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Engineering Design in Industry: Teaching Students and Faculty to Apply Engineering Science in Design
Author(s) -
DunnRankin Derek,
Bobrow James E.,
Mease Kenneth D.,
McCarthy J. Michael
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
journal of engineering education
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.896
H-Index - 108
eISSN - 2168-9830
pISSN - 1069-4730
DOI - 10.1002/j.2168-9830.1998.tb00345.x
Subject(s) - curriculum , engineering education , relevance (law) , engineering , engineering management , health systems engineering , bridge (graph theory) , aerospace , core competency , engineering design process , civil engineering software , engineering ethics , biological systems engineering , mechanical engineering , management , pedagogy , psychology , medicine , political science , law , economics , aerospace engineering
In a typical engineering curriculum students and faculty rarely have the opportunity to take a real problem, extract its essence, apply an analysis, and then make design decisions based on this analysis. This extractive link between fundamentals and design is particularly critical to a smooth transition from engineering study at the university to engineering practice in industry. Historically, universities have taken the responsibility for rigorous theoretical and technical training in subjects that include the basic sciences and fundamentals of engineering, while industry has been responsible for making engineering graduates contributors to specific tasks important to the company and its core competency. In this division of training, however, no one teaches students how to apply fundamental engineering principles to practical problems. To make matters worse, faculty often ignore engineering relevance of basic theory and the students then reject these fundamentals; in both cases engineering performance suffers. One solution to this missing bridge is being developed in the Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Department at the University of California, Irvine (UCI) in the form of the “Engineering Design in Industry” program.