Title: The Future of Engineering Education
1- The Future of Engineering Education
- Where do we go from here?
- Peter Goodhew FREng
- University of Liverpool
2The context
- In future, graduate working lifetimes are likely
to be gt50 years - There will be regular national and international
crises - There will be rapid change in ways we cannot
today imagine - The laws of physics will not change
3Current crisis The recession
- My first priority has been to identify
efficiencies in spending programmes supported by
DIUS which do not directly contribute to the
frontline delivery of teaching and research, and
the targets set out below reflect the significant
savings I intend to achieve in these areas. - I would like you to look critically at the
funding you provide for bodies that do not
directly deliver teaching and research. - John Denham, UK Secretary of State for
Innovation, Universities and Skills letter to
HEFCE, 6th May 2009.
Support for change may (temporarily) disappear
4In the next 50 years
- There will be more knowledge
- Information will be readily accessible, by almost
anyone - There will be new engineering disciplines
- Biology will be more important, and more
controlled - Engineers will be even more crucial to the
operation of society - The rate of change will be higher (Moores law
for engineering?) - There will be a number of grand challenges
(global warming, energy, water)
5 but
- We have to design and offer engineering courses
now which can provide the basis for practise as
an engineer in 55 years time!
655 years ago
In 1954, before I went to University!
laser PC mobile phone optical storage internet
heart transplant MRI space travel pulsar
catalytic converter fuel injection CCD digital
imaging jet airliners photocopier geodesic dome
bucky ball VCR integrated circuit LED LCD genetic
modification spreadsheet foreign food cheap air
travel Euro security scanners nuclear power
7Current problems (which may get worse / better)
- Engineering is perceived to be difficult / an
exciting challenge - Much of the best engineering is invisible to the
general public / wonderfully miniaturised and
incredibly reliable - Engineering is perceived to be masculine / a good
field for women to enter - Creative engineering requires a large base of
knowledge / takes you into all corners of society
81964
9Invisible engineering
10Invisible engineering
11Visible engineering
12Visible engineering
13Visible engineering
14Invisible engineering
- The iPhone
- HDD recorder
- Ink-jet printers
- The cockpit of the plane which brought me here
15Questions
- Active engineering students ask questions
- So shall I
- (time for a joke?)
16A thought about happy sheets
- academics are often in the business of
educating their students tastes and encouraging
them to question their values. Indeed one of the
most distinct and significant dimensions of
academic and intellectual activity is that it
does not often give customers what they want. - Frank Furedi Times Higher Education, 4th June
2009
17Question
- Who are we going to be educating?
- Young people, fresh from school
- Mid-career citizens getting into engineering
- Prior engineers needing a refresher
- Future researchers
- Future educated citizens
- The elderly, seeking to make a contribution
18Question
- For what purpose? What are these engineers to
do? - Creative innovation ( design new things)
- Entrepreneurial activity ( make money)
- Research ( expand our knowledge)
- Work as engineers in wealth-creating industry (
keep the economy going) - Work as non-engineers ( keep society going)
- Vote ( encourage states to do the right thing)
- Continue to learn ( or get left behind)
19Question
- Is professional accreditation helpful?
- The pace of change is likely to be faster than
the time constant for accreditation - Accreditation has little effect on the quality of
engineering practice - New types of engineering (eg inter-disciplinary)
are likely to emerge faster than accreditation
can keep up
20Question
- Can we continue to specialise at undergraduate
level? - E.g. mechanical aero electrical civil
materials production - Will these terms still be meaningful in 50 years?
- What other specialisms will emerge?
- Shouldnt we have an engineering foundation
like pre-clinical medicine?
21Question
- What is the minimum set of knowledge and
attitudes which justifies the designation
engineer? - Knowledge could be almost anything
- Depth or proven ability to understand in depth
- Attitudes surely most important, but which?
- Problem solving ability
22Question
- How should we partition learning time between
- Expertise/knowhow ( can do)
- Knowledge (... understands)
- Appreciation ( is aware of)
- Communication skills ( can explain)
- Societal understanding? ( does the right thing)?
23A new model
- Not linear but networked
- Knowledge of Engineering Science
- Skills for using knowledge creativity
intuition ingenuity - Attitudes skepticism, persistence, agility,
dynamism - Leadership, teamwork, communication
Mathematics?
Sheppard et al. Educating Engineers Designing
for the Future of the Field, Carnegie 2009
24Group T modelLeuven
- 5E Engineering, Enterprising, Educating,
Ensembling, Environmenting - Mission is Educing Essence by Experiencing
Existence - 3 building blocks
- the Engineering Experiences lie at the heart of
the curriculum - the Engineering Content forms its backbone and
- the 5E-Context is its soul
Group T, Leuven, Belgium www.groupt.be/www/
25Alternative T
B r e a d t h
Depth
26My Lemmas
- Few individuals will be prepared to spend more
than 4-5 years on their initial formation as an
engineer - The most important applications for engineering
(in terms of addressing societys issues) will
change every ten years or so - Biology will become important to engineers
- We cannot, and will not be able to, demand depth
of study in all areas deemed important by any
group of engineers
27My suggestions
- Address the question via assessment
- What should we test after 4 years?
- Ability to hold a discussion with an expert about
one topic at the cutting edge of research (depth) - Ability to formulate a reasonable solution to an
open-ended engineering problem given incomplete
data (engineering aptitude) - Ability to tell a story, and answer questions,
about the development of an engineered artefact
to include all aspects of its life cycle from
societal need to eventual disposal
(understanding, societal and communication
skills) - Ability to retrieve information and deploy it
quickly and accurately (knowledge, agility,
dynamism, persistence) - Credibility as a team member, possibly leader
(employability)
28The challenge
- How do we construct a programme to develop
students to meet these tests? - Note that none of the five areas is best tested
using a conventional exam! - How do we organise to deliver LLL as well as
initial formation? Together or separately?
29The summarySome paths through life!
How much of this do we aspire to deal with?
30 and finally
- For an example from the past
- Lets go back to 1882 to meet one of the true
greats of British Engineering
31Joseph Bazalgette President of the Institution
of Civil Engineers
32Bazalgettes Genius
- By the middle of the 19th century, London was on
the brink of an environmental catastrophe. - The city was growing rapidly in terms of
population and size, and the old ways of
supplying water, burying the dead and disposing
of sewage were rapidly becoming inadequate. - Little was done until the 'Great Stink' of 1858
offended Members of Parliament. - Over the following seven years, Joseph Bazalgette
and the Metropolitan Board of Works constructed a
simple but immense sewage disposal system - Pumping waste into the Thames far East of London
33Crossness Pumping Station
- Incoming liquid was raised some 30-40 feet by the
application of four large steam driven pumps - The single cylinder beam engines were of enormous
size and power - They were built by James Watt Co. to Joseph
Bazalgette's own designs and specification
34(No Transcript)
35Bazalgettes Skills Abilities
- Understood and responded to his social, economic
and political environment - Applied his theoretical engineering knowledge and
ability to solve real problems for the good of
society - Improving quality of life and human health
- Laying the foundations for continued economic
growth - A true multi-disciplinary engineer
- Trained as a civil engineer but was also an
accomplished mechanical engineer - Had a good eye for design
- Engineering works executed with a style and
panache that goes beyond the strictly functional
36Joseph Bazalgette was a great engineer because he
combined excellent technical ability with a broad
range of personal and professional skills
Will tomorrows engineering graduates be equipped
with the right blend of knowledge, skills and
abilities to become great engineers?
37Incidentally,
- Joseph Bazalgettes great-great-grandson is this
man
- Successful TV executive who pioneered reality TV
bringing us such gems as - Changing Rooms
- Ready Steady Cook
- Ground Force
- Deal or No Deal
- Big Brother
Peter Bazalgette
38IRONY!
39- Enjoy the conference while thinking about the
future