Kurt Barnhart, executive director of the Applied Aviation Research Center and head of the aviation department, and Eric Shappee, associate professor of aviation, at Kansas State University Salina, have helped write and edit one of the first collegiate-level textbooks on unmanned aircraft systems, “Introduction to Unmanned Aircraft Systems.”
They were joined by Stephen B. Hottman and Douglas M. Marshall. Hottman is deputy director of New Mexico State University’s Physical Science Laboratory, and Marshall is the laboratory’s division manager for unmanned aircraft systems regulatory and standards development.
“The book emerged when Professor Shappee and I were discussing the available textbooks for our new unmanned aircraft systems courses. There was very little available in the way of suitable material, so we decided to create it,” Barnhart said. “Most of what we found was out of date or didn’t cover the information we wanted it to,” Shappee said.
The textbook is designed as the students’ first exposure to the field of unmanned systems and takes them from having little or no knowledge of the industry to being fluent in the terminology and familiar with the current challenges and issues surrounding the emerging field of study. The illustrated text also offers Web-based resources.
Chapters include current and proposed federal regulations, operational procedures, safety concerns, commercial and military applications, integration into the national airspace system, and the unmanned systems themselves. Shappee will begin using the book in K-State’s unmanned aircraft systems classes in January. He anticipates that the second edition will be released in less than two years to keep pace with the rapidly changing industry.
The book, published by Chemical Rubber Company Press, which primarily publishes texts in the engineering field, is available on Amazon.
Enrolment in the university’s unmanned aircraft systems’ bachelor’s and certificate programs has soared. The bachelor’s degree programme was launched this fall and course enrollments are already capped. Barnhart said one of the many factors that sets Kansas State University’s programme apart from the few others offered in the nation is that students actually get hands-on time learning to fly unmanned aircraft because of key authorization from the Federal Aviation Administration.
The job market is wide open for students seeking careers in the field right now, said Josh Brungardt, director of the university’s unmanned programme. “If a student wants to work for a manufacturer or military contractor and they’re in the United States, they’ll likely start out at $60,000-$65,000 right out of college,” Brungardt said. “And if they want to do deployments and work for a contractor, they could earn up to $100,000 a year. It’s a very lucrative career field for students.”
Source: K-State Today