خطة التخصص

Production

  • 1983
  • 1984
  • 1990
  • 1997
  • 2016
  • 2022

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Course No رقم المساق Course Name اسم المساق Credit hours الساعات المعتمدة Course Description وصف المساق
2001 Arabic Language 3 The Arabic language course is considered a fundamental requirement for the college of applied professions. The course aims to prepare students to communicate fluently in Arabic in their daily lives and academic work by providing them with basic practical knowledge and skills in Arabic language and its arts that are in line with their needs and knowledge. This will enable them to use it correctly in reading, writing, and speaking, reflecting positively on their performance and increasing their self-confidence and the confidence of others in them. The course includes lessons in grammar, morphology, and basic linguistic rules, as well as listening, speaking, reading, and writing exercises. Additionally, it also includes the study of common vocabulary and phrases in the Arabic language.
2002 English Language 3 This course aims at developing the four skills: writing, reading, comprehension (listening) and pronunciation. The grammatical rules related to tenses, direct & indirect speech, prepositions, and conditionals.
3219 Entrepreneurship 3 " Entrepreneurship course is an educational course aimed at developing students' skills in managing and operating small and medium-sized enterprises، and teaching them how to develop their ideas and turn them into successful projects. During the course, students are taught many basic concepts and skills in the field of entrepreneurship, such as market research, development of administrative and marketing plans, management of human and financial resources, creation of business plans, innovation, and digital transformation. The course is taught practically, relying on practical activities and applied projects that allow students the opportunity to apply the concepts they have learned in their own projects. Entrepreneurship course is considered one of the important courses that helps students achieve their dreams of self-employment and financial independence."
3350 Digital skills 3

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Course No رقم المساق Course Name اسم المساق Credit hours الساعات المعتمدة Course Description وصف المساق
2017 Physical Education 1 The physical activity course is designed to promote health and fitness and improve students' athletic skills. It includes various concepts and physical activities, including team sports such as soccer and basketball, and individual sports such as running, swimming, weightlifting, and yoga. In addition, the course emphasizes teamwork, collaboration, and challenge. It also focuses on committing to sports ethics and social responsibility, and learning about some of the injuries that can occur on and off the field, their causes, symptoms, and first aid methods. This course is useful for improving physical and mental health, balance, coordination, and self-confidence. It also promotes discipline, dedication, and perseverance in sports and other activities in life.

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Course No رقم المساق Course Name اسم المساق Credit hours الساعات المعتمدة Course Description وصف المساق
2005 Mathematics (1) 3 This course strengthens students’ understanding of functions like; polynomials, absolute value functions, greatest integer functions, trigonometric functions, exponential and logarithmic functions, in preparation for the process of differentiation and integration. Then students will extend their experience with functions as they study the fundamental concepts of calculus: limiting behaviors, continuity, the derivative by definition, the differentiation rules including chain rules and implicit differentiation. Finally this course covers basic ideas of integration; definite integral, anti-derivatives and indefinite integrals, the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus, and some integration's methods .
2006 Engineering drawing 2 The course aims to introduce the student to engineering drawing principles and provide him with the ability to read stereoscopic and schematic engineering drawings by identifying the basics and principles of engineering drawing, drawing regular and curved geometric shapes, writing Arabic and English letters in a geometric line, vertical projection, and extracting the third projection and isometric drawing.
2007 Engineering Workshop 2 This course aims to introduce the student to the principles of manufacturing, as well as the proper handling of machines, equipment, and various tools without falling or causing practical accidents in workshops, factories, and various construction projects, as well as to provide him with the knowledge of the processes required to complete a part.
2008 Industrial Supervision & Org. 1 The course aims to familiarize students with the nature of large and small industrial establishments, their characteristics, requirements for their establishment, and factors affecting their success, identifying organizational structures in industrial establishments and the tasks of industrial supervision in them and the responsibilities of the supervisor in industrial work, developing the student's positive attitudes toward occupational safety and health issues in industrial work, and through familiarity with the relevant foundations and the means and procedures used to prevent industrial accidents, identifying the elements of industrial costs and methods of cost reduction and loss treatment in industrial work, and familiarity with the most important aspects addressed by parliamentary legislation related to work and workers, such as the Social Security Law.
2094 Mechanics, Heat & Light 2 Physical quantities, Units, Vectors and Scalars, Motion in one dimension, Motion in two dimensions, Newton’s laws of motion and dynamics, Work and Energy, Conservation of Energy, Conservation of linear momentum and collision, Center of mass and moment of
2095 Mechanics, Heat & Light Lab. 1 The course contains 12 experiments in Mechanics thermodynamics and Motion, which aims to give the students, the basis concepts in the previous topics given in the physics course
2096 Mechanics 2 The course covers Newton's laws, force, force analysis in two perpendicular directions, net forces, particle equilibrium, moment of force, and object equilibrium.
2097 Mechanics Lab. 1 The course covers tensile topics in wires and ropes, compressive forces in columns, and friction and its applications, such as torque, tensile and compressive forces in foundation members, force in basic beams, and center of area for geometric forms.
2098 Mechanical Drawing 1 2 The course aims to teach students about the different types of sectors, simple assembly drawing, complex assembly drawing ( screws and other connecting techniques), detailed drawing, drawing of individual units and intersections of surfaces and models, schematic drawing, drawing schematics with various technical symbols, and so on (pipes and valves, welding symbols, signs operation and variance).
2099 Properties of Materials 2 The course aims to teach students about engineering materials, their sources and creation, qualities, materials, mechanical characteristics of materials and their investigation, corrosion and oxidation, material behavior under the impact of external forces and temperature variations.
2100 Appiled Electricity 2 The course aims to introduce students to the elements and characteristics of an electrical circuit, the basics of analyzing DC and AC circuits, the laws of DC circuits, studying the characteristics of AC circuits, magnetic circuits, electrical transformers, identifying the types of AC and DC motors, electrical measuring devices, fuses, Relays, and circuit breakers, and familiarization with basic electronic components.
2101 Applied Electricity Lab. 1 The practical section of applied electricity aims to teach students about electrical measuring devices and their different types, DC circuits and the application of Ohm's law, Kirchhoff's voltage and current laws and their comparison with laboratory results, single-phase alternating current circuits, transformers, DC and AC machines (working principles and benefits), fuses, relays, and circuit breakers.
2102 Strength of Materials 2 This course presents the basics of the determination of axial force, shear strength and bending moments. The concept of stress and strain, Hook's law, modulus of elasticity, stiffness and Poisson's ratio.
2103 Strenght of Materials Lab. 1 The strength of materials lab aims to introduce students to the relationship between symmetry in stress and strain in tension and compression, calculating and finding the modulus of elasticity and the modulus of stiffness in rubber, comparing the tensile strength of different materials, calculating the stiffness in springs, and calculating the bending moment.
2104 Metallurgy 2 The main aims to introduce students to the atom and its structure, atomic bonds, crystal structure, defects in crystal network installation, dislocations, boundaries, alloys, cooling curves and thermal equilibrium, heat treatment of metals (hardening, surface hardening, annealing, thermal revision), heating methods, and equipment.

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Course No رقم المساق Course Name اسم المساق Credit hours الساعات المعتمدة Course Description وصف المساق
2105 Metallurgy Lab. 1 The course aims to teach students to metallurgical microscopy, brittle and soft metals, metallurgical inspection, mechanical and chemical investigation and treatment procedures, cold forming changes, alloys and the study of freezing, and heat treatment of ferrous alloys.
2106 Metal Forming 3 The course is designed to teach students the fundamentals of forging, rolling, rolling calculations, drawing, wire drawing, extrusion, hot press characteristics, bending, metal forming by shearing, powder technology, cladding, light forming, deep drawing, and current ways of forming. Elastomers and composites, as well as cold forming
2107 Meterial Cutting 3 The course aims to introduce students to metalworking methods, cutting tools, materials and properties, elements of the cutting process in lathe machine tools, forces affecting lathe cutting performance, cutting temperature and cooling, wear and tool life, classification of working machines, and methods of changing lathe speeds, cutting spirals, drilling and hole operations, completing holes and managing their dimensions and surface quality, smoothing operations for flat surfaces, surface milling operations, milling operations, grinding activities.
2108 Material Handling 2 The course goes over handling principles, foundations and operating theories of handling equipment, components of handling machinery, handling activities, sheltered tankers and flying tankers, hopper conveyors (buckets), overhead conveyors, vehicle and quay conveyors, cranes (elevators), thread conveyors, and conveyors. Dolphin, pneumatic conveyors, hydraulic conveyors, industrial vehicles, loaders, auxiliary equipment, and principles of handling equipment maintenance
2109 Metal Casting 3 The course covers the fundamentals of mechanical, physical, and chemical features of castings, sand casting models, casting mold preparation, smelting furnaces, casting metals in sand molds, foundry sand characteristics, binders, cores, casting processes, and mechanical casting.
2110 Metal Casting Lab. 1 After completing this practical course, the student will be able to create and test the sand casting, prepare sand molds, print models, build and run the crucible furnace, cast molten metal into molds, cast using the lost wax process, cast in metal molds, and clean castings.
2111 Machining Workshop 2 The course is designed to qualify the student's knowledge of the longitudinal and transverse lathes, adjust the measurements to a specific tolerance, use different cutting techniques and tools (boring, forming, internal and external coordination and drilling, adjusting dimensions), and identify different leveling machines (milling, grinding, planer machine ), cutting gears.
2112 Forging & Weiding Workshop 2 The course covers arc welding technology, different welding modes, different types of welding joints, different types of welding rods, gas welding (oxyacetylene), welding inspection and defect identification, welding with inert and active gases, contact welding, international specifications for welding rods and wires, and machine welding maintenance.
2113 Theory of Machines 2 The course is designed to introduce learners to abstract motion, kinematic pairings, the most well-known mechanisms (mechanisms), the polygon of velocity and acceleration, gears, cams, mechanical friction, movement regulators, and equilibrium.
2114 Theory of Machines Lab. 1 The practical component of machine theory focuses on teaching students how to analyze the sliding of blocks, vibrating arm, clamps or mechanisms used in machines, polygon analysis of velocity and acceleration, friction, static and dynamic equilibrium, and so on.
2115 Mechanical Instrumentation 2 The course aims to familiarize the students with the SI units of measurement, measuring tools and how to use them, measuring tools (vernier, micrometer, measurement indicators, and measurement templates), measuring internal and external negatives, measuring comparison devices (mechanical, electrical, optical antenna), system compatibility, limits and duplications, instrumentation and instrumentation maintenance, temperature measurement.
2116 Mechanical Instrumentation Lab. 1 The practical course of instrumentation is designed to educate students the fundamentals of measuring and calculating the degree of accuracy in measuring instruments, measurement standards, limits of accuracy, calculating the degree of accuracy, training in proper measuring instrument usages, treating measurement defects, and measuring and calculating the value of wear on surfaces and spirals. Setting out the measurement procedure (measuring the internal and external dimensions, measuring angles, using the pocket table and balls).
2117 Machining & Welding Technology 2 The course is designed to introduce students to precise measurement tools (vernier, micrometer, measuring clock), planing and chucking, automatic drilling and manual threading, tin work, turning (lathe parts, connecting works, different machining patterns), scraper buttress, milling, flat grinding, and welding. Cylindrical grinding, oxy-acetylene welding, contact welding, inert gas welding
2118 Field Training I 3 The course aims to allow students to practice the multiple skills of turning, milling, drilling, grinding, forming materials, and other cutting operations in local workshops and factories, under proper monitoring and follow-up by the university, in collaboration with local institutions, integrating it into the market and providing additional skills that may not be available in the University workshops.
2119 Field Training II 3 The course aims to allow students to practice the multiple skills of turning, milling, drilling, grinding, forming materials, and other cutting operations in local workshops and factories, under proper monitoring and follow-up by the university, in collaboration with local institutions, integrating it into the market and providing additional skills that may not be available in the University workshops.
2120 Project 2 The course aims to enable the student to apply the skills and information gained throughout the study in the implementation of an applied project that contributes to the solution of industrial issues or the discovery of new ways in the production and equipment processes.

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Course No رقم المساق Course Name اسم المساق Credit hours الساعات المعتمدة Course Description وصف المساق
2003 Studies in Arabic & Islamic Thought 3 The course deals with introducing Islamic culture, its characteristics, and its sources, discussing some contemporary cultural issues, and Islam’s view of them, as well as talking about issues pertaining to the Muslim community such as the educational and moral system, rehabilitation for marital life, and family and community rights in Islam, especially with regard to psychological rehabilitation of those about to get married, as well as the rights and duties of each of the spouses over the other, and talking about important rules to tackle marital problems.
2999 Anti - Corruption "Challenges & Solutions" 3 This course provides in-depth knowledge about the concept of corruption globally and locally, and the complex forms in which it manifests in both official and unofficial institutions. The course also discusses the most important factors that increase the likelihood of the emergence and spread of corruption, whether those related to the structural organization of state institutions, or political and social complexities that affect the functioning of these institutions and weaken their ability to combat this phenomenon. The course also covers the most important strategic plans and internationally recognized approaches to combat corruption, and also identifies the national strategy for combating corruption.