DocumentCode
753528
Title
The phoenix-a challenge to engineering education
Author
Everitt, W.L.
Author_Institution
Operational Research Branch, Office Chief Signal Officer, United States Army, Washington, D. C.; On Leave as Professor of Electrical Engineering, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio
Volume
23
Issue
4
fYear
1980
Firstpage
179
Lastpage
183
Abstract
Engineering education is presented with a unique opportunity for improvement due to the interruption caused by the war. This improvement can only be obtained by a clear determination of the fundamental goals of engineering education and the application to its curricula of the engineering design processes it claims to teach. A distinction should be drawn between the problems of Science, which are those of analysis, and the problems of engineering which are those of Synthesis. Engineering and nonengineering students both should be taught what engineering really is, its philosophy and what it can do. The importance of its humanistic aspect should be stressed. A program is proposed for participation in the discussion and design of engineering curricula by the Institute sections.
Keywords
Agriculture; Art; Biomedical engineering; Design engineering; Educational institutions; Educational programs; Engineering education; History; Process design; Reliability engineering;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Education, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9359
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TE.1980.4321409
Filename
4321409
Link To Document