**NEWS**
Important Notice to NEW STUDENTS admitted for September 2011
Due to the Mail Strike - Students who have been accepted into the Mechanical Engineering Program will receive an email by Friday, June 24th notifying them of their acceptance. Students will be asked to advise the Mechanical Engineering office by Thursday, June 30th via email if they plan to attend the Fall 2011 semester. Students will be grouped by Model A or Model B located below. Students are asked that when registering please follow the model you are assigned too unless you have decided to complete the degree in 4 years. Should you have any questions please contact the Mechanical Engineering Office.
June 16, 2011 - Please note that MECH 4170 Program Management and Systems Engineering will be taught under the course number MECH 4342 Systems Engineering in the Fall 2011 term. This change has been made because of some change to the old course content. This course may not be used towards a business minor.
2010-2011 New Curriculum Program Information
Fall 2010 - Winter 2011 Course Schedules (Please check frequently for updates)
Program Information Prior to September 2009
For information about the program requirements for the Mechanical Engineering degree program, please click on the links below:
University of Manitoba Policy on Plagiarism and Cheating
To plagiarize is to take ideas or words of another person and pass them off as one’s own. In short, it is stealing something intangible rather than an object. Obviously it is not necessary to state the source of well known or easily verifiable facts, but students are expected to acknowledge the sources of ideas and expressions they use in their written work, whether quoted directly or paraphrased. This applies to diagrams, statistical tables and the like, as well as to written material, and materials or information from Internet sources. To provide adequate documentation is not only an indication of academic honesty but also a courtesy which enables the reader to consult these sources with ease. Failure to do so constitutes plagiarism. It will also be considered plagiarism and/or cheating if a student submits a term paper written in whole or in part by someone other than him/herself, or copies the answer or answers of another student in any test, examination, or take-home assignment.
Plagiarism or any other form of cheating in examinations or term tests (e.g., crib notes) is subject to serious academic penalty (e.g. suspension or expulsion from the faculty or university). A student found guilty of contributing to cheating in examinations or term assignments is also subject to serious academic penalty.