转型期工程教育的回顾与评价

L. Wilcox, M. S. Wilcox
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引用次数: 7

摘要

本文回顾了过去通过综合课程、多学科项目和国家/全球技术问题实现教育转型的成功案例。成功的项目在很大程度上依赖于教育者和劳动力中的专业工程师之间的互动。州和国家的政治优先事项在决定范围和成功方面发挥了重要作用。全球问题在大多数课程中都是必不可少的,因为经济因素本身就是工程师必须理解的主要组成部分。由于我们现在正处于“知识管理”的舞台上,在这个舞台上,企业、大学和政治系统之间的海量信息互联正在不断扩大,因此在我们面前存在着非凡的机遇、障碍和危险。在缺乏诚实和严谨的工作队伍的情况下,这将产生隐私、道德和价值问题。尽管我们在电气工程课程转型方面已经取得了很大进展,但仍有许多工作要做,正如瓦坦·格里高利博士(卡耐基公司)所预测的那样:“激光通信、核能、生物技术、联网计算机等正是在塑造我们的思维习惯和欲望。它们已经成为我们文化的主要来源,甚至改变了知识的范式。快速发展的全球通信正在带来复杂而深远的社会变化,这些变化不是简单理解就能理解的。”随着教育进入21世纪,企业和社会普遍认识到“随时随地学习”的重要性。通过强大的通信和网络机制,教育和工业迅速认识到需要一支新的训练有素的劳动力。教育看到了将他们的教师与来自工业界的访问教师结合起来,形成一个综合的多学科团队的非凡优势。转型工程教育由电气工程部门主导,得到了IEEE和IBM等公司的支持。在这一历史性的转变中,学生们的投入变得越来越重要,因为他们研究了结合工程、医学、卫生保健、商业、科学和管理等领域的新职业。长期以来,终身学习一直是IEEE和IBM的核心优先事项。终身学习和“随时随地”课程显然会变得更好,因为它们有一个非凡的、动态的网络作为实施平台的支持。人与程序之间的互动正在扩大对“知识管理和计算机模拟”等术语的理解,这是由常见性评估以及在这些巨大的数字数据仓库中不断寻找和强调“智慧”的意义或作用所驱动的。迈克尔·克莱顿不断提醒我们,网络的脆弱性很容易被误用或误导,从而给社会带来灾难性的后果。本文综述了三种基于过渡的方案:1。一份涉及技术管理和产品研究的长期大学/公司协议在弗吉尼亚州詹姆斯·麦迪逊大学建立独特的综合科学与技术学院。州长发起的一项重要的西弗吉尼亚州技术法案,旨在全州范围内支持经济发展和教育变革,根据参议院法案547实施。这些项目有以下共同的目标:•为我们的学生-未来工作的竞争优势。•为我们的教育工作者-技术资源的内容和访问的不妥协的质量。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A Review and Evaluation of Engineering Education in Transition
This paper revisits success stories of past projects aimed at education transition through integrated curricula, multidisciplinary projects, and national/global technological issues. Successful programs depended heavily on interaction between educators and the professional engineers in the work force. Political priorities, both state and national, have played a major role in determining scope and success. Global issues are essential in most curricula since economic factors alone present major integrated components that engineers must understand. There are extraordinary opportunities, obstacles, and dangers ahead because we now are embroiled in the arena of "knowledge management," where massive information interconnections are expanding among businesses, universities, and political systems. This will create problems of privacy, ethics, and value in the absence of an honest and rigorous work force. Although we have made great progress in electrical engineering curricular transitioning, there is much to do, as Dr. Vartan Gregorian (Carnegie Corp.) predicts: "Laser communications, nuclear power, biotechnology, networked computers, and the like are precisely shaping our habits of thought and desire. They have become a dominant source of our culture, even to changing the very paradigms of knowledge. Rapidly evolving global communications are bringing social changes that are so complex and far-reaching they are not amenable to easy understanding." As education moved into the 21st century, business and society in general recognized the significance of "learning anywhere, anytime." Enabled through the powerful mechanism of communications and networking, education and industry quickly recognized the need for a new trained work force. Education saw the extraordinary advantage of combining their faculty with visiting faculty from industry, forming an integrated and multidisciplinary team. Transforming Engineering Education has been led by electrical engineering departments with support from IEEE and corporations like IBM. During this historic transition, input from students became increasingly important as they examined new careers combining fields like engineering, medicine, health care, business, science, and management, to name a few. Lifelong learning has long been a core priority for IEEE and IBM. Lifelong learning and "anywhere and anytime" courses clearly will get better because they will have the support of an extraordinary, dynamic network that is the platform for implementation. Interactions between people and programs are expanding understanding of terms like "knowledge management and computer simulations" driven by common sense evaluations and the continual search for and emphasis on the meaning or role of "wisdom" in these gigantic digital warehouses of data. Michael Crichton continually reminds us of the fragility of networks susceptible to misuse or misdirection resulting in catastrophic consequences for society. In this paper, three transition-based programs are reviewed: 1. A long-term university/corporation agreement involving technical management and product research 2. Creation of a unique College of Integrated Science and Technology at James Madison University in Virginia 3. A major governor-sponsored West Virginia technology bill aimed at statewide support of economic development and educational change implemented under Senate Bill 547. These programs had in common the following goals: • for our students - the competitive advantage for the jobs of the future. • for our educators - the technological resources for uncompromised quality of content and access.
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