Outline - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 49
About This Presentation
Title:

Outline

Description:

1983-84 National Science Foundation Engineering Research Centers ... Indicators 2002, Text Table 2-9, page 2-23. Courtesy of Michael Crosby, NSB. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:25
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 50
Provided by: mtab7
Category:
Tags: crosby | outline

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Outline


1
Outline
  • General comments on the ECE curriculum and
    external factors influencing change
  • Role of Biology in Engineering
  • What EE and Eng. can do for Biology
  • Applications
  • Concluding Remarks

2
Generation of Change
  • 1981 Bayh-Dole Act requiring universities to
    protect intellectual property funded by the
    government and license preferably to small
    businesses.
  • 1983-84 National Science Foundation Engineering
    Research Centers interdisciplinary, team-based
    research focused on an engineering system.
  • ABET 2000 (a) (k) what students need to know
    to be effective members of the profession.
  • Recognition that the profession needs to be
  • inclusive.

3
The Need for Continuous Curricular Change
  • Changing Workforce Demographics
  • Educating Students for a Career
  • Sustaining US Innovation

4
Mission of the University1
  • Pass on culture to the next generation.
  • Educate researchers and investigators.
  • Train students for the professions.
  • Produce leaders for society.
  • 1. Jose Ortega y Gasset, 1944 Princeton Press

5
Great Cultural Disciplines
  • Physical scheme of the world (physics)
  • Fundamentals of organic life (biology)
  • Historical processes of the human species
    (history)
  • Structure and function of society (sociology)
  • Plan for the Universe (philosophy)

6
Entering First Year College Students
Source U.S. Bureau of the Census, Population
Division, Projections of the Resident Population
by Age, Sex, Race and Hispanic Origin 1999 to
2100 Note Populations for 2010 and 2025 are
projected.
7
Gender Demographics 2002 Natural Scientists and
Engineers of total 24 yr. olds
  • Source Science and Engineering Indicators 2002,
    Text Table 2-9, page 2-23. Courtesy of Michael
    Crosby, NSB.

8
Ratio of 2002 NSE degrees to total degrees
granted
  • Source Science and Engineering Indicators 2002,
    Text Table 2-9, page 2-23.

9
US Workforce is Changing
  • Steady decrease in US students pursuing science
    and engineering degrees from 1985-2003.
  • Steady increase in underrepresented students
    entering college few are pursuing NSE degrees.
  • Fewer women than men obtaining NSE degrees.
  • US has traditionally relied on foreign-born
    scientists and engineers
  • H-B1 Visas issued dropped in half from 2001
    2003
  • Applications to US Universities falling

10
The Need for scientists and engineers is gt the
number of technical jobs
Use of Engineering Skills in Occupations
Occupations of Engineers
Source Science and Engineering Indicators 2004
Note SESTAT definitions of Eng and Non-Eng
occupations.
Source Calculated from Science and Engineering
Indicators 2004 Note Use SE skills includes
all those in SESTAT-defined Eng jobs and those
in SESTAT-defined Non-Eng jobs who closely or
somewhat use Eng skills in those jobs.
11
How do we attract the next generation into NSE?
  • Teach students what they need to know (not what
    we know how to teach).
  • Motivate students to want to learn (foster
    curiosity and confidence).
  • Align curriculum with social issues, make it
    relevant to our modern society.
  • Diversify faculty role models are critical.
  • Create community isolation cited for attrition
    particularly for underrepresented groups.

12
What do they need to know?
  • Solve problems in their discipline.
  • Integrate knowledge across disciplines.
  • Make persuasive oral and written arguments.
  • Develop a holistic perspective on projects,
    problems, and programs.
  • Appreciate and respect other people, cultures
    team player.

13
How do we do this?
  • Common first year design experience focused on a
    relevant engineering theme.
  • Second year core courses building on an
    integrated theme.
  • Third year depth courses with integrated
    independent research and international
    experience.
  • Fourth year team-based, challenging design
    project that makes an impact.

14
Example in ECE at Duke3
  • First year experience Matlab as a common
    computational platform. Fundamentals of ECE
    design course building on a theme of integrated
    sensors and information processing (ISIP)
    building a weather station with integrated
    sensors.
  • Second year disciplinary knowledge in four
    subjects circuits and devices,
    electromagnetics, signals and systems, logic and
    computer architecture. Case studies in
    engineering design/leadership.
  • Third year focus on depth, integrating research
    experiences and gaining international exposure.
  • Fourth year integrated design course and
    breadth design electives.
  • 3 Professors Lisa Huettel and Leslie Collins,
    NSF curriculum design grant.

15
Change Engineering Education To
  • Prune the curriculum to provide flexibility.
  • Integrate the great cultural subjects into every
    engineering course - addressing the Hybrid
    World2
  • Start design in the first year.
  • Switch the emphasis from the classroom to the
    lab.
  • Require international and independent research
    experience.
  • Focus on preparing professionals, researchers and
    leaders to sustain innovation you dont
    outsource leadership.
  • 2. Rosalind Williams, Profession Formerly Known
    as Eng.

16
Integrating The Great Cultural Subjects the
Living World
  • Role of Biology in the Engineering Curriculum
  • Inspiration
  • Motivation
  • Interesting Problems
  • Diversity

17
(No Transcript)
18
(No Transcript)
19
(No Transcript)
20
(No Transcript)
21
(No Transcript)
22
(No Transcript)
23
(No Transcript)
24
(No Transcript)
25
(No Transcript)
26
(No Transcript)
27
(No Transcript)
28
(No Transcript)
29
(No Transcript)
30
(No Transcript)
31
(No Transcript)
32
(No Transcript)
33
(No Transcript)
34
(No Transcript)
35
(No Transcript)
36
(No Transcript)
37
(No Transcript)
38
(No Transcript)
39
(No Transcript)
40
(No Transcript)
41
What can engineering do for the biological
sciences?
  • Provide a language for describing living
    organisms from a systems perspective
  • Deliver analytical tools and develop quantitative
    approaches for understanding these systems
  • Manage information over multiple scales
  • Optimize system under constraints

42
Applications
  • Macroscopic scales
  • Biomedical devices
  • Imaging and instrumentation
  • Assistive technology,
  • Networks and communications
  • Microscopic scales
  • Nanomedicine
  • Nanomanufacturing

43
(No Transcript)
44
Closed-Loop Brain-Machine Interface for
Augmenting Motor Performance
Miguel A. L. Nicolelis, Pat Wolf and Craig
Henriquez Depts. Neurobiology and Biomedical
Engineering, Center for Neuroengineering Duke
University, nicoleli_at_neuro.duke.edu
45
HIGH DENSITY MICROWIRE ARRAYS
46
Cortical Neuroprosthesis for Restoring Motor
Functions
Nicolelis and Chapin. Scientific American 2002.
Nicolelis, MAL. Nature Rev. Neurosci. 2003.

47
CURRENT EXPERIMENTAL APPROACH
48
Engineering the Brain-Machine Interface

49
Engineering the Brain-Machine Interface
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com