• 实时天气:多伦多 28°
    温度感觉: 27°
  • 实时天气:温哥华 21°
    温度感觉: 23°
  • 实时天气:卡加利 28°
    温度感觉: 26°
  • 实时天气:蒙特利尔 24°
    温度感觉: 28°
  • 实时天气:温尼伯 24°
    温度感觉: 24°
查看: 1523|回复: 2
打印 上一主题 下一主题

加拿大军队招聘工程师

跳转到指定楼层
楼主
发表于 2007-1-7 20:37:25 | 只看该作者 回帖奖励 |倒序浏览 |阅读模式
Engineer (Officer)

Company:

Canadian Forces
Location: CA-ON-Mississauga

Status:

Full Time, Employee
Job Category:
Engineering


Job Description

Engineer (Officer)

Overview

In battle, your primary role is to help the army live, move and fight while denying the same to the enemy. Your secondary role is to fight as infantry when called upon. Your focus will always be on combat readiness.


What They Do
Engineer Officers are commissioned members of the Canadian Military Engineers, a Branch which (like the Armour, Infantry and Artillery) belongs to the Combat Arms. In battle, the primary role of Engineers (ENGRS) is to help the army live, move and fight while denying the same to the enemy. Their secondary role is to fight as infantry when called upon.

You will begin your Engineer Officer career as a Troop Commander leading up to 40 sappers and several armoured vehicles. Depending on the mission, your Troop may be composed of combat engineers trained as field, armoured or heavy equipment engineers able and ready to fulfill numerous military tasks. The focus will always be on combat readiness. As a Troop Commander you will be the principal planner and supervisor for all tasks assigned to you by your Squadron Commander. Working in conjunction with your Senior Non-Commissioned Members, you will be expected to solve complex problems under stress and various climactic conditions. You may be performing tasks such as breaching minefields, using explosives to destroy a road or bridge, constructing a bridge or ferry using re-usable military equipment, building a combat road, disposing explosive ordnance on the battlefield, or constructing obstacles out
of concrete, timber and wire.

You may be supporting civil authorities during national emergencies in Canada or be deployed abroad on operational missions. As an integral component of the Combat Arms, you will be responsible for force protection tasks wherever you are deployed, which includes the construction of habitable camps. You will always have to be ready to fight alongside others to accomplish the Battle Group mission.


Qualification Requirements
Personal Characteristics
ENGR Officers must be dedicated team members and selfless leaders. They must be able to solve complex technical problems in stressful situations, even when fatigued and uncomfortable. They must have strong character and be physically fit.

Formal Qualifications
The preferred degree is a Bachelor of Civil, Mechanical, or Electrical (Power) Engineering. A Bachelor degree in Science (Applied), Math, Physics, Chemical/Fuels and Materials, Fire Protection, Nuclear, Geomatics/Survey Engineering or Engineering Management may also be considered. Occasionally applicants with a three-year Community College Technology Diploma in Architectural Engineering, Water and Air Resources, Heating and Air Conditioning, Civil Engineering, Communication Engineering, or Mechanical Engineering are considered. All applicants must meet Canadian Forces (CF) medical and physical fitness standards, and go through a selection process, which includes tests and interviews.
Regular Officer Training Plan (ROTP) – The ROTP comprises a full undergraduate education at the Royal Military College of Canada or another accredited Canadian university, immediately followed by two to five years of obligatory service, depending on the period of academic subsidy. To qualify for the ROTP, you must have completed high school with the appropriate university-oriented credits, or be in Grade 12 in an appropriate program with full expectation of successful completion.
Direct Entry Officer (DEO) – To qualify for direct entry as an Engineer, you must have a university degree in one of the disciplines listed under Formal Qualifications.


Training
The length and content of officer training will depend on your entry plan.

Phase I: Initial Assessment and Basic Officer Training
Following your successful application, you will be enrolled in the CF and undergo the Initial Assessment and the Basic Officer Training course at the CF Leadership and Recruit School in St-Jean-sur-Richelieu, Quebec. You will learn the principles of leadership, regulations and customs of the service, basic weapons handling, and first aid. You will also participate in a rigorous program of sports and fitness training. Basic Officer Training is given in English or French and successful completion is a prerequisite for further training. After Basic Officer Training, you may attend a second language training course for two to seven months, depending on your second language proficiency.

Phase II: Common Army Phase
The 11 week Common Army Phase (CAP), conducted at the Infantry School at CF Base Gagetown, will prepare you for employment within the Army, with the emphasis on basic infantry skills such as navigation, radio communication and weapons handling. You will also learn to lead a section of eight soldiers and employ war fighting infantry tactics. During the field training exercises, you will be assessed as a leader of troops in infantry operations.

Phases III and IV: Basic Engineer Officer Course (BEOC)
The next two phases will take place at the CF School of Military Engineering at CF Base Gagetown.
Phase III, which lasts two and a half months, concentrates on basic combat engineering skills and includes subjects such as basic demolitions, mine warfare, obstacle construction, field fortifications and dismounted infantry tactics at the platoon level. It ends with a three-week field deployment where you will be evaluated on your ability to lead a Troop of sappers conducting dismounted infantry tactics.

Phase IV, which lasts nine months, concentrates on reconnaissance, planning, and Troop-level combat engineer tasks. Subjects included are bridge building, minefield construction, booby-trap clearance, route denial, bridge demolition, combat road repair and construction, defensive works, timber and rope field machines, destruction of battlefield munitions, construction of temporary camps and breaching various obstacles in the face of the enemy. At the end of Phase IV, during a comprehensive four-week field deployment, you will be evaluated again on your ability to lead a Troop conducting combat engineer tasks.

Initial Employment
Following Phase IV, you will be posted to one of the following Engineer Regiments:
Combat Engineer Regiment, Edmonton Garrison, Lancaster Park, AB
Combat Engineer Regiment, Petawawa Garrison, Petawawa, ON
Engineer Support Regiment, CFB Gagetown, Oromocto, NB
Combat Engineer Regiment, Garnison Valcartier, Valcartier, QC


Working Environment
As an Engineer Officer, you may serve in various terrains – Arctic tundra, tropical jungle, desert, mountains, urban complex – and various climates. During training and on operations, you may work long hours, by day or by night, often in physically demanding conditions that can include exposure to dust, mud, loud noise and combustion fumes.

Appropriate training, environmental clothing and equipment are provided, and Engineer Officers’ health, safety and morale are closely monitored.


Career Development
After your first tour of duty with a first line unit, you will be able to specialize in one of the following areas: mapping and geodesic support to joint operations, infrastructure engineering to both garrison and deployed installations, and technical engineering to support the procurement and management of equipment.


Related Civilian Occupations
Construction Engineer
Senior Project Manager - Construction
Geological Engineer
Mining Engineer
Utilities/Equipment Manager
Human Resources Manager
Architect
Environmental Engineer

Contact Information

Company:
Canadian Forces

https://blrscr3.egs-seg.gc.ca/fo ... raph/welcome_e.aspx
沙发
 楼主| 发表于 2007-1-7 20:41:42 | 只看该作者

另一个

Airfield Engineering (Officer)

Company:
CANADIAN FORCES
Location:
CA-ON-Mississauga

Status:
Full Time, Employee
Job Category:
Engineering
  
Job Description


Airfield Engineering (Officer)

Overview
You will provide engineering support to CF deployed operations so that our air force can live, fly and fight. You will plan, develop and implement projects involving a wide range of military engineering tasks.

What They Do
Airfield Engineers (AF ENGR) are part of the Air Force’s officer classification and are members of the Canadian Military Engineers. They perform a wide range of tasks in support of Canadian Forces operations, both at home and abroad. They provide engineering support to CF deployed operations so that our air force can live, fly and fight. Airfield Engineers also provide the full range of engineering support services to CF installations such as facilities management, fire engineering, contract and project management, and construction and environmental engineering as well as mapping, charting and geodesic support to sea, land and air operations.

Airfield Engineers plan, develop and implement projects involving a wide range of military engineering tasks, including the preparation or approval of construction drawings, designs and specifications, and cost estimates relating to manpower, money and materials for both static and deployed operations. They advise their superiors on military engineering matters, and exercise leadership and technical control over organizations involved in engineering services, including the administration and control of substantial monetary and human resources. Airfield Engineers may be required to deploy on international operations in support of UN, NATO or Coalition missions. Regardless of their area of employment, Airfield Engineers lead an organization of skilled men and women on a full-time basis.

Qualification Requirements
The preferred degree is a Bachelor of Engineering in Civil, Mechanical, Electrical or Environmental Engineering. Other degrees that may be considered include a Bachelor of Engineering degree in the Chemical, Fire Protection, Physics, Management or Systems field, or a Bachelor of Science (Math or Physics), Geology or Applied Science.

You must meet Canadian Forces medical standards and successfully complete a selection process that includes interviews and a wide range of examinations, including tests of physical fitness.

Regular Officer Training Plan – The Regular Officer Training Plan (ROTP) comprises a fully subsidised undergraduate education (to the Bachelor’s degree level) at The Royal Military College of Canada or another accredited Canadian university, followed by a period of obligatory service in the Regular component of the Canadian Forces. To qualify for ROTP, you must have completed high school with the appropriate university-oriented credits including English or French, Mathematics, and Physics or Chemistry, be in Grade 12 in an appropriate program with full expectation of successful completion, or be currently enrolled in an accredited Canadian university.

Direct Entry Officer – To qualify for direct entry as an Airfield Engineer, you should have a university degree in one of the above-noted fields.

Training
Phase I: Basic Officer Training
Following your successful application, you will be enrolled in the Canadian Forces and undertake the Initial Assessment and Basic Officer Training Course at the Canadian Forces Leadership and Recruit School in Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu, Quebec. You will learn the principles of leadership, the regulations and customs of the service, basic weapons handling, and first aid. You will also take part in a rigorous program of sports and fitness training. Basic Officer Training is given in English or French and successful completion is a prerequisite for further training.
After Basic Officer Training, you may attend a second language training course lasting from two to seven months, depending on your second language proficiency.

Phase II: Basic Occupational Training
You will attend the Canadian Forces School of Military Engineering at Canadian Forces Base Gagetown, New Brunswick in order to prepare you for general employment in both airfield and construction engineering. An air combat support operations environment is used to teach leadership and effective management of personnel, materials and time. This training is divided into the following three phases.
During the first phase of occupational training, you will build upon the leadership training you received in Basic Officer Training. Additionally, you will learn more advanced basic military skills including weapons handling, communications, cross-country navigation, fieldcraft, and section level tactics.
The aim of the next phase is to familiarize you with Airfield Engineering operations. You will learn to lead your troops in the execution of basic engineering tasks. You will also be introduced to Airfield Engineering operations such as preparing operating surfaces for air operations and planning the installation of facilities and structures to support these operations.

During the final phase, you will have an opportunity to function in various Airfield Engineering roles undertaking tasks in different settings and scenarios and you will further develop your skills at leading your team of specialists. Your training as an Airfield Engineering Flight Commander will include managing realty assets at main operating bases, and planning and directing airfield infrastructure projects as they relate to deployed operations.

Working Environment
In a theatre of operations, your duties will require sustained physical effort in austere living conditions and in extreme climates. Airfield Engineers must operate under conditions of fatigue, mental strain and physical discomfort over extended periods of time in order to carry out complicated tasks against exacting time schedules. Long periods of isolation are characteristic of survey and construction projects, particularly in the North and on foreign deployments.

Your initial posting will likely be to an Airfield Engineering Flight or to a Construction Engineering organization within the Air Force to reinforce your training with practical experience. As you gain more experience and knowledge, you may be employed in a variety of staff positions in operational, personnel or technical fields, and may serve in an international headquarters, on a multinational staff or mission, or in an exchange or liaison capacity. Airfield Engineers may be posted to any Canadian Forces Base or headquarters where the Canadian Forces serve.
Appropriate training, environmental clothing and equipment are provided, and Airfield Engineers’ health, safety and morale are closely monitored.

Related Civilian Occupations
Construction Engineer
Project Manager – Construction
Utilities Manager
Realty Asset Manager
Fire Chief
Cartographer
Municipal Engineer
Facilities Manager
Director of Public Works


Company:
CANADIAN FORCES

https://blrscr3.egs-seg.gc.ca/fo ... raph/welcome_e.aspx
板凳
 楼主| 发表于 2007-1-7 20:45:59 | 只看该作者

海军招聘

Job Description

Marine Systems Engineering (Officer)

Overview

You will be responsible for the readiness, operation and maintenance of propulsion and ancillary systems, power generation and distribution, auxiliary systems, ship’s service systems, ship and machinery control systems, hull structure, ship’s stability, damage control, and the integration of these systems.

What They Do

Marine Systems Engineering (MS ENG) Officers are members of the Navy. The role of an MS ENG officer is to:

provide engineering expertise for:

the support of day-to-day Naval operations and maintenance of marine systems in ships and submarines

the continuous renewal of the Fleet through modernization and replacement, including design, development, acquisition, construction and disposal of Naval marine systems and equipment

the peacetime sustainment of infrastructure needed to support Naval operations and missions in times of emergency, mobilization and war

provide leadership, development and personnel management of the officer and technician occupations that support Marine Systems Engineering activities.

More specifically, Marine Systems Engineers are responsible for the readiness, operation and maintenance of propulsion and ancillary systems, power generation and distribution, auxiliary systems, ship’s service systems, ship and machinery control systems, hull structure, ship’s stability, damage control, and the integration of these systems. They analyze the state of their systems, equipment and personnel, predict their requirement for Naval operations and advise Command accordingly.


Qualification Requirements

You must meet Canadian Forces medical standards, and successfully complete a selection process that includes interviews and a wide range of examinations, including tests of physical fitness.

The primary degrees for those who wish to become Marine Systems Engineers are a Bachelor of Mechanical or Electrical Engineering. Most other Engineering degrees and many Science degrees are also acceptable.



The Regular Officer Training Plan (ROTP) comprises a full undergraduate education (to the Bachelor’s degree level) at the Royal Military College of Canada or another accredited Canadian university, followed by at least four years of obligatory service in the Regular component of the Canadian Forces, commencing immediately upon graduation. To qualify for ROTP, you must have completed high school with the appropriate university-oriented credits, or be in Grade 12 in an appropriate program with full expectation of successful completion.

Direct Entry Officer (DEO) Plan – You must have or be in the process of obtaining a university degree in one of the above-noted disciplines.



Additionally, you will attend the one-week Naval Officer Assessment Board held each spring and fall in Halifax, NS or Victoria, BC. Training The length and content of officer training depend on the entry plan you use to join the CF.


Training

Phase I: Initial Assessment and Basic Officer Training

Initial Assessment and the Basic Officer Training Course (BOTC) are conducted at the Canadian Forces Leadership and Recruit School in Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu, Quebec. During BOTC, you will learn the principles of leadership, regulations and customs of the service, basic weapons-handling, and first aid. Throughout Phase I, you will participate in a rigorous program of fitness training and sports.



Second language training will be provided to officers who are not already fluent in both official languages. The length of training is based upon an individual’s second language proficiency.



Phase II: Naval Officer Training

Consists of the 9-week Naval Environmental Training Program – Officers course held at the Naval Officer Training Centre in Victoria, B.C. This course introduces the Naval environment and includes 4 weeks on board a minor war vessel for officers to experience life at sea.



Phase III: Marine Systems Engineering Training

Consists of several courses held at the Canadian Forces Naval Engineering School (CFNES) in Halifax, N.S. The first course, Naval Engineering Indoctrination, lasts 11 weeks and introduces the systems, equipment and personnel of the two engineering departments of the ships in the Fleet. This course includes 7 weeks on board a major warship.



The next course, Marine Systems Engineering Applications, lasts 22 weeks and provides detailed instruction in the theory, application, operation, maintenance, personnel and management of Marine Systems Engineering in the Navy. On completion, officers join the ships of the Fleet for one year in order to consolidate their skills and knowledge of Marine Systems Engineering.



Throughout the above-noted training, officers will develop the general and personnel management skills required to successfully fill engineering positions.



Working Environment

Marine Systems Engineers are employed in the ships and submarines of the Fleet and at shore-based establishments that support the Fleet. In the Fleet, they serve as the Head of the Marine Systems Engineering Department. In this position, they are frequently required to work extended hours and are on-call ‘around-the-clock’. They deal with the mental stress of working with and leading a large number of personnel of varied training levels and backgrounds in a cramped, noisy, self-contained environment for extended periods and in all weather conditions.



In shore-based establishments, they are employed throughout Canada (primarily in Halifax, N.S., Victoria, B.C. and the National Capital Region) and abroad. The range of employment is wide and involves present and future technological challenges in the Navy. For example, a Junior Project Engineer may be part of a new equipment acquisition project or a technical project within a Fleet Maintenance Facility. In addition, Marine Systems Engineers are employed in staff, training and administrative positions requiring engineering expertise.



Appropriate training, environmental clothing and equipment are provided, and Marine Systems Engineering Officers’ health, safety and morale are closely monitored.



Advanced MOC Training

Post-Graduate and Specialized Training Opportunities

Marine Systems Engineering offers opportunities to further enhance engineering specialization through fully funded postgraduate education in Canada or abroad. For example, there is an ongoing need for Marine Systems Engineers with a Master’s degree in:

Naval Architecture

Marine Engineering

Nuclear Engineering

Control and Instrumentation Engineering



There is also a need for Marine Systems Engineers with specialized skills in:

Naval Construction

Vibration Analysis

Gas Turbine Analysis

Reliability Centered Maintenance

Career Development

You will be enrolled at the rank of Naval Cadet (NCdt). On completion of a degree (as described above) and Basic Officer Training, you will be commissioned as an Acting Sub-Lieutenant (ASLt). On completion of the Naval Engineering Indoctrination course and one year of commissioned service, you will be promoted to the rank of Sub-Lieutenant (SLt). Upon attaining your qualification as a Marine Systems Engineer and after three years of commissioned service, you will be promoted to the rank of Lieutenant Navy (Lt(N)). Further promotions are based upon performance, potential and merit.

Contact Information

Company:
CANADIAN FORCES

https://blrscr3.egs-seg.gc.ca/fo ... raph/welcome_e.aspx
您需要登录后才可以回帖 登录 | 免费注册

本版积分规则

快速回复 返回顶部 返回列表