Chemical Engineering Essentials from Academic Authors - Session One - Engineering Education in 2015 (or sooner) | AIChE

Chemical Engineering Essentials from Academic Authors - Session One - Engineering Education in 2015 (or sooner)

 

LIMITED TIME OFFER: Claim a 20% discount on eLearning courses with code ELEARN20.

Offer is valid from April 1-30. Credential programs excluded from promo. 

The American job market for engineers is changing. In 'The World is Flat', Thomas Friedman argues convincingly that most jobs calling for the analytical problem-solving skills that engineering education has traditionally focused on can now be done better and/or cheaper by either computers or skilled foreign workers—and if they can be, they will be. Friedman also predicts that American professionals with certain different skills will continue to be in demand. His list includes creative thinking and entrepreneurship, the ability to recognize complex patterns and opportunities in the global economy and formulate strategies to capitalize on them, the communication skills and cultural awareness needed to establish and maintain good relationships with current and potential customers and commercial partners in developing countries, and the capacity for self-directed learning needed to stay abreast of rapidly changing technological and economic conditions.

Traditional engineering curricula were not designed to equip students with those skills nor were engineering faculty prepared to provide the requisite training, and there have been numerous calls for changes in both curricula and faculty development. As might be expected, many faculty members and administrators are less than enthusiastic about the proposed changes, arguing that the existing system functions well and needs no radical revision.

The ongoing debate involves four focal issues:

1. How should engineering curricula be structured?

2. How should courses be taught and assessed (and what role will technology play)?

3. Who should teach?

4. How should the teachers be prepared?

This webinar outlines the opposing positions on each of these issues—the traditional position, which has been the predominant approach for centuries, and the alternative position—and offers predictions about the outcomes.


Webinar content is available with the kind permission of the author(s) solely for the purpose of furthering AIChE’s mission to educate, inform and improve the practice of professional chemical engineering. All other uses are forbidden without the express consent of the author(s). For permission to re-use, please contact chemepermissions@aiche.org.

Once the content has been viewed and you have attested to it, you will be able to download and print a certificate for PDH credits. If you have already viewed this content, please click here to login.
  • AIChE Member Credits - 1
  • AIChE Pro Members - $76.00
  • AIChE Graduate Student Members - Free
  • AIChE Undergraduate Student Members - Free
  • AIChE Explorer Members - $109.00
  • Non-Members - $109.00
Do you already own this? Log In for instructions on accessing this content.
  • Source:
    AIChE
  • Language:
    English
  • Skill Level:
    Intermediate
  • Duration:
  • PDHs:
    1.50