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Alun Palmer wrote in message . ..
(Brian Kelly) wrote in om: Brian, I can't even understand that sentence. Can you try again? I screwed that one to the wall good din I? It was late. The Scotch was lousy. Don't duck the bullet Alun, I don't have to try again, you bloody well know what I mean. I had to read it a few times. I think the reason for poor performance in UK engineering has nothing to do with the quality of UK engineers and everything to do with the culture of UK companies, in which the engineers are not in charge, but instead the accountants are. And this is not because we don't study business subjects (we do), or because we don't do English or History or 'Western Civilisation' in college (the accountants don't either). That's universal in capitalist democracies. But it's better than "the other" system which proved to be mother of all socioeconomic duds of the prior millenium. There is a BSME/MBA I know extremely well who rose to the top of a local technology-based quarter-billion dollar manufacturing enterprise. He ran into a nasty show-stopping product design problem which involved the need for far-end analytical work to resolve. He groused to me about it. Sayeth me; "I toldja 'way back to get yer PhD!" To which his response was, "Ah phooey, any time I want a PhD I'll go out and buy one." Which is exactly what he did. That's our fate and we done it to ourselves. As I understand it (and I freely admit there are gaps in my knowledge of your system), you can get a 4-year degree over here with 120 (?) semester- hours of credit, and maybe only half of it has to be in your major (?). When I sat down and tried to calculate it (from old timetables, since there are no hours on my transcript, only grades) my 3-year UK degree included about 150 semester-hours of classroom time, of which about 120 semester hours was in engineering subjects, the rest being things like economics, finance, mathematics, etc. I'm not a product of a traditional four year U.S. engineering school either so I'm not much better off than you are when it comes to comparing U.K apples to U.S. oranges, it's a mess. I trudged thru what is called a five-year "cooperative education" undergrad mech eng program. It's quite different from the four year schools' approach, entrance requirements are similar but just about everything else is different. The classroom & lab side of the program consists of twelve 11 week "terms" at a rate of four terms per year vs. semesters. Ten weeks in class plus "exam week". The Freshman year is spent taking three terms straight in class. Beyond the third term students serve two terms in class then two terms out in industry per year on a rotating basis for four years. The six-month "industry periods" are served working for firms which are cooperating with the school by providing paid engineering apprenticeships supervised by both the school and the firms. In some instances government agencies are the employers. By the time they drop your dipolma on you you've spent five years at it but already have two years experience in whatever your field happens to be. Once you're in you're in for five straight, no summers at the beach working as a lifeguard BS. One of my brothers went thru the ME program with me and we both came out with all our bills paid without tapping our parents and with money in the bank. I doubt that this is possible today but it's still better than not earning income by working in your field as a student. Credits are granted by the classroom hour and half credits are granted for lab hours. 212 credits were required to graduate, I assume that's still the case. Plus grades and averages were strictly by the numbers, an 83 in a course was better than an 82, no such things as As, Bs and Cs. 65 was the flunk point. All of which was/is completely incompatible with the way the traditional schools pass out credits and grades. Made transferring credits to and from other schools a *major* pain except in the cases of similar schools like MIT and Cincinatti Tech. Course work was all over the map. Two or three mandatory terms (it's been awhile . . !) of English were the only classroom humanities we took but there were piles of humanities electives available. Two terms of modern economics plus one of engineering economics were also mandatory. There were a couple other nontechnical "mandatories" but I've lost track. One cute hook they inserted into the program was the "industry reading courses". Mandatory humanities reading assignments completed while out in the work force and were tested immediately upon return to class terms. Normally involved 4-5 arcane tomes per term. History, lit, psychology, anthropology, philosophy, etc. For which the student got zero academic credit. None. Zip. Nada. Class and "lab" work included mandatory military training (U.S. Army Corps of Engineers ROTC) for two years and voluntary training for the remaining three years. Completion of all five years of military training resulted in a commission as a reserve or regular military officer. The technical courses were taught by a number of departments beyond the mech eng people. Heavy doses of chemistry by the chem dept, even heavier doses of physics by the physics dept thru Nukes 101, materials science by the metalurgy dept, math out our ears of course via the math dept, the early courses in applied mechanics from the civil engineers, EE 101 & 102 from the EE dept. and on and on. From the beginning thru around the seventh term all technical courses with some minor variations were the same. With the exception of the biology majors . One could hop from EE to ME to chem eng at will. From seventh or so your department took over your mind and body and the rest is probably very similar to your path. The place was no fun at all. Gaining admittance was quite competitive to begin with and when it was all done almost 70% of the Freshman class had either flunked out or bagged it by the time graduation rolled out. Parris Island North for five years, the largest private engineering college on the planet. 85 MEs and something like 90 EEs came out of my class of '63. http://www.drexel.edu/ God help science, engineering and western civilization the day American universities don't have license to pound at least some modicum of literacy into the thick skulls of the geeklets. Perhaps that is more of a comment on your high schools than your colleges? The whole damned system from top to bottom. Stay away from that button or you'll trigger a megabyte spleen dump and I'm in the mood for doing just that. w3rv |