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American Engineering Education In International Perspective: Alois Riedler And The Reform Of German Engineering, 1893 1914
Author(s) -
Gregory R. Zieren
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
2006 annual conference and exposition proceedings
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.18260/1-2--1263
Subject(s) - german , perspective (graphical) , engineering ethics , political science , engineering education , engineering , engineering management , economic history , aeronautics , computer science , history , artificial intelligence , archaeology
In 1893 Prof. Alois Riedler of the Royal Technical University of Berlin was commissioned by the Prussian Ministry of Education and Culture to investigate American engineering education. At the same time he also served as a technical correspondent for the Association of German Engineers and wrote extensively on American technology on display at the World’s Columbian Exposition for the Association’s journal. Riedler’s interest in American engineering education had its origins in his role as a jury member at the Philadelphia Centennial in 1876 and his admiration for the accomplishments of American civil and mechanical engineers, whom he considered to be among the world’s best. He was also the leading German proponent of reform of engineering education away from overly abstract and theoretical instruction, equal standing for newer technical universities with traditional institutions of higher learning, and improvement in the professional and social standing of the engineer in German society. Riedler’s report singled out programs at Cornell University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Stevens Institute of Technology as engineering curricula worth emulating by German technical universities. He believed that the hours spent in practical laboratories, as the best American programs required, offered hands-on and practical experience for engineers in training. Materials testing facilities offered both faculty and students the opportunity to perform real research of value to the engineering profession and society at large. Riedler’s conclusions won quick approval in professional engineering circles in Germany. The Association of German Engineers took up his recommendations and incorporated them into a series of resolutions to be forwarded to state governments to increase the funding for technical universities, to change the curriculum promoting laboratory practice and create practical testing facilities. The reforms, inspired by American engineering school education, profoundly changed the nature of German engineering in the 20 century.

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