Title: IndustryUniversityGovernment Roundtable for Enhancing Engineering Education IUGREEE
1Industry-University-Government Roundtable for
Enhancing Engineering Education IUGREEE
- Summary Overview
- October 2000
- John McMasters
- Technical Fellow
- The Boeing Company
- Seattle,WA
2Background
- IUGREEE initiated by Boeing - First meeting held
in Seattle in March 1995 (hosted and paid for by
Boeing) - Outgrowth of the Boeing-University Workshop
process initiated in Feb. 1994 which recognized
that - Many of the problems affecting Boeing in its
relations with universities were national in
scope (e.g. ABET accreditation policy) and beyond
the reach of a single company in a single market
niche (aerospace) to influence - There are many interested parties in
engineering education reform all have
perspectives, all of which must be respected if
real reform is to be accomplished - No existing body or organization was working the
problem of education reform (beyond conducting
studies with mountains of mere recommendations),
from an industry perspective although the NSF
was doing a lot from the government end and IRI
was working the research part with limited
success.
3Industry, University and Government Players in
Technical Education and Research
Industry
NSF, DoD, NASA
Industry- University research interests
The engineering education legislature
IRI
NAE/NAS/NIH NRC
ABET
IUGREEE
The Big Science lobby
AAAS
ASEE
Undergrad Education
Academe
IEEE, ASME, AIAA, etc.
Universities
The engineering educator faculty club
Professional Societies
for research
4IUGREEE - How It Works
- Operates like a Knowledge Management Community
of Interest/Practice - Purely voluntary affiliation of individuals
interested or involved in engineering education
reform and enhancement - Initiated, but not led, by Boeing (which remains
a heavy participant, however) - Membership open to anyone based solely on
interest and willingness to contribute time and
effort - Operates under a simple Memorandum of Agreement
(MOU) with no membership dues or fees, and no
paid staff (other than services donated from
various sources, e.g. SAE Foundation for several
years) - Meeting hosting expenses borne by donating
organizations or companies on a semi-round robin
basis Boeing has hosted 4 out of 11 to date, and
McD hosted one prior to our merger. - Individual travel and meeting related or other
expenses borne by participants or the
organizations they represent.
5Industry-University-Government Roundtable for
Enhancing Engineering Education
- Mission
- Create and sustain an alliance of industry,
university and government representatives to
influence the quality of engineering education
programs needed to produce engineering graduates
able to meet the professional standards and
challenges of the business environment of the
21st Century. - Identify and articulate critical issues to which
academe must respond as perceived from an an
evolving industrial perspective - Develop action agendas to accomplish needed
changes in engineering education - Facilitate implementation through existing
organizations and institutions, i.e. use existing
resources to the maximum degree possible
Objectives
6Industry-University-Government Roundtable for
Enhancing Engineering Education IUGREEE
- IUGREEE Action Implementation Model
Organizations
IUGREE
- ABET
- Government Agencies
- (NSF, DoD, NASA, etc.)
- NAE and NRC
- Professional Societies (ASEE, IEEE, etc.)
- Industry Associations
- (IRI, AIA, etc.)
Policy Steering Team
Advocate
Council (Advisory Board)
- Action Teams
- Academic
- Programs
- Enhancing the
- Profession
- Knowledge
- Management
- Research
- Alliances
Influence
Academe
Advocate/ Interact
7IUGREEE TEAMS (Fall 2000)
- Policy and Steering Team (Chair Dr. Ted Okiishi,
Iowa State U.) - Guides and integrates the
activities of the Action Teams (the chairs of
which are on the PS teams) which in turn
identify issues and create action agendas in
their areas of interest. - Academic Programs (Co-chairs John McMasters,
Boeing Wm. Durgin, WPI) - Deals with issues
affecting students prior to graduation (at
whatever degree level) including university
curricula and pedagogy, related ABET
accreditation standards, and industry-university
educational alliances. In a 1999 team
reorganization, Academic Programs absorbed the
activities of the earlier Career Long Learning
team and became responsible for continuing
education issues (curricula, distance learning,
accreditation, etc.) as well. - Enhancing the Engineering Profession Team (Chair
Bob Waner, Boeing) - Works towards providing the
infrastructure necessary to support engineering
education reform and complementary career long
professional development opportunities once
individual enter professional practice. Specific
issues addressed include professional growth and
recognition as well as supply and engineering
image building in K-14 education and in the
public perception. - Knowledge Management Team (Chair Adnan Akay,
Carnegie-Mellon U.) - This team was initially
formed around the notion of the importance of
knowledge reuses with all its education
ramification to the future success of industry
manufacturing concerns. It has since broadened
to an effort to include a range of formal
Knowledge Management issues and concerns into
university programs. - Research Technology Alliances Team (Chair Dave
Wisler, GEAE) - Seeks to better align university
research with industry needs and ultimately
influence the university reward system.
8IUGREEE Council
- The IUGREEE Council is made up of visible,
senior-level individuals with strong ties to
industry, professional societies, academe and
other agencies committed to the goals of the
organization. - Council functions include
- Provide credibility and access to the working
body of the Roundtable - Actively assist in recruiting new (especially
corporate) members - Aid in drawing broad external attention to the
issues identified by the Roundtable - Evaluate and enable Roundtable team actions
- Constructively influence policies and programs of
Roundtable teams and those of other education
reform agencies
9IUGREEE Critical Issues
- Development of a viable action (rather than
mere recommendation) agenda by each of the
IUGREEE teams - Recruiting and retaining additional members,
especially those from non-aerospace companies - Increasing and strengthening (broadening) the
membership of the Council - Strengthening and/or reestablishing relations
with organizations with needed resources to
affect change
- Development of a strategic vision for engineering
education, beyond the limits of what can be
accomplished under ABET EC 2000 - Development of a compelling case for a continued
broad base of industry support and participation
in engineering education reform efforts - We really need to take a hard look at where we go
from where we have been and where we are now -
and why.
10Some Major Near Term Issues to Work
- Continued support for ABET
- Accreditation of click versus brick education
programs - Help define global requirements for ABET
accreditation - Successful full implementation of EC 2000
- Continue to provide high caliber ABET program
evaluators from industry (and overcome internal
company barriers to participation, etc.) - Do we really have a serious problem with the
demographics and pipeline for future graduates?
If so, what should we do about it? - How do we actually affect the faculty (and
industry/government) reward system to better
align both university education and research
programs with real industry needs ? - What, if any, impact do the concepts of Knowledge
Management have on the way universities do their
business? KM is clearly a big deal for industry,
but what does it have to do with the way
individual professors do their jobs? - Programs like our Boeing-Welliver Faculty Summer
Fellowship work well for us, but have so far
resisted exportation to other companies. Why?
How can this situation be changed?
11Boeing List of Desired Attributes of an Engineer
- A good understanding of engineering science
fundamentals - Mathematics (including statistics)
- Physical and life sciences
- Information technology (far more than computer
literacy) - A good understanding of design and manufacturing
processes (i.e. understands engineering) - A multi-disciplinary, systems perspective
- A basic understanding of the context in which
engineering is practiced - Economics (including business practice)
- History
- The environment
- Customer and societal needs
- Good communication skills
- Written
- Oral
- Graphic
- Listening
- High ethical standards
- An ability to think both critically and
creatively - independently and cooperatively - Flexibility. The ability and self-confidence to
adapt to rapid or major change - Curiosity and a desire to learn for life
- A profound understanding of the importance of
teamwork.
- This is a list, begun in 1994, of basic durable
attributes - into which can be mapped specific skills
reflecting the - diversity of the overall engineering
environment in which - we in professional practice operate.
- This current version of the list can be viewed
on the Boeing - web site as a basic message to those seeking
advice from - the company on the topic. Its contents are
also included - for the most part in ABET EC 2000.
12ABETs Role In Technical Education
Workplace Rapid Change Classical Business
Info. Tech New Ventures Globalization Tech
nical Competency Socially Complex Desired
Employee Attributes Individual Basic
Education Advanced Degrees BS
Degree Continuing Education
Certification Life Long Learning Educational
System K-12 System Traditional Schools
Universities Non-Traditional Schools AA,
BS, MS, PhD Intl vs. Domestic Schools
Specialized Educ. Corporate Schools ABET
(Role) Pre-College, K-12 Graduate Degrees
Domestic Accreditation International
Substantial BS Degrees
Equivalency Engineering Continuing
Education Technology Distance
Learning Computing Certification
abetres8262000.ppt
13ABET Program Evaluators from Industry
Industry looks to ABET for Accreditation ABET
looks to Industry for Evaluators
Universities (323) provide the education
with accreditation renewal every 6 years for
1555 programs
Industry Want Engineers who are properly prepared
from universities
ABET provides the accreditation for
Engineering education programs
Graduates enter workforce accepted by industry
as qualified to begin careers
Engineers come from industry to serve
The Math 50 schools/year 6-10 evaluators 3-5
from industry 200 industry people/year 1 week of
time training ABET pays travel Companies pay
time ? Industry Needs to Support
Evaluators 50 Industry 50 University
Professional Societies (28) provide Program
Evaluators and support the training of program
evaluators (eg, ASME, SAE, AIAA)
abetres8262000.ppt
14Changing Paradigms In University Education
- Traditional Model
Emerging Model ?
A whole system perspective
Aided by adoption of ABET EC 2000
Educate
Education (college/university raison detre)
Curriculum
Research (Scholarship and creation of new
knowledge)
Community Service
Create New Knowledge
Community Service
- Blocked by
- Continued heavy reliance on (government) funding
for research - Faculty reward system
- Lack of adequate industry attention
15TECHNICAL EXCELLENCE BY DESIGN
Which of these two archetypal technical employees
is more valuable to The Boeing Company? They
both are!
Growth on this axis is necessary for all
technical path individuals.
- Tool Makers
- Information/Knowledge
- Gathers and Providers
- System Integrators
- Product/service Architects
Breadth of Technical Knowledge/ Experience
Breadth of Technical Knowledge/ Experience
Breadth of Business Knowledge/Experience
Deep Generalists
Technical Specialists/ Experts
Log scale
Minimum knowledge/ expertise required
for Technical Fellowship
Depth of Knowledge/ Experience
Boeing Technical Workforce Currently Future (5
yrs ) Technical Specialists 80-90 50
? Deep Generalists 10-20 50 ?
16Evolving Trends In Engineering Education and
PracticeIndustry Needs -University Responses
- Industry Practice Major Industrialized Nations
- Massive computational/simulation capabilities
- Testing shift to validation
- Integrated Product Teams mandatory
- Lean concepts force closure of engineering
(design) and manufacturing gaps - Heavy emphases on Processes, Costs, Value
- Heavy emphasis on experiment
- Limited to slide rule mathematics
- Heavy reliance on handbook methods
- Strong linkage of engineering to manufacturing
- Limited company funded research
- Continued heavy reliance on testing
- Steadily increasing computational
- capabilities (but largely linear math)
- Widening gap between engineering and
- manufacturing cultures
- Greatly increased company-funded RD
- Greatly increased need for depth of
- technical knowledge
Engineering Curricula
System Integrators/ Product Architects (Multidis
ciplinary Perspective)
Technical Specialists (Engineering Science
Technicians)
- Vocational orientation
- Limited (linear) mathematics
- Emphases on
- - data gathering,
- - problem solving,
- - design (and drafting)
- - manufacturing
- Retain strengths in math and physics
fundamentals plus enhanced IT emphasis - Emphasis on design and manufacturing
- New emphases on breadth, context and process
issues - -Economics, business, project management
- -Environmental and societal issues
- -Teamwork and communication skills
- -Career-long learning
- Engineering
- General
- Practitioners
- Mechanical
- Electrical
- Civil
- Chemical
- Increasing emphasis on depth of specific
- technical knowledge
- Much attention to theory and math technique
- Decreasing emphasis on design and
- manufacturing
- Needs to publish or perish
Information Age
Cold War Era
Rapid Industrial Expansion
Emerging post-Cold War global economy, enabled
by transportation and communications technology
Big science, rapid technological
advances, international perspective
Transform from Agrarian to Manufacturing Economy
WW 2
Sputnik
Berlin Wall
1900
1950
2000
17Desired Elements of a Model Engineering Education
Program
- Curricula with a proper balance between
fundamentals (math, engineering sciences, IT,
etc.) and provision of in-depth experience in
skills and issues important to professional
practice - Fully compliant with the spirit and intent of
ABET EC 2000 cf. Boeing list of Desired
Attributes - Provides a solid foundation for subsequent
graduate study, professional practice and
continued career-long learning - Built on strengths in graduate education and
research programs where these exist - Courses and labs team taught to degree feasible
- Strong emphasis on design-build-test project
experience from the freshman year through
graduation (at whatever degree level) - A diverse, well qualified faculty
- Strong teaching as well as research ability
- Industry and professional practice literate and
experienced - Willing and bale to function as a team
- Exemplars of life-long learning
- Effective mechanisms in place to integrate
knowledge transfer (teaching, etc.) with research
and community service - Vertically between graduate and undergraduate
programs - Horizontally across department, college and
discipline boundaries
- Adequate facilities and institutional support
- Classroom space suitable for cooperative/collabora
tive learning pedagogical models - Dedicated student design-build-test project labs
- Laboratory and computational facilities with
modern equipment and technician support - Strong external (industry, government, etc.)
relations and support - Use of adjunct faculty from industry, etc. to
degree practical - Strong, effective external advisory boards
(with industry, government, peer institution
representation) at both departmental and college
levels - Effective networks and exchange opportunities
with industry, peer university programs (both
domestic and international) and alumni
The model program outlined here pertains to a
standard engineering core (to which requisite
general education/liberal arts content may be
added) in universities with both graduate and
undergraduate degree programs. Most elements are
applicable to those programs devoted primarily to
providing quality undergraduate education as well.
18A Possible Degree and Continuing Education
Structure for Engineering and Engineering
Science Education
- Pre-professional degree for subsequent graduate
study in - business, law, medicine, finance, etc.
- Employment as an engineering science
technician
- Note The traditional BS/MS/PhD degree structure
- is a legacy of the 19th Century origins of
engineering - education programs as vocationally oriented
outgrowths - of the science components of liberal arts
curricula and is - no longer consistent with the needs of a true
- Professional Program.
Professional practice in industry, government,
etc.
Professional Engineering Degree M.E. - Master
of Engineering
Intern/Coop Encouraged
K-12 Education
Continued Career-Long Learning (Education and
Training)
Pre-Professional Engineering/Technology Degree
B.E. - Bachelor of Engineering
Traditional M.S. (Engineering Science)
Traditional Ph.D. (Professional Engineering
Science degree) Professional practice in
academe, research, etc.
5-6 years
19About Process Improvement
- Never tell someone how to do something, tell
them what you want done . . . and they will amaze
you with their solutions. - Gen. George S. Patton
20Industry-University-Government Roundtable for
Enhancing Engineering Education IUGREEE
- Some Issues in Engineering Education in Relation
to Knowledge Management from a Boeing Perspective - October 2000
- John McMasters
- Technical Fellow
- The Boeing Company
- Seattle,WA
21World Views of The Boeing Company
- Heritage Boeing
- (Puget Sound-centric)
- Emerging Boeing (Global) Enterprise
growth
Commercial Airplanes
Customer/Supplier Network
TBC Seattle, WA
Military
Space
growth
Commercial
TBC Global
growth
Other
growth
Space
Military
growth
Other
growth
Note Increasing the size of the company from
its Heritage level presents an organizational
volume problem. Thus, in doubling the size of
the company, according to the square-cube law
the problems of communications, etc.
are increased approximately eight fold.
Global Societal/Political/Economic Context
22Technical Workforce Composition Over Time(Toward
a Technical Workforce Stabilization Strategy)
- Assumption The business remains cyclical per
past historical trends, but grows (in terms of
work statement) at an annualized rate of about 5
per year on average, while attrition stabilizes
at the historical rate of 5-6 per year.
1.0
Relative Technical Employee Headcount
Contingent Workforce -Contractors -Industry
Assist -Off shore teams
Temporary
0.5
Technicians
Permanent
Professionals (Math, Science, Eng., Computing)
Core Professionals (Core long-term technical
expertise)
0
2000
2010
2020
Year
Notes - While the work statement grows over
time, permanent employee headcount can be
stabilized via process improvements,
mechanization of routine work and strategic
assets utilization and consolidation.
- Stabilization of the workforce against
normal attrition allows beneficial continuous
recruiting regardless of fluctuations in the
business cycle.
23Every Technical Employee Has (at least) Two
Allegiances
Multidisciplinary Team Platforms, IPTs, etc.
- Multi-disciplinary Teams (IPTs, Platforms Teams,
etc.) - Discipline/
- Technology
- Specialty
- TIG
- Each technical employee must become an
ambidextrous thinker able to work cooperatively
in a multi-disciplinary team while maintaining
the integrity of the discipline(s) in which each
has particular expertise.
Discipline/ Technology Specialization KM
Communities of Practice
24Opportunities in a Balanced Exploration of the
Knowledge Management Domain
- Opportunities (all quadrants)
- Wise (balanced) use of resources
- Intrinsic part of the education/learning process
Aware
What we know we know.
What we know we dont know.
Knowledge Re-use
Targeted Research
Unknown
Known
Curiosity-based Research
Prospecting Hunting Searching
Traps Surprises Competitive Risk
What someone knows, but that we havent found
yet.
What we dont know we dont know.
Unaware
Originally developed by Dr. Lee Matsch Allied
Signal Aerospace and John McMasters under the
auspices of the Boeing initiated
Industry-University-Government Roundtable for
Enhancing Engineering Education IUGREEE in
1997-98.
25Essentials of Knowledge Management
- Wise application of knowledge is situational -
requiring judgment and experience. There are few
one size fits all, every time, everywhere
solutions to most problems. - Mentorship is required to reach the higher levels
of the KM value stream. - Knowledge is processed organized, interpreted
information. - Knowledge and information is what we put in
textbooks - Information is processed data
Enlightenment
Why What How
Wisdom
Knowledge
What How
Information
Data
26Perspectives on Knowledge Management(Priorities,
Values and Emphases)
Education Agenda
- Customer satisfaction
- Shareholder value
- Profit
- Educated graduates
- Scholarly publications
- Research funding
Enlightenment
Wisdom
Products
Theory
Knowledge
Problem Solution and Data Acquisition Techniques
Tools and Processes
Information
Theory (and economics)
Data
Possible Applications
27Why arent they talking?
Create people networks, rather than mere
information technology networks.
28Technology Interest Groups(Communities of
Practice)
- An Boeing enterprise-wide association of people
- a community of common discipline/technology
interest intent on - advancing their art while maintaining the
integrity of the body of knowledge it
encompasses, - enhancing the skill and knowledge of its
practitioners at all experience levels, - preserving its heritage and durable lessons
learned - purposely making its knowledge and experience
readily accessible to the Boeing community at
large.
29Committees, Teams and Communities
- Committees/Teams
- Task/project oriented
- Direct value (perceived)
- Membership assigned
- Culture of action
- Driven by deliverables
- Develop by work plan (budget and schedule)
- Bound by authority (job expectations, rewards)
- Communities TIGs
- Goals oriented
- Indirect (strategic) value
- Membership open to all
- Culture of learning
- Driven by intrinsic motivation
- Develop organically
- Bound by sense of common interest and purpose
30An Example of a Boeing KM Community of
Practice Aerospace Vehicle Configurations
Technical Fellowship Technology Knowledge
Sharing Forum
- Basic Premises
- Aerospace vehicles remain a core of Boeing
business - All the excellent technology and processes in
the world are - useless without the necessary skilled and
motivate people - to apply them
- Talented designers configurators
aerospace vehicle - system architects are hard to come bythe
skill - needs to be cultivated
Education/Training Programs Available to the
entire Boeing community
Master
One-on-One Mentoring
Aerospace Vehicle Configuration Synthesis 699
Experienced Journey-people
- Mentorship
- Technical Fellowship
- Technical peers
- Outside sources
- Academe
- Customers
- Suppliers
- Other
Aerospace Vehicle Configuration Synthesis 101
Apprentices
University Auxiliary
- Improved curricula
- Enhanced graduates
- Fresh ideas and methods
Strong ties to other CoPs
Faculty
Students
31A Comprehensive TIG Concept
Technology Interest Groups (TIGs) are Boeing
variants of KM Communities of Practice.
Mutual research interests
University Executive Focal Boeing Fellows on
Campus
- Recruiting
- - Interns/
- Coops
- - New Hires
- Enhanced curricula
- Better prepared graduates
Faculty (Welliver Fellows ?)
Cream of the crop
University B
University C
Student Population
Created by Prof. Russ Cummings, Cal Poly-SLO in
collaboration with John McMasters
32Boeing Signature Design Competition
- A Proposal to the Boeing University Relation
Sub-Process Council - Ron Bengelink
- Steve Kruse
- Brian Lee
- John McMasters
- (with special thanks to Dr. Russ Cummings,
- Cal Poly-SLO for review and advice)
- Revised September 29, 2000
Note This proposal was given first
reading approval at the URPC meeting held in
Houston, TX on Sept. 28, 20000.
33Situation/Background
- Boeing has an outstanding Education Outreach
program to advance company interests in - Recruiting
- Continuing education
- Research and technology acquisition
- An outcome has been the adoption of ABET
Engineering Criteria 2000 - an outcomes based
approach to technical education program
accreditation - New ABET standards require a heavy emphasis on
design and many schools lay claim to Boeing
resources to support their programs - A Boeing sponsored design competition could
advance our broad interests while protecting our
limited resources
34What is Wanted
- A program that directly contributes to desired
student learning outcomes and objectives that is
more than a mere second helping of a large
number of often parochially focused design
competitions already on offer under various
auspices - A significant and constructive aid to our future
college recruiting efforts - Directly aids in preparing students with skills
and attributes the company needs - Projects a very positive image of The Boeing
Company and our core competencies - large-scale systems integration
- Customer knowledge and focus
- Lean, efficient design and production systems
35Designing a Design Competition(Some Basic
Principles)
- Enhance the Boeing image
- Branding
- Leader in engineering education enhancement
- Good corporate citizenship
- Be of real educational value in undergraduate
technical (and business) education - Emphasize overall company technical interests and
core competencies - Enhance the image of the engineering profession
at national and local community levels.
- Awareness of colors of money and intellectual
property issues - Offer a prize worth winning while avoiding
winner and losers problems - Should be a multidisciplinary team-based,
design-build-test project competition - Involvement by multi-department and cross-college
teams should be encouraged - Keep it as simple as possible to avoid hidden
costs.
36Competition Proposal
- The Boeing Company annually offers up to three
- prizes of 50,000 each 1/2 to the students and
1/2 to the school to - multidisciplinary teams of undergraduate student
- from our Focus and Interest schools for the
design, - construction and proof of concept demonstration
of a - system or major component of a system (in which
case the - entirety of system of which it is a part is to
be described) which - meets the requirements of a suitable customer
to - be selected by each of the participating teams.
- Note A suitable customer may be any local
non-Boeing company or business, service agency,
philanthropy, municipal government, etc. that
agrees to work with a student team for the
duration of the competition each year.
37Competition Proposal (contd - 1)
- The theme of the competition will initially be
-
- and will reflect the constructive application of
the - broad range of technologies of interest to The
- Boeing Company, its customers and its suppliers
to - the needs of the students local communities.
- Within these broad guidelines, the specific
project - entry to be submitted is left to the discretion
of the - students working with the customer they select.
- A listing of current Boeing technology
interests will be provided each year.
Aerospace Technology in Service to the
Community
38Boeing Major Technologies(As Identified by the
Technical Fellowship Sub-Process Council in 1999)
Sample only
- Aerodynamics
- Aeroservoelasticity
- Communications
- Computing
- Configurations (airplanes, missiles, spacecraft,
rotorcraft) - Electronics
- Low Observables
- Materials
- Manufacturing
- Multidisciplinary Optimization MDO
- Propulsion
- Software
- Space Flight
- Structures
- Systems (Mission)
- Systems (Vehicle)
- Testing
- Other, e.g.
- Human Factors
- Safety
- Noise (Acoustics)
- Metrology
- Fuels
39Competition Proposal (contd -2)
- In addition to the prize money offered to the
winning entries, the company offers preliminary
funding grants of 3,000 each to the 50 teams
submitting preliminary project proposals
(received by time and date to be specified)
judged most promising according to the
competition criteria. - Notes
- Failure to receive a grant does not preclude
entry into the competition - Grants are to be given to most promising team
proposals, with a limit of three maximum per
school per year - Grants are not subtracted from subsequent prize
to winning teams - Teams receiving grants which fail to produce a
final report disqualify their school from
subsequent competition entry for a two year
period.
40Competition Proposal (contd-3)
- Competition Schedule (Typical)
- Competition announcement sent to eligible schools
- (via Executive Focals) March 2001
- Students find customers, form teams, develop
- projects Apr. -Sept. 2001
- Preliminary proposals submitted
- ( for Prelim. Grant ) Oct.
15, 2001 - Grants awarded Nov. 1, 2001
- Announcement of following years competition
April 2002 - Formal entry packages Final Rpt. and test doc.
- due May 1, 2001
- Winners announced June 1, 2001
41Competition Proposal (contd -4)
- Student Team Deliverables
- Final Project Documentation (Due May 1, 200X1)
- A final written report in specified format not to
exceed 50 pages in length including
illustrations, etc. with a mandatory 2-page
Executive Summary good practice samples to be
provided for guidance - A video tape or equivalent documentation of
test/proof-of-concept validation results not to
exceed 10 minutes in length - A letter from the students customer verifying
the degree to which the project results met their
agreed upon requirements
42Final Report Format and Content Requirements
- Maximum 50 page limit including all
illustrations, and required documentation - 12 point Helvetica font with standard margins
- Must include a clear 2-page Executive Summary
- Must contain a suitable Index and List of
Illustrations - Clear, concise description of the customer, the
project and why it is significant - Clear description of customer requirements and
design objectives
- Full discussion of design, and the design process
and methods used - Full discussion of the construction materials and
techniques used and why specific approaches were
taken - Appropriation documentation of test procedures
and results (in addition to video, etc.) - Costs incurred, project management plan, and a
closed business case for potential manufacture
if applicable - Summary of lessons learned
- Validation letter from the customer
43Competition Judging Criteria
- Quality of Overall Approach and Results
40 - Depth of thought and understanding of all product
and process - phases of the project
- Appropriateness and logic displayed in approaches
and method used - Multidisciplinary aspects of the team and results
proportion to effort - and cost expended
- Significance and Value of the Problem Solved
30 - Importance of the problem as it serves the
interest and needs - of the customer
- Results obtained in terms of simplicity,
cost-effectiveness and value - Results of the business case analysis
- Creativity and Imagination Demonstrated
20 - The best solution may be the simplest one
- Innovation for innovations sake is to be
avoided - Additional Relevant Factors 10
- Aesthetic appeal, absolute simplicity (in solving
a tough problem), etc. - Truly imaginative or unique selection of a
problem or a customer - Good results from a virtual team of students from
several universities
44Competition Judging Process
- Judging panel to be formed of company technical
managers, members of the Technical Fellowship
(STF,TF,ATF - it is now in their job description
and we have over 1300), and other company
technical experts as necessary and appropriate on
a rotational basis for the duration of a given
years competition - The judges decisions shall be final (except in
cases of fraud, plagiarism, or failure to follow
the stated process) - The judges shall review 5-page Preliminary
Proposal packages and select up to 80 student
teams for 3,000 preliminary funding grants (Oct
15-Nov.1, 200X) - The judges will review the Executive Summaries
(and test documentation if warranted) of the
Final Documentation packages submitted and down
select to a suitable number (about 15-20)
finalists ( May 1-15, 200X1) - The judges with conduct a full review of the
down-selected packages and recommend up to three
winners to the URPC (May 15-30, 200X1) - Following approval by management of the judges
selections, winners of the competition will be
informed on June 1, 200X1.
45Additional Factors and Considerations
- Intellectual property rights for any work that
may be patentable or copy written will be
assigned to the students and their customers to
be dealt with by local precedent and procedure.
To address IRS issues with Colors of money,
and avoid as many legal entanglements as
possible. - There is no single right answer and the playing
field is level - A wide range of customers and problems are
possible - A small team that produces good results
working an a small but significant problem has as
much chance of winning as does a large team
working on something grand - This proposed competition is a contest within a
contest within a contest - Students must find their own (non-Boeing)
customers and define with them the problems to be
solved - The students must then design, build and test a
product - The students must also demonstrate an
understanding of the entire Process (including
the business and project management aspects)
46A Competition Everyone Wins
- The Boeing Company
- Enhances the company image
- Enhances the recruiting of students with the
right skills - Serves many university relations interests with
consolidated use of our always limited resources - Students
- Exposed to and given realistic experience in our
full list of Desired Attributes of an Engineer - Gain exposure to working with a customer on a
real problem of significance in their communities
- The Students Customers
- Gain the benefits of whatever the students are
able to do, whether they win the prize for the
competition or not