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Automotive Engineering Skills and Job Roles of the Future?

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Part of the book series: Communications in Computer and Information Science ((CCIS,volume 1251))

Abstract

Technological progress and new lifestyle demand is changing the way we live and affects the future development and usage of technologies in different areas including the automotive sector. According to this demand, the future car is aiming to be smart, clean and autonomous. To be able to achieve that in the relatively short time given by the social demand, we need to assess, evaluate and establish a combination of new, emerging and existing skills pools to define future job roles and skills required for the design, production and maintenance of cars. Mapping these skills onto the phases of engineering, production, and maintenance in the automotive life cycle outlines an interesting future picture of a vehicle that will integrate smart technologies, smart production, smart maintenance and continuous machine learning. In this paper the job roles supporting this future are proposed and discussed.

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Acknowledgements

We are grateful to the European Commission which has funded the Blueprint project Development and Research on Innovative Vocational Skills (DRIVES, 2018-2021, www.project-drives.eu). The project DRIVES – Project number 591988-EPP-1-2017-1-CZ-EPPKA2-SSA-B is co-funded by the Erasmus + Programme of the European Union.

The European Commission support for the production of this publication under the Grant Agreement Nº 2017-3295/001-001 does not constitute an endorsement of the contents which reflects the views only of the authors, and the Commission cannot be held responsible for any use which may be made of the information contained therein.

We are grateful to the partners in DRIVES project, especially of the Work Package 3 - Skills Framework of the DRIVES project, for their inputs during the project work.

Work is partially supported by Grant of SGS No. SP2020/62, VŠB - Technical University of Ostrava, Czech Republic.

We are grateful to a working party of Automotive suppliers SOQRATES [45] (www.soqrates.de) who exchange knowledge about such assessment strategies. This includes: Böhner Martin (Elektrobit), Brasse Michael(HELLA), Bressau Ernst (BBraun), Dallinger Martin (ZF), Dorociak Rafal (HELLA), Dreves Rainer (Continental Automotive), Ekert Damjan (ISCN), Forster Martin (ZKW), Geipel Thomas (BOSCH), Grave Rudolf (Elektrobit), Griessnig Gerhard (AVL), Gruber Andreas (ZKW), Habel Stephan (Continental Automotive), Hällmayer Frank (Software Factory), Haunert Lutz (Giesecke & Devrient), Karner Christoph (KTM), Kinalzyk Dietmar (AVL), König Frank (ZF), Lichtenberger Christoph (MAGNA ECS), Lindermuth Peter (Magna Powertrain), Macher Georg (TU Graz & ISCN), Mandic Irenka (Magna Powertrain), Maric Dijas (Lorit Consultancy), Mayer Ralf (BOSCH Engineering), Mergen Silvana (TDK/EPCOS), Messnarz Richard (ISCN), Much Alexander (Elektrobit), Nikolov Borislav (msg Plaut), Oehler Couso Daniel (Magna Powertrain), Riel Andreas (Grenoble INP & ISCN), Rieß Armin (BBraun), Santer Christian (AVL), Schlager Christian (Magna ECS), Schmittner Christoph (Austrian Institute of Technology AIT), Schubert Marion (ZKW), Sechser Bernhard (Process Fellows), Sokic Ivan (Continental Automotive), Sporer Harald (Infineon), Stahl Florian (AVL), Wachter Stefan (msg Plaut), Walker Alastair (Lorit Consultancy), Wegner Thomas (ZF).

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Stolfa, J. et al. (2020). Automotive Engineering Skills and Job Roles of the Future?. In: Yilmaz, M., Niemann, J., Clarke, P., Messnarz, R. (eds) Systems, Software and Services Process Improvement. EuroSPI 2020. Communications in Computer and Information Science, vol 1251. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-56441-4_26

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