CAD/CAM教育的挑战

M. Melkanoff, F. Puhl, Victor Langer, D. Greenberg, Mark S. Shepard, H. Voelcker
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Members of this panel represent both schools and industry and together attempt to outline approaches to developing more extensive CAD/CAM emphasis in education, including - the role colleges and universities can or should play in addressing industry needs in this area - user- and implementor-oriented CAD/CAM education - CAD/CAM education as an integral part of university engineering curricula - problems encountered in organizing and implementing CAD/CAM curriculum - universities' relationships with industry. It is our hope that panelists' experiences will help guide schools in structuring CAD/CAM programs to best insure that the United States remain at the forefront of technology and compete industrially world-wide. Frank Puhl Victor Langer Donald P. Greenberg Mark S. Shepard Herb Voelcker Universities' Relationships With Industry Frank Puhl American industry needs engineers who have been brought up with the realization that computers are intimately involved in all aspects of design, analysis, and manufacturing. Industry, of course, needs engineers who are already trained in fundamental CAD/CAM principles and in solving real world problems using computers, as well as those who have been taught to be productivity- and cost-conscious. To help meet these needs, we must now provide answers to several significant questions: What part should industry play in encouraging and sponsoring research and education in CAD/CAM? How can we resolve conflicts between industries' “trade secrets” and universities' “open research”? How can industry and educational institutions work together to increase U.S. productivity so as to regain our competitive edge? Lockheed Corporation and CADAM, Inc. are addressing these issues by supporting selected schools, installing CADAM systems, and providing fellowships for education and research at upperclass and graduate levels. In addition, we are involved in various joint research projects with universities, and we look optimistically toward continuing these projects. CADD CAM User EducationCADD CAM User Education Victor Langer General Electric Medical Systems Division in Milwaukee experienced a severe shortage of CADD CAM operators and encouraged MATC to develop a training program which started in 1980. A three-year NSF- CAUSE grant and a partial donation of a Computervision CADDS 3 (now CADD 4 Designer V six-station) system resulted in a program for upgrading employed designers and for two-year associate degree full-time students. The program enrolls 200 students per semester, with 70% continuing education students and 30% full-time students. Before students can effectively apply CADD CAM education, they must have drafting and design experience or at least a year of engineering training, plus ability to use spatial relationships and a course in descriptive geometry. With this background, students learn to create geometry for a 2-D drawing database and gain sufficient experience in the first course to be as productive as employees with six months' full-time experience. In the final semester or in the second advanced course, students create 3-D geometry and apply analytical computer capabilities for design, specializing for uses in mechanical, electrical, structural, architectural, and graphics arts applications. The defined geometry is also used in CAM for generating numerical control machining and flame-cutting paths, and for robotic control. Each course has been evaluated, follow-up studies have been completed, and an advisory committee has guided development. Employees have verified success and ease in transferring geometric skills to many different CADD CAM systems in the market. Beginning in the Fall of 1982, Apple microcomputers will be used to teach all 2-D computer graphics skills previously taught on the Computervision system, and CADD CAM education is now becoming available on an economical basis to all users. Some Problems in CAD Education Donald Greenberg It is imperative that universities educating the next generation of engineers introduce computer-aided design courses into their curricula. There are many obstacles in accomplishing this within a university structure. This presentation describes the facilities and operation at Cornell University and discusses the potential benefits and difficulties. CAD/CAM Education in an Engineering Curriculum Mark S. Shepard Today there is a large industrial demand for engineering graduates that understand CAD/CAM techniques and computer graphics. Therefore, many colleges and universities already have or are planning to introduce computer graphics and CAD/CAM concepts into their curriculum. The major questions to be addressed in integrating these techniques into the curriculum include type and amount of hardware, development and maintenance of software and method of introduction into the curriculum. In 1977, RPI's school of engineering established the Center for Interactive Computer Graphics which is charged with integrating interactive computer graphics into the entire undergraduate engineering curriculum and providing a facility for graduate instruction and research. With heavy industrial support, the Center has also developed a research program in computer graphics and CAD/CAM. This presentation will discuss RPI's overall approach to integrating interactive computer graphics into the engineering curriculum. A Postgraduate Program in “Programmable Automation” Ari Requicha Herb Voelcker “Programmable Automation” designates the emerging body of knowledge surrounding CAD/CAM and industrial robotics. Graduate study in the field is aimed at (1) understanding the informational aspects of design and production in the discrete goods industries, and (2) developing new technologies for producing goods automatically with programmable, general-purpose tools. Some of the knowledge and techniques used in Programmable Automation are drawn from established fields (computer science, material science, control theory, ...), but the distinctive character of Programmable Automation is set mainly by the pervasive roles played by geometry and computation. A postgraduate program in Programmable Automation is being launched at the University of Rochester to train MS/level systems engineers for industry, and Ph.D-level researchers and teachers. The program's evolution reflects a “trickle-down” philosophy of education, wherein major new fields enter engineering education through on-going research; research begets seminars, seminars sometimes evolve into graduate courses, and graduate courses sometimes spawn undergraduate courses. (Put differently, the process starts with mature minds grappling with poorly understood concepts and ends with immature minds assimilating tightly codified concepts.) The Rochester program is sited in Electrical Engineering and draws heavily on the staff and facilities of the Production Automation Project; it also has strong links with Mechanical Engineering and Computer Science. The initial curriculum is based on two core courses in computational geometry, a graphics lab, and a systems seminar; these are supplemented with established courses in computer science, digital systems, finite-element analysis, control theory, and so forth. An NC Systems course and lab will be introduced a year hence. 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Furthermore, many Bachelor's-level graduates are going directly into industry, rather than pursuing graduate degrees, thereby compounding this problem. Members of this panel represent both schools and industry and together attempt to outline approaches to developing more extensive CAD/CAM emphasis in education, including - the role colleges and universities can or should play in addressing industry needs in this area - user- and implementor-oriented CAD/CAM education - CAD/CAM education as an integral part of university engineering curricula - problems encountered in organizing and implementing CAD/CAM curriculum - universities' relationships with industry. It is our hope that panelists' experiences will help guide schools in structuring CAD/CAM programs to best insure that the United States remain at the forefront of technology and compete industrially world-wide. Frank Puhl Victor Langer Donald P. Greenberg Mark S. Shepard Herb Voelcker Universities' Relationships With Industry Frank Puhl American industry needs engineers who have been brought up with the realization that computers are intimately involved in all aspects of design, analysis, and manufacturing. Industry, of course, needs engineers who are already trained in fundamental CAD/CAM principles and in solving real world problems using computers, as well as those who have been taught to be productivity- and cost-conscious. To help meet these needs, we must now provide answers to several significant questions: What part should industry play in encouraging and sponsoring research and education in CAD/CAM? How can we resolve conflicts between industries' “trade secrets” and universities' “open research”? How can industry and educational institutions work together to increase U.S. productivity so as to regain our competitive edge? Lockheed Corporation and CADAM, Inc. are addressing these issues by supporting selected schools, installing CADAM systems, and providing fellowships for education and research at upperclass and graduate levels. In addition, we are involved in various joint research projects with universities, and we look optimistically toward continuing these projects. CADD CAM User EducationCADD CAM User Education Victor Langer General Electric Medical Systems Division in Milwaukee experienced a severe shortage of CADD CAM operators and encouraged MATC to develop a training program which started in 1980. A three-year NSF- CAUSE grant and a partial donation of a Computervision CADDS 3 (now CADD 4 Designer V six-station) system resulted in a program for upgrading employed designers and for two-year associate degree full-time students. The program enrolls 200 students per semester, with 70% continuing education students and 30% full-time students. Before students can effectively apply CADD CAM education, they must have drafting and design experience or at least a year of engineering training, plus ability to use spatial relationships and a course in descriptive geometry. With this background, students learn to create geometry for a 2-D drawing database and gain sufficient experience in the first course to be as productive as employees with six months' full-time experience. In the final semester or in the second advanced course, students create 3-D geometry and apply analytical computer capabilities for design, specializing for uses in mechanical, electrical, structural, architectural, and graphics arts applications. The defined geometry is also used in CAM for generating numerical control machining and flame-cutting paths, and for robotic control. Each course has been evaluated, follow-up studies have been completed, and an advisory committee has guided development. Employees have verified success and ease in transferring geometric skills to many different CADD CAM systems in the market. Beginning in the Fall of 1982, Apple microcomputers will be used to teach all 2-D computer graphics skills previously taught on the Computervision system, and CADD CAM education is now becoming available on an economical basis to all users. Some Problems in CAD Education Donald Greenberg It is imperative that universities educating the next generation of engineers introduce computer-aided design courses into their curricula. There are many obstacles in accomplishing this within a university structure. This presentation describes the facilities and operation at Cornell University and discusses the potential benefits and difficulties. CAD/CAM Education in an Engineering Curriculum Mark S. Shepard Today there is a large industrial demand for engineering graduates that understand CAD/CAM techniques and computer graphics. Therefore, many colleges and universities already have or are planning to introduce computer graphics and CAD/CAM concepts into their curriculum. The major questions to be addressed in integrating these techniques into the curriculum include type and amount of hardware, development and maintenance of software and method of introduction into the curriculum. In 1977, RPI's school of engineering established the Center for Interactive Computer Graphics which is charged with integrating interactive computer graphics into the entire undergraduate engineering curriculum and providing a facility for graduate instruction and research. With heavy industrial support, the Center has also developed a research program in computer graphics and CAD/CAM. This presentation will discuss RPI's overall approach to integrating interactive computer graphics into the engineering curriculum. A Postgraduate Program in “Programmable Automation” Ari Requicha Herb Voelcker “Programmable Automation” designates the emerging body of knowledge surrounding CAD/CAM and industrial robotics. Graduate study in the field is aimed at (1) understanding the informational aspects of design and production in the discrete goods industries, and (2) developing new technologies for producing goods automatically with programmable, general-purpose tools. Some of the knowledge and techniques used in Programmable Automation are drawn from established fields (computer science, material science, control theory, ...), but the distinctive character of Programmable Automation is set mainly by the pervasive roles played by geometry and computation. A postgraduate program in Programmable Automation is being launched at the University of Rochester to train MS/level systems engineers for industry, and Ph.D-level researchers and teachers. The program's evolution reflects a “trickle-down” philosophy of education, wherein major new fields enter engineering education through on-going research; research begets seminars, seminars sometimes evolve into graduate courses, and graduate courses sometimes spawn undergraduate courses. (Put differently, the process starts with mature minds grappling with poorly understood concepts and ends with immature minds assimilating tightly codified concepts.) The Rochester program is sited in Electrical Engineering and draws heavily on the staff and facilities of the Production Automation Project; it also has strong links with Mechanical Engineering and Computer Science. The initial curriculum is based on two core courses in computational geometry, a graphics lab, and a systems seminar; these are supplemented with established courses in computer science, digital systems, finite-element analysis, control theory, and so forth. An NC Systems course and lab will be introduced a year hence. 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引用次数: 1

摘要

由于很少有学校有教授CAD/CAM的经验,因此学院和大学不能满足工业对使用或实施计算机辅助设计和制造系统的毕业生的需求。此外,许多本科水平的毕业生直接进入行业,而不是继续攻读研究生学位,从而加剧了这一问题。该小组的成员代表了学校和行业,并共同试图概述在教育中发展更广泛的CAD/CAM重点的方法。包括:高校在解决这一领域的行业需求方面能够或应该发挥的作用——面向用户和实施者的CAD/CAM教育——CAD/CAM教育作为大学工程课程的一个组成部分——在组织和实施CAD/CAM课程时遇到的问题——大学与行业的关系。我们希望小组成员的经验将有助于指导学校构建CAD/CAM项目,以最好地确保美国保持在技术的最前沿,并在全球范围内进行工业竞争。大学与工业的关系美国工业需要这样的工程师,他们从小就认识到计算机与设计、分析和制造的各个方面都密切相关。当然,工业需要已经接受过CAD/CAM基本原理培训的工程师,以及使用计算机解决现实世界问题的工程师,以及那些被教导具有生产力和成本意识的工程师。为了满足这些需求,我们现在必须回答几个重要的问题:工业界应该在鼓励和赞助CAD/CAM的研究和教育方面发挥什么作用?如何解决产业界的“商业秘密”与高校的“开放研究”之间的矛盾?工业和教育机构如何共同努力提高美国的生产力,从而重新获得竞争优势?洛克希德公司和CADAM公司正在通过支持选定的学校,安装CADAM系统,并为高年级和研究生的教育和研究提供奖学金来解决这些问题。此外,我们还参与了与大学的各种联合研究项目,我们对继续这些项目持乐观态度。通用电气密尔沃基医疗系统分部经历了CADD CAM操作员的严重短缺,并鼓励MATC从1980年开始制定培训计划。一项为期三年的NSF- CAUSE拨款和Computervision cadd3(现为cadd4 Designer V六站)系统的部分捐赠,促成了一项旨在提升在职设计师和两年制全日制副学士学位学生的计划。该项目每学期招收200名学生,其中继续教育学生占70%,全日制学生占30%。在学生能够有效地应用CADD CAM教育之前,他们必须具有制图和设计经验或至少一年的工程培训,加上使用空间关系的能力和描述几何课程。有了这个背景,学生学习创建一个二维绘图数据库的几何图形,并获得足够的经验,在第一门课程是生产力的员工与六个月的全职经验。在最后一个学期或第二门高级课程中,学生将创建三维几何图形并应用分析计算机功能进行设计,专门用于机械,电气,结构,建筑和图形艺术应用。所定义的几何形状也用于凸轮生成数控加工和火焰切割路径,并用于机器人控制。每门课程都进行了评价,后续研究已经完成,并由一个咨询委员会指导发展。员工已经验证了将几何技能转移到市场上许多不同的CADD CAM系统中的成功和轻松。从1982年秋天开始,苹果的微型计算机将被用来教授以前在计算机视觉系统上教授的所有2-D计算机图形学技能,而CADD CAM教育现在可以在经济的基础上向所有用户提供。计算机辅助设计教育中的几个问题培养下一代工程师的大学必须在课程中引入计算机辅助设计课程。在大学结构中实现这一点有许多障碍。这篇演讲描述了康奈尔大学的设施和运作,并讨论了潜在的好处和困难。工程课程中的CAD/CAM教育Mark S. Shepard今天,工业对了解CAD/CAM技术和计算机图形学的工程专业毕业生有很大的需求。 因此,许多学院和大学已经或正在计划将计算机图形学和CAD/CAM概念引入他们的课程。在将这些技术整合到课程中需要解决的主要问题包括硬件的类型和数量、软件的开发和维护以及将这些技术引入课程的方法。1977年,RPI的工程学院建立了交互式计算机图形学中心,负责将交互式计算机图形学整合到整个本科工程课程中,并为研究生教学和研究提供设施。在重工业的支持下,中心还开发了计算机图形学和CAD/CAM的研究项目。本报告将讨论RPI将交互式计算机图形学整合到工程课程中的整体方法。“可编程自动化”指的是围绕CAD/CAM和工业机器人的新兴知识体系。该领域的研究生学习旨在(1)了解离散商品行业中设计和生产的信息方面,以及(2)开发使用可编程通用工具自动生产商品的新技术。可编程自动化中使用的一些知识和技术来自于已建立的领域(计算机科学、材料科学、控制理论等),但可编程自动化的独特特征主要是由几何和计算所起的普遍作用所决定的。罗彻斯特大学正在启动可编程自动化研究生课程,为工业培训硕士/级系统工程师,博士级研究人员和教师。该计划的发展反映了一种“涓滴”教育理念,其中主要的新领域通过正在进行的研究进入工程教育;研究引发研讨会,研讨会有时演变成研究生课程,研究生课程有时衍生出本科课程。(换句话说,这个过程开始于成熟的头脑与理解不透彻的概念作斗争,结束于不成熟的头脑吸收严格编纂的概念。)罗彻斯特项目位于电气工程,并大量利用生产自动化项目的人员和设施;它与机械工程和计算机科学也有密切的联系。最初的课程是基于计算几何的两门核心课程,一个图形实验室和一个系统研讨会;这些课程还包括计算机科学、数字系统、有限元分析、控制理论等现有课程。一年后将开设NC系统课程和实验室。将该项目与罗彻斯特的超大规模集成电路项目联系起来,以及启动机器人研究和教学的计划,仍处于萌芽阶段。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The challenge of CAD/CAM education
Colleges and universities are not meeting industry needs for graduates trained in the use or implementation of computer-aided design and manufacturing systems since few schools have experience in teaching CAD/CAM. Furthermore, many Bachelor's-level graduates are going directly into industry, rather than pursuing graduate degrees, thereby compounding this problem. Members of this panel represent both schools and industry and together attempt to outline approaches to developing more extensive CAD/CAM emphasis in education, including - the role colleges and universities can or should play in addressing industry needs in this area - user- and implementor-oriented CAD/CAM education - CAD/CAM education as an integral part of university engineering curricula - problems encountered in organizing and implementing CAD/CAM curriculum - universities' relationships with industry. It is our hope that panelists' experiences will help guide schools in structuring CAD/CAM programs to best insure that the United States remain at the forefront of technology and compete industrially world-wide. Frank Puhl Victor Langer Donald P. Greenberg Mark S. Shepard Herb Voelcker Universities' Relationships With Industry Frank Puhl American industry needs engineers who have been brought up with the realization that computers are intimately involved in all aspects of design, analysis, and manufacturing. Industry, of course, needs engineers who are already trained in fundamental CAD/CAM principles and in solving real world problems using computers, as well as those who have been taught to be productivity- and cost-conscious. To help meet these needs, we must now provide answers to several significant questions: What part should industry play in encouraging and sponsoring research and education in CAD/CAM? How can we resolve conflicts between industries' “trade secrets” and universities' “open research”? How can industry and educational institutions work together to increase U.S. productivity so as to regain our competitive edge? Lockheed Corporation and CADAM, Inc. are addressing these issues by supporting selected schools, installing CADAM systems, and providing fellowships for education and research at upperclass and graduate levels. In addition, we are involved in various joint research projects with universities, and we look optimistically toward continuing these projects. CADD CAM User EducationCADD CAM User Education Victor Langer General Electric Medical Systems Division in Milwaukee experienced a severe shortage of CADD CAM operators and encouraged MATC to develop a training program which started in 1980. A three-year NSF- CAUSE grant and a partial donation of a Computervision CADDS 3 (now CADD 4 Designer V six-station) system resulted in a program for upgrading employed designers and for two-year associate degree full-time students. The program enrolls 200 students per semester, with 70% continuing education students and 30% full-time students. Before students can effectively apply CADD CAM education, they must have drafting and design experience or at least a year of engineering training, plus ability to use spatial relationships and a course in descriptive geometry. With this background, students learn to create geometry for a 2-D drawing database and gain sufficient experience in the first course to be as productive as employees with six months' full-time experience. In the final semester or in the second advanced course, students create 3-D geometry and apply analytical computer capabilities for design, specializing for uses in mechanical, electrical, structural, architectural, and graphics arts applications. The defined geometry is also used in CAM for generating numerical control machining and flame-cutting paths, and for robotic control. Each course has been evaluated, follow-up studies have been completed, and an advisory committee has guided development. Employees have verified success and ease in transferring geometric skills to many different CADD CAM systems in the market. Beginning in the Fall of 1982, Apple microcomputers will be used to teach all 2-D computer graphics skills previously taught on the Computervision system, and CADD CAM education is now becoming available on an economical basis to all users. Some Problems in CAD Education Donald Greenberg It is imperative that universities educating the next generation of engineers introduce computer-aided design courses into their curricula. There are many obstacles in accomplishing this within a university structure. This presentation describes the facilities and operation at Cornell University and discusses the potential benefits and difficulties. CAD/CAM Education in an Engineering Curriculum Mark S. Shepard Today there is a large industrial demand for engineering graduates that understand CAD/CAM techniques and computer graphics. Therefore, many colleges and universities already have or are planning to introduce computer graphics and CAD/CAM concepts into their curriculum. The major questions to be addressed in integrating these techniques into the curriculum include type and amount of hardware, development and maintenance of software and method of introduction into the curriculum. In 1977, RPI's school of engineering established the Center for Interactive Computer Graphics which is charged with integrating interactive computer graphics into the entire undergraduate engineering curriculum and providing a facility for graduate instruction and research. With heavy industrial support, the Center has also developed a research program in computer graphics and CAD/CAM. This presentation will discuss RPI's overall approach to integrating interactive computer graphics into the engineering curriculum. A Postgraduate Program in “Programmable Automation” Ari Requicha Herb Voelcker “Programmable Automation” designates the emerging body of knowledge surrounding CAD/CAM and industrial robotics. Graduate study in the field is aimed at (1) understanding the informational aspects of design and production in the discrete goods industries, and (2) developing new technologies for producing goods automatically with programmable, general-purpose tools. Some of the knowledge and techniques used in Programmable Automation are drawn from established fields (computer science, material science, control theory, ...), but the distinctive character of Programmable Automation is set mainly by the pervasive roles played by geometry and computation. A postgraduate program in Programmable Automation is being launched at the University of Rochester to train MS/level systems engineers for industry, and Ph.D-level researchers and teachers. The program's evolution reflects a “trickle-down” philosophy of education, wherein major new fields enter engineering education through on-going research; research begets seminars, seminars sometimes evolve into graduate courses, and graduate courses sometimes spawn undergraduate courses. (Put differently, the process starts with mature minds grappling with poorly understood concepts and ends with immature minds assimilating tightly codified concepts.) The Rochester program is sited in Electrical Engineering and draws heavily on the staff and facilities of the Production Automation Project; it also has strong links with Mechanical Engineering and Computer Science. The initial curriculum is based on two core courses in computational geometry, a graphics lab, and a systems seminar; these are supplemented with established courses in computer science, digital systems, finite-element analysis, control theory, and so forth. An NC Systems course and lab will be introduced a year hence. Plans for linking the program with Rochester's VLSI program, and for launching robotics research and teaching, are still in an embryonic stage.
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