The Education of the Extractive Metallurgist-A Personal View
 
    
    - Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 3
- File Size:
- 240 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1987
Abstract
In the last several years we have seen the  demise of the Department of Mining and  Metallurgy at the University of Melbourne, the  removal of extraction metallurgy from the  Department of Metallurgy and incorporation of  it within a School of Mines at the University  of New South Wales, and the joining of a small  Department of Metallurgy with a Department of  Chemical Engineering to form a Department of  Chemical and Materials Engineering at the  University of Newcastle. Most of these  changes have been forced by the logical  application of the principles of accounting,  the currency for such accounting being the  Whole Student Unit (WSU). It is not my intent  to address the problem of attracting young  people into courses in metallurgy (including  extraction metallurgy) which, at present, is  the only way to introduce black ink into the  WSU accounting ledger. Rather, I wish to  express my disquiet over the trends,  illustrated by some of the above occurrences,  of separating out extractive metallurgy from  METALLURGY by suggesting in broad terms how a  course in metallurgy should be structured. I  firmly believe that the mechanical  metallurgist and materials engineer need an  exposure to chemical and extractive  metallurgy; similarly, the extractive and  process metallurgist should, in my view, have  a good grounding in the interrelationships  between composition, structure, and  properties, this topic being the core of the  basic subject physical metallurgy.
Citation
APA: (1987) The Education of the Extractive Metallurgist-A Personal View
MLA: The Education of the Extractive Metallurgist-A Personal View. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1987.
