Title :
Teaching analysis to a computer-weaned generation: asking questions
fDate :
12/1/2001 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
It is widely acknowledged that the construction of working algorithms for prediction and performance assessment in the class of computationally-large real-world problems-loosely characterized as "wave interactions with complex environments"-is aided substantially by embedding analytic problem-matched physics-based modeling within numerical algorithms for greater computational efficiency and better understanding of complex wave phenomenology. To teach the necessary analytic underpinnings to a generation of students that has grown up with computers-commonly believing that computers, as such, solve complex problems, and that the printouts furnish physical insight-is a challenge to the academic community. Some reflections are aired here, using tongue-in-cheek humor to look at certain foibles in the engineering profession
Keywords :
computer aided instruction; engineering education; physics computing; teaching; analytic problem-matched physics-based modeling; computational efficiency; computationally-large real-world problems; engineering education; engineering profession; numerical algorithms; performance assessment; teaching; wave interactions; Algorithm design and analysis; Computational efficiency; Education; Embedded computing; Numerical models; Performance analysis; Physics computing; Prediction algorithms; Predictive models; Reflection;
Journal_Title :
Antennas and Propagation Magazine, IEEE