ETFS
1120. Fundamentals of Fire Protection. (3)
This course is an introduction to the relevant issues one would
encounter upon entering a career in fire protection. The course
is an overview of many areas including fire protection career
opportunities, history of public fire protection, general
chemistry and physics of fire, codes and ordinances and fire
protection systems and equipment.
ETFS 1232.
Fire Protection Hydraulics and Water Supply. (3)
Provides a
foundation of theoretical knowledge in order to understand the
principles of the use of water in fire protection and to apply
hydraulic principles to analyze and to solve water supply
problems.
ETFS 1252.
Fire Protection Law. (3)
Provides
information about potential legal liabilities encountered every
day by fire, safety and emergency personnel. Explains how to
research, read and understand various statutes, regulations &
cases. Actual cases are presented in detail and followed by
explanations that identify the most important issues facing
emergency & safety personnel.
ETFS
2124. Fundamentals of Fire Prevention. (3)
This class provides a fundamental overview of the history and
philosophy regarding fire prevention. Class will investigate the
organizational and operational aspects of a fire prevention
bureau including the use of fire codes, identification and
correction of fire hazards, and the relationships of fire
prevention with built-in fire protections systems, fire
investigation, and the positive effects of fire and life-safety
education.
ETFS 2126.
Fire Investigation. (3)
This course
covers investigation into various types of fires: structure,
wildland, automobile, fabric, and chemical. Topics include fire
chemistry and physics, scene analysis, case analysis, arson, the
new generation of petroleum products, post-flashover patterns of
damage, misuse of post-fire indicators, and documentation.
ETFS 2132.
Building Construction for Fire Protection. (3)
Studies the
components of building construction that relate to fire and life
safety. The focus of this course is on fire fighter safety. The
elements of construction and design of structures are shown to
be key factors when inspecting buildings, preplanning fire
operations, and operating at emergencies.
ETFS 2144.
Fire Protection Systems. (3)
Provides
information relating to the features of design and operation of
fire detection and alarm systems, heat and smoke control
systems, special protection and sprinkler systems, water supply
for fire protection and portable fire extinguishers.
ETFS 2230.
Hazardous Materials. (3)
This course
focuses on the basic knowledge required to evaluate the
potential hazards and behavior of materials considered
hazardous. The course examines the reasons for chemical behavior
of hazardous materials and is designed to improve decision
making abilities when hazardous materials are encountered in the
workplace or at an emergency scene.
ETFS 2264.
Fire Behavior and Combustion. (3)
Explores the
theories and fundamentals of how and why fires start, spread,
and are controlled.
ETFS 2264L.
Fire Behavior and Combustion Laboratory. (1)
Laboratory
experiments and hands-on computer simulations to illustrate the
concepts presented in ETFS 2264.
ETFS
3103. Principles of Fire Behavior. (3)
Fundamental principles of fire chemistry and physics, and
mechanisms that control enclosure fires. Topics include basic
principles of fluid mechanics, thermodynamics, heat transfer,
and combustion as far as those subjects relate to fire dynamics;
ignition of liquids and solids; flame spread over liquid and
solid surfaces and through porous fuel beds; burning rate;
diffusion flames and plumes; combustion products; and
compartment fires.
ETFS 3113.
Building Fire Safety. (3)
Construction standards and codes to ensure acceptable levels of
fire safety in buildings. Topics include anatomy of building
construction, building construction features affecting fire
performance, fundamentals of reading plans and specifications,
the traditional code approach to passive fire protection,
trade-offs between active and passive fire protection, concepts
of rational fire design for structural members, and
performance-based fire design as an alternative to traditionally
prescriptive codes.
ETFS 3123.
Industrial Hazards & Electricity. (3)
Typical industrial hazards encountered including: compressed
gasses, chemicals, bio-toxins, radiation sources, boilers and
ovens. Introductory concepts and methods of analysis of AC & DC
circuits, electrical switchgear, and rotating machinery.
Compliance & reporting issues in an industrial setting. Safety
procedures and safety equipment will also be discussed in
regards to working as a fire safety engineer.
ETFS 3124.
Risk Management for the Emergency Services. (3)
An exploration of management and organizational principles with
emphasis on controlling the risk associated with operations in
the emergency services. In depth discussion of recognizing and
controlling risk, personnel accountability, incident management
systems and post-incident analysis as related to the emergency
services. Critical analysis of private protection measures
available to reduce loss potential.
ETFS 3144.
Active Fire Protection. (3)
Review of fire suppression, alarm, and smoke control systems.
Topics include fixed and portable suppression systems, fire
suppression agents and extinguishing mechanisms, fire detection
devices, fire protective detection and signaling systems, smoke
production in fires and principles of smoke movement and
management.
ETFS 3183.
Fire Safety Engineering Problem Analysis. (3)
Prerequisite: ETFS 3103. Methods of solving fire safety
engineering problems. Topics include enclosure fire radiation
heat transfer calculations; calculations of vent flows in
enclosure fires; estimating ignition, flame spread, and heat
release rate properties of materials on the basis of
experimental data; smoke filling of enclosures; and conduction
heat transfer through fire protective materials.
ETFS 3233.
Applied Fire Engineering Design and Analysis. (3)
Prerequisite: ETFS 3103. Application of fire safety engineering
technology in fire design and analysis of fires. Topics include
computer modeling of compartment fires and emergency evacuation
of buildings, structural fire design, sprinkler system design,
performance-based design, and fire investigation and
reconstruction.
ETFS 3400. Practicum. (1-4)
Prerequisite: Must be
classified as a junior, have a cumulative 2.2 GPA and the
approval of FSET program faculty. This course is designed to
allow students to participate in an approved applied practicum
designed to allow theoretical and course-based learning in a
supervised fire and/or safety related environment. Each
practicum experience is individual and is arranged with a
contract between the supervising faculty member, the student and
the employer. Students must complete the practicum proposal
form and identify a faculty member who will direct and evaluate
the completed work. Practicum requires a weekly progress report
as well as a final report and presentation to be graded by the
supervising faculty member. May be repeated for up to a total
of 4 hours. (On demand)
ETFS 3611.
Professional Leadership Seminar. (1) (W) (O)
This course is to provide a framework of executive-level
competencies by focusing primarily on areas and issues of
personal effectiveness. The issue of command perspective vs. a
first line fire fighter perspective are examined. The course
includes case study analysis, role-playing and experiential
activities. Students will develop desirable goals in the areas
of their professional, personal community, and family life.
Course topics include leadership, multiple roles, decision
skills, influencing leaders, coaching and mentoring, and
effective use of personal computing.
ETFS 3800. Independent Study. (1-3)
Prerequisite: Must be
classified as a junior, have a cumulative 2.2 GPA and the
approval of FSET program faculty. This course is designed to
allow students to take responsibility for the direction of their
learning about a topic of interest to them. Each independent
study is individual and is arranged with a contract between the
supervising faculty member and the student. Students must
complete the independent study proposal form and identify a
faculty member who will direct and evaluate the completed work.
Each hour of credit for this course should be comparable to what
would be expected in the classroom – 15 hours contact time plus
outside work or approximately 30 hours. The project is
culminated with a final report and presentation. May be
repeated for a total of 3 hours. (On demand)
ETFS
4123. Command and Control of Major Disasters.
(3)
This course focuses on the commanding officer's responsibility
while conducting major operations involving multi-alarm units
and man-made disasters that may require interagency or
jurisdictional coordination. Earthquakes, hurricanes,
terrorism, hazardous materials releases, tornadoes, and floods
are some of the topics covered. Emphasis is placed on rapid
fireground decision making, advanced incident command, command
and control, safety, personnel accountability, hazard
preparedness, mitigation, response, recovery, evacuation,
sheltering and communications.
ETFS 4243.
Research Investigation. (3) (W) (O)
Application of practical, up-to-date review of fire research and
its application. The transfer of research and its implications
for fire prevention and protection programs are addressed.
Development of a student project and a written report in a
specified area in fire administration or fire science technology
with faculty supervision. Analytical modeling, technical
research, oral and written reporting of progress and findings
are required.
ETFS 4323. Advanced Fire Service
Administration. (3) A study of
management theories, leadership philosophies and strategies for
the fire service. Emphasis in the course will be on planning,
organizing staffing, and evaluating fire protection services.
Public fire education, loss prevention principles, and
management of resources particular to fire and emergency
services are addressed. Discussion of techniques for assessment
of public fire protection and its impact on the community and
environment.
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2005 UNC Charlotte
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