Title: Bachelor of Wireless Engineering Program at Auburn University
1Bachelor of Wireless Engineering Programat
Auburn University
- Victor P. Nelson
- Electrical Computer Engineering
- Auburn University
- nelson_at_eng.auburn.edu
2Outline
- History of wireless engineering at Auburn
- Motivation for creating the program
- The program development process
- The Wireless EE curriculum
- The Wireless SWE curriculum
- Program Status
3Wireless Engineering at Auburn Background
- Wireless technology and networks has been a focus
of research in ECE and CSSE, particularly in the
Information Technology Peak of Excellence - 25M gift to AU from Dr. Sam Ginn in Feb. 2001,
most of which will support wireless engineering - Dr. Ginns vision for wireless engineering at AU
- Unique baccalaureate program in wireless
- Excellence in graduate programs and research
- AU Wireless Engineering Research and Education
Center (WEREC) Established (Director Dr. Richard
Jaeger)
4Wireless Engineering at Auburn(background -
continued)
- Baccalaureate Wireless Engineering curriculum
developed - ECE and CSSE Departments
- AU joined the Global Wireless Education
Consortium - - GWEC Points of Knowledge considered in
curriculum - Wireless Technical Advisory Board created
- Met with AU faculty on campus and at their sites
- Sam Ginn Professorship in Wireless Engineering
created - Planning for graduate programs and extension
activities in Wireless
5Wireless Advisory Board
- Sam Ginn, Chairman (ret.), Vodaphone
- Donal OConnell, VP RD, Nokia
- William Keever, President, Vodaphone
- Al Javed, VP Wireless Networks, Nortel Networks
- Hakan Eriksson, VP Research, Ericsson
- Ted Hoffman, VP Tech Dev, Verizon Wireless
- Richard DeMillo, Chief Tech Officer, HP
- Edgar Reynolds, Pres. Network Ops, Cingular
- Bill Krenik, Wireless Adv Arch Mgr, T.I.
6Bachelor of Wireless Engineering Program
Constituents
- Wireless equipment manufacturers
- ICs
- Handsets
- Networking equipment
- Wireless service providers
- Network integration
- Network operation
- Network planning
7Wireless Engineering Job Market
- Dr. Sam Ginn, Retired Chairman of Vodaphone, made
gift to create a program to support the needs of
the wireless industry, based on his experience - Donal OConnell, VP of RD at Nokia, estimates
300-400,000 jobs in the wireless industry, with
many of these in engineering - Edgar Reynolds, Pres. Network Operations at
Cingular, estimates 1,000 jobs per year in the
Southeast U.S. - Letters from the A.U. Wireless Advisory Board
indicate their keen desire to hire BWE graduates
8The Wireless Engineering ProgramDevelopment
Process
- Initial curriculum focused on RF design, wireless
communication wireless networks - Intended to be a formal option within EE
- Wireless option within SW Engineering added
- Wireless industry needs software engineers who
understand the EE aspects of wireless
communication, technology and networks - Networking emphasis added to both options
- To address needs of wireless service providers
- Program redesignated Bachelor of Wireless
Engineering - Dr. Ginns desire to emphasize program uniqueness
- Supported by AU Wireless Technical Advisory Board
9Wireless Engineering Program Educational
Objectives
- Produce graduates with a basic foundation in
electrical or software engineering,
telecommunication network design and operation,
and wireless technology that will provide the
technical proficiency needed for the professional
practice of engineering in the wireless
telecommunications industry. - Objectives shared with EE, CPE, SWE
- ability to communicate
- prepared for lifelong learning
- responsible citizens highest ethical
standards
10 Baachelor of Wireless EngineeringProgram
Organization
Wireless Electrical Engineering Option
Wireless Software Engineering Option
EE Core
SWE Core
Wireless Core
Wireless Core
Hardware Design
Software Design
Network Design
(Areas of Specialization)
11BWE Degree Requirements
- 128 Credit Hours (AU constraint)
- 30 credits general studies (AU core)
- 32-33 credits math and science
- 7 credits general engineering
- 26 credits common EE/SWE core
- 29-30 credits EE or SWE wireless courses
- (6-9 credits specialization-specific)
- 3 credits free elective
12BWE (EE Option) vs. BEECommon EE Courses
- Circuits, Signals Systems
- Digital Circuits, Computer Organization
- Digital Electronics, Analog Electronics
- Electromagnetics I II
- Probability, Communications
- EE Labs I, II, III (radio)
- Senior Design Project
13BEE Courses Dropped from BWE (EE Option)
- Power Systems
- Control Systems
- EE Lab IV (Robot)
- Two general engineering courses
- Statics/Dynamics/Strength of Materials
- Thermo/Heat Transfer/Fluid Flow
- One technical elective
14Courses Unique to BWE (EE Option)
- Wireless Core Courses
- Wireless Communications Systems
- Wireless Networks
- Wireless Communication Lab
- Computer Programming (C)
- Network Specialization
- Data Networks
- Telecom. Networks
- Network Optimization
- Hardware Specialization
- RF Electronics
- Digital Signal Processing
15BWE (SWE Option) vs. BSWECommon COMP Courses
- Computer Science I II (including labs)
- Discrete Structures, Algorithms
- Digital Circuits (EE)
- Computer Organization
- Computer Networks
- Computer Ethics
- Senior Design Project
16BSWE Courses Dropped from BWE (SWE Option)
- Operating Systems
- (replaced by Embedded Systems Software)
- Software Modeling Design
- (replaced by Wireless Software Development)
- Programming Language Principles
- Computer Architecture
- Intelligent Interactive Systems
- General engineering course
- One technical elective
17EE Courses Included in BWE (SWE Option) not in
BSWE
- Circuits
- Signals Systems
- Probability
- Communications
- EE Lab I
- Wireless Communications Lab
18Wireless Courses Unique to BWE (SWE Option)
- Wireless Core Courses
- Embedded Systems Software
- Wireless Software Development
- Wireless Mobile Networks
- Network Specialization
- Telecom. Networks
- Network Optimization
- Network Quality Assurance
- Software Specialization
- (Also in BSWE)
- Software Processes
- Software Quality Assurance
19Wireless Engineering Elective Courses(new and
existing)
- ECE
- Wireless information security
- RF Microwave Engineering
- Design of Antennas Antenna Systems
- CSSE
- Computer network security
- Interface design for wireless applications
- Personal area networks
- 3G and 4G wireless
20BWE Accreditation Issues
- Since wireless engineering criteria do not
exist, the BWE program will be reviewed under
ABET EC2000 Nontraditional Program Criteria - BWE must satisfy EC2000 general criteria.
- (common to all engineering programs)
- We must define program-specific outcomes and
demonstrate achievement by BWE graduates - (EE/SWE plus wireless-specific outcomes)
- 15 programs required to define ABET
program-specific criteria
21Status of the BWE Program
- Approved through Auburn University channels
- ECE and CSSE Curriculum Committees
- Wireless Technical Advisory Board
- College of Engineering Curriculum Committee
- University Curriculum Committee
- A.U. Board of Trustees
- Submitted to Alabama Commission on Higher
Education (decision expected in May, 2002) - Planned start date Fall 2002
- Advisors now working with prospective and current
students interested in the BWE program
22Further Information
- For further information, visit
- http//www.eng.auburn.edu/ece
- Or email
- nelson_at_eng.auburn.edu