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On 16 Jul 2003 14:28:18 GMT, Alun Palmer wrote:
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. If you don't think that that is the case "over here" too, you have not been paying attention to how Corporate America is being run. 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). In other words, your "professional education" is basically trade school programs. What a waste. 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. IIRC my BEE degree was more like 180 hours (4 years of 20-credit semesters plus one summer of Surveying -- did you take that by any chance? It came in real handy when I built my first house and when I studied Real Estate Law in law school and when I discuss or plot radio path and contour calculations or directional antenna patterns with clients or even map-reading and "orienteering" with non-technical hiking friends and relatives. No chemistry in an engineering program? This is not the same as a Literature or Cultural Humasnitiers course. This is basic science. In an EE program we took a year of chemistry (class and lab), two years of physics, one year of advanced math, and assorted courses in non-EE engineering subjects such as thermodynamics, mechanics of materials, atomic physics, and surveying, plus our rigorous EE power and electronics courses. That was 50 years ago. Now they require a lot more of "non-EE" stuff such as environmental engineering and medical engineering The school has acquired a reputation for application research in those fields. Otherwise one is not a rell-educated engineer - one is a geek with a degree. -- 73 de K2ASP - Phil Kane |