19 Tex. Admin. Code § 130.487 - Oil and Gas Production III (One Credit)
(a) General requirements. This course is
recommended for students in Grades 11 and 12. Prerequisite: Oil and Gas
Production II. Students shall be awarded one credit for successful completion
of this course.
(b) Introduction.
(1) Career and technical education
instruction provides content aligned with challenging academic standards and
relevant technical knowledge and skills for students to further their education
and succeed in current or emerging professions.
(2) The Energy Career Cluster focuses on
Texas's diverse economic landscape, geography and natural resources, including
renewable energy potential, transportation system, labor force, and leadership
in environmental research.
(3) In
Oil and Gas Production III, students will gain knowledge of hydraulic and
pneumatic systems and skill requirements to work in oil and gas and related
industries. Students complete an advance core curriculum that includes
hydraulic and pneumatic systems involved in oil and gas production. This
program is designed to train students in all areas of down and mid-stream
operation skills.
(4) Students are
encouraged to participate in extended learning experiences such as career and
technical student organizations and other leadership or extracurricular
organizations.
(5) Statements that
contain the word "including" reference content that must be mastered, while
those containing the phrase "such as" are intended as possible illustrative
examples.
(c) Knowledge
and skills.
(1) The student demonstrates
professional standards/employability skills as required by business and
industry. The student is expected to:
(A)
identify career development, education, and entrepreneurship opportunities in
the oil and gas production field;
(B) identify careers in oil and gas
production with required aptitudes in science, technology, engineering,
mathematics, language arts, and/or social studies;
(C) apply technology skills to create an
electronic portfolio of skills and abilities;
(D) apply competencies related to resources,
information, interpersonal skills, problem solving, critical thinking, and
systems of operation;
(E)
demonstrate knowledge of personal and occupational safety, health,
environmental regulations, and first-aid policy in the workplace; and
(F) analyze employers'
expectations, including appropriate work habits, ethical conduct, legal
responsibilities, and good citizenship skills.
(2) The student identifies the importance of
oil field hydraulics and its contributions to the oil and gas industry. The
student is expected to:
(A) identify
companies that contributed to oil field hydraulics and fracturing and discuss
those contributions;
(B) explain
the history of hydraulic fracturing and its importance to the oil field
industry and the process of producing wells in North America;
(C) describe the impact of hydraulics on
energy in North America; and
(D)
explain the impact on new oil and natural gas production in North America as it
relates to technology.
(3) The student demonstrates an understanding
of pneumatics and hydraulics and their significance and application in the
petroleum engineering industry. The student is expected to:
(A) describe and define the basic functional
components of the pneumatic system and the function of a pneumatic schematic;
(B) explain pneumatic pressure and
identify its unit of measure during application procedures;
(C) explain the importance of a hydraulic
system and identify the hydraulic system's five basic components (hydraulic
pump, control valves, actuators, reservoir, and accumulators), including the
hydraulic system's significance in the petroleum engineering industry; and
(D) define hydraulics and identify
its unit of measure during application procedures.
(4) The student explains and demonstrates the
six pneumatic safety rules and the importance of the rules in the petroleum
industry. The student is expected to:
(A)
explain the six pneumatic safety rules, including wearing safety glasses when
building and operating pneumatics, keeping fingers clear of piston rods, never
blowing compressed air at anyone, not turning the main air supply on until a
circuit is connected, turning the air off if air is leaking from a joint, and
turning the air off before altering a circuit;
(B) demonstrate safety precaution measures in
pneumatics and discuss the importance of safety equipment during this process;
and
(C) demonstrate and explain
the importance of a pressure regulator in pneumatics, including the historical
significance.
(5) The
student demonstrates an understanding of basic cylinder circuits and pneumatic
cylinder circuits and their significance and applications in the petroleum
engineering industry. The student is expected to:
(A) explain the functions of the operation of
a double acting pneumatic cylinder and each of its functions;
(B) describe the operation of five-way
three-position directional control valves (DCV);
(C) describe the function of a pneumatic
quick-connect fitting; and
(D)
demonstrate how to safely connect the pneumatic circuit with a quick-connect
fitting.
(6) The
student understands the impact of a hydraulic schematic in oil field
applications. The student is expected to:
(A)
describe ISO symbols and appropriately use them to draw a hydraulic schematic;
and
(B) create a hydraulic
schematic.
(7) The
student identifies the principles of hydraulic pressure and flow and discusses
the basic hydraulic cylinder circuits and their application. The student is
expected to:
(A) calculate the force output
of an extending cylinder and the retraction force of a cylinder;
(B) explain the relevance of Pascal's Law to
hydraulics;
(C) identify and
discuss hydraulic motors and pumps; and
(D) identify hydraulic cylinders and their
impact on single and double acting circuits.
Notes
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.