Educating The Engineer of 2020:: Global Visions For The New Century Alice M. Agogino
Educating The Engineer of 2020:: Global Visions For The New Century Alice M. Agogino
Technology Drivers
Growing complexity, uncertainty, and interdisciplinary foundations of engineered systems The diminishing half-life of engineering knowledge in many fields The accelerating pace of technological advance:
Bioengineering, biotechnology & biomedical technology Miniaturization (MEMS, nanotechnology, advanced materials) Information Technology Complex and large-scale systems integration
Micro/Nanotechnology
Nanosciences & engineering will draw on multiple fields Genetic and molecular engineering Composites and engineered materials Quantum scale optical and electrical structures Quantum mechanical behavior
Nano-2007
Nano-2012
Nano-optical/electronics & power sources High-end flexible displays NEMS-based devices Faster switches and ulta-sensitive sensors
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Socio-Technological Challenges
Physical infrastructures in urban settings Information and communications infrastructures Technology for an aging population The environment & sustainable engineering Managing complex interdisciplinary problems Managing globalization Consumers will demand more and more: higher quality, mass customization, personalization, etc. Socio-political tensions around the world Growing diversity of the workforce
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The Environment
Three quarters of the US population resides in areas with unhealthy air. [American Lung Association] In 2020, California will need 40% more electrical capacity, 40% more gasoline, and 20% more natural gas than in 2000. 50% of the worlds original forest cover has been depleted [Worldwatch Institute] and global per capita forest area is projected to fall to 1/3 its 1990 value by 2020. [Haque, 2000]. 48 countries (2.8 billion people) face freshwater shortages in 2025 [Henrichsen, 1997] The wealthiest 16% of the world consumes 80% of the worlds natural resources. By the year 2020, there will be 8 billion people who will further depleting the environment and fuel political instability if the inequity of these resources continues. [CIA 2001].
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Intent was not to make recommendations on curricula but to assess how well their education had prepared them for the issues they will face in engineering practice out to 2020
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% Responses
Inte Con rdiscip. text Com m/W ritin g Syst Eng ems inee ring Biol ogy Man agem ent Tech . Po licy Ethi cs 2 nd L angu age
Q4. Which topics should receive increased coverage in the undergraduate engineering curriculum?
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U.S. Workforce
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2020?
16% 56%
Middle East
13%
In contrast to the aging of the US, Europe and Japan, the most politically instable parts of the world will experience a youth bulge.
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Workforce Vulnerability
A quarter of the current science and engineering workforce whose research and innovation generated the economic boom in the 1990s is more than 50 years old and will retire by 2020. 21% decline in U.S. student population Student populations in engineering and physical sciences are static or declining 15% decline in foreign-born doctoral students since 1997
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Recommendations
1. The baccalaureate degree should be recognized as the preengineering degree (BA or BS), depending on the course content and reflecting the career aspirations of the student.
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Recommendations
2. ABET should allow accreditation of engineering programs of the same name at the baccalaureate and graduate levels in the same department to recognize that education through a professional masters degree produces an AME, an accredited master engineer. Engineering schools should more vigorously exploit the flexibility inherent in the outcomes-based accreditation approach to experiment with novel models for baccalaureate education. ABET should ensure that evaluators look for innovation and experimentation in the curriculum and not just hold institutions to a strict interpretation of the guidelines as they see them.
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3.
Recommendations
4. The essence of engineering the iterative process of designing, predicting performance, building, and testing should be taught from the earliest stages of the curriculum, including the first year. The engineering education establishment should endorse research in engineering education as a valued and rewarded activity for engineering faculty as a means to enhance and personalize the connection to undergraduate students, to understand how they learn, in appreciate the pedagogical approaches that excite them.
5.
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Student Retention
Universal agreement that the process of designing, building and testing should be taught from the earliest stages of curriculum, including the first year. Student learning outcomes and retention increases.
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Recommendations
6. Colleges and universities should develop new standards for faculty qualifications, appointment, and expectation, for example to require experience as a practicing engineer, and should create or adapt development programs to support the professional grown of engineering faculty. 7. As well as delivering content, engineering schools must teach engineering students how to learn, and must play a continuing role along with professional organizations in facilitating lifelong learning, perhaps through offering executive technical degrees similar to executive MBAs.
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Recommendations
8. Engineering schools introduce interdisciplinary learning in the undergraduate environment, rather than having it as an exclusive feature of the graduate program. 9. Engineering educators should explore the development of case studies of engineering successes and failures and the appropriate use of case-studies approach in undergraduate and graduate curricula. 10. Four-year engineering schools must accept it as their responsibility to work with their local community colleges to ensure effective articulation, as seamless as possible, with their two-year program.
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Scenarios
The next scientific revolution The natural world interrupts the technology cycle Global conflict or globalization? The biotechnology revolution in a societal context
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Recommendations
11. U.S. engineering schools must develop programs to encourage/reward domestic engineering students to aspire to the M.S. and/or ph.D. degree. 12. Engineering schools should lend their energies to national effort to improve math, science, and engineering education at the K-12 level. 13. The engineering education establishment should participate in a coordinated national effort to promote public understanding of engineering and technology literacy of the public.
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Recommendations
14. NSF should collect and/or fund collections, perhaps through ASEE or Engineering Workforce Commission, of comprehensive data by engineering department/school on program philosophy and student outcomes such as, but not exclusively, student retention rates by gender and ethnicity, common reasons why students leave, where they go, percent of engineering freshman that graduate time to degree, and information on jobs and admission to graduate school.
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