations, technical curiosity, strongly founded criticism, the logic of the conclusions, etc.
Through their reports, students should demonstrate that they have mastered the relationship between the different disciplinary fields in architecture.

Work placement(s)

The purpose of the course.

Organizational remarks

Work should be completed on time, in order to be able to take advantage of free periods during the class to carry out the work placement. The insurance which covers the students does not permit them to conduct on-site work. It is down to each student to conduct research and undertake the necessary steps to establish a work placement which meets the objectives in question.
Students may carry out all or part of their internship during the first year of the Masters, although logically, they will better understand the issues in the second year. The report must, in all cases, be submitted in the second year, as indicated above.

Contacts

Karl SIMON - Karl.Simon@ulg.ac.be
Jean Claude Donneau - jcdonneau@ulg.ac.be