Electronics Engineering Technology
Program details
Credential: 3-Year Ontario College Advanced DiplomaThis three-year program prepares students for a career in electronics as it relates to telecommunications systems, operating from audio frequencies to light waves. The program provides a solid education in the basics of analog and digital electronics as well as a specialization in telecommunications technology. A core area of fundamentals and mathematics is studied in this program. The additional areas of study are analog and digital communication systems, networks and transmission media. State-of-the-art courses offered in the third year allow the student to experience the leading edge of technology and enhance his/her career goals.
Student availability & wage data
Conestoga College facilitates recruitment on an ongoing basis - there are no hard deadlines. Typical time frames for work terms are listed below.
Postings are accepted beginning four months before the start of a term until all students have secured employment provided the minimum 12 consecutive weeks of full-time work is met.
Work/Study Sequence
Year | Fall (Sept - Dec) | Winter (Jan - Apr) | Spring (May - Aug) |
---|---|---|---|
Year 1 | Classes | Classes | |
Year 2 | Classes | Classes | Work Term 1: $18-24 |
Year 3 | Work Term 2: $18-25 | Work Term 3: $18-25 | Work Term 4: $18-25 |
Year 4 | Classes | Classes |
Conestoga College collects data on hourly wages of co-operative education students and offers suggested ranges as a service to employers for the purpose of establishing fair and competitive compensation.
Our experience has been that employers increase wages as skills increase, particularly when employing students for more advanced work terms. The Co-operative Education Office can provide assistance to employers in establishing appropriate wage rates.
Work term capabilities
A student's work terms run continuously for sixteen months and it is common to complete all work terms with the same employer. It is expected that due to the longer period of time with the employer, students will be given progressive responsibility and/or exposure to new challenges as their skills develop.
Work terms 1 - 4
- Interpret and produce schematic diagrams of electronic circuits
- Provide assistance to engineering teams on fundamental problems, extracting information from manuals, drawings and schematics
- Produce reports
- Perform electronic assembly and prototyping
- Use standard test equipment
- Program simple embedded processors using assembly language
- Program embedded processors using C language
- Test and troubleshoot circuits, equipment and systems
- Design simple analog and digital circuits
- Install electronic equipment
- Perform QA/QC testing
- Design and simulate QA/QC tests
In addition to the above general skills, the telecommunications students have specific training in the following:
- Design, modeling and measurement of transmission line circuits
- Produce and interpret Smith Charts
- Design, produce and measure microstrip circuits
- Construct and measure waveguide circuits
- Use specialized test equipment such as Vector Network Analyzer
- Design, produce and measure transistorized RF circuits at frequencies to 1 GHz
Sample job titles
- Developer - IOT
- Development Engineering Technician
- Electronic Draftsperson
- Electronics Assembler
- Maintenance Technician
- Production Engineering Assistant
- Service Representative
- Systems Engineering Assistant
Program courses
To see a typical course list for this program, see the current program course information.
Post a co-op job now
Setup an account or login to Conestoga's MyCareer to post a job.
Contact information
Do you need help developing a recruitment plan or job posting, accessing wage information, or connecting with a talented co-op student? Contact:
Hemant Chauhan, P.Eng., MCPM
Employer Relations Consultant
hchauhan@conestogac.on.ca
226-898-1242