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THE DARTMOUTH COLLEGE BACHELOR OF ARTS IN ENGINEERING SCIENCES. Eric W. Hansen Thayer School of Engineering, Dartmouth College Hanover, New Hampshire 03755-8000 eric.hansen@dartmouth.edu. Overview. Motivation Program structure Outcomes. U.S. Engineering A.B. Programs (partial list).
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THE DARTMOUTH COLLEGE BACHELOR OF ARTS IN ENGINEERING SCIENCES Eric W. Hansen Thayer School of Engineering, Dartmouth CollegeHanover, New Hampshire 03755-8000 eric.hansen@dartmouth.edu
Overview • Motivation • Program structure • Outcomes
U.S. Engineering A.B. Programs (partial list) • University of Arizona • * Dartmouth • Harvard • Johns Hopkins • Lafayette • Rice • * University of San Diego • ** North Carolina State (Benjamin Franklin Scholars Program) • Texas Tech • Yale * Combined A.B.-B.S. or A.B.-B.E. program ** Double major in engineering and a liberal arts discipline
Engineering at Dartmouth — history • Founded 1867 by Gen. Sylvanus Thayer; early emphasis on engineering with liberal arts • Mid-1960s • Interdisciplinary faculty of engineering sciences • Broad, common core • Liberal arts A.B. in engineering sciences before professional B.E. • Mid-1990s • Curriculum revised to reflect greater breadth of engineering • Expanded interdisciplinary “modified majors” • Today, engineering sciences major is second most popular science major, seventh overall. 65 graduates/year.
MacLean Engineering Sciences Center — 2006 • Will add 64,000 square feet for research and project labs, classrooms, and offices.
Characteristics of the Dartmouth environment • Quarter system — four ten-week terms per year • Students take three courses per term • Sophomore summer • Foreign study in sophomore or early junior year • Declare major at end of sophomore year
Engineering at Dartmouth — Undergrad program • A.B. in Engineering Sciences — liberal arts degree • Bachelor of Engineering (ABET) — one year post-A.B., can be accelerated using free electives in A.B. program B.E. Program (9-11 courses) Engineering Sciences (9-10) Free Electives (5-9) Foreign Language (3) Mathematics & Science (7) Humanities & Social Science (7-10)
Engineering philosophy Build specialization on a broad, interdisciplinary foundation.
Biotech, Chem Engg Solid, Fluid Mechanics Gateway courses (choose 2 from different groups) Environmental Engg Digital, Analog Electronics Elective core (choose 2) Materials, Thermodynamics, Controls Discrete/Probabilistic Systems Intro to Engg Lumped Systems Distributed Systems & Fields Common core Prerequisites(3 math, 2 physics, 1 chem, 1 CS) Implementation Specialized electives (engs, math, science)
Introduction to Engineering (Engs 21) • Early immersion in design and problem solving (late freshman or early sophomore year). • Student groups given a general theme, must develop practical device that meets a real-world need. • Structured problem-solving approach • Stresses teamwork, communication, need assessment, patents & markets, as well as technical expertise • Demonstrate prototype at end of course • Carries through to design projects in other courses
A recent Engs 21 project: the GyroBike™ Gyroscopic effect of a spinning disk in the front wheel facilitates learning to ride a bike, without training wheels. Now patented, seeking to license. Watch a movie: http://www.dartmouth.edu/~gyrobike/kids.htm
Systems core (Engs 22 & 23) • Provides early foundation in interdisciplinary thinking.. • Allows students to make a more informed choice about eventual engineering specialty. • Bridge basic science and more specialized engineering courses. • Understanding one kind of system enables understanding of other systems. • Effective use of faculty time and course credits. • Avoid teaching the same fundamentals in multiple introductory courses — good for a small faculty. • Efficiently package “old knowledge” so curriculum can include more “new knowledge”.
Modified majors • Elected by 38% of current engineering sciences majors. • Major consists of six courses in engineering, four in a modifying subject. • Biology (biotech, premed) • Chemistry (chemical engg) • Computer science (computer engg) • Environmental science (environmental engg) • Studio art (architecture, product design) • Economics (business) • Engineering physics major — 5 courses in engineering, 5 in physics. • Majors modified with science merge well with B.E. program.
Engineering for nonmajors • Minor in engineering or other major modified with engineering • Minor in materials science — offered jointly with physics and chemistry • Technology courses for nonmajors • Everyday technology • Technology of sailing • Materials, the substance of civilization • Technology and the future of healthcare (2) • Biosecurity and homeland security (2) • Nanotechnology • Bioinformatics • Product design • Technology and society
Postgraduate education of A.B.s • Bachelor of Engineering program (ABET) — 63% of A.B.s continue • Admission is automatic for A.B. graduates • Up to one year post-A.B., but frequently accelerated • Thayer’s Master of Engineering Management — engineering and business (elected by 30% of B.E.s) • Other graduate programs • M.B.A. (23%) • M.S. and Ph.D. (16%) (Dartmouth and elsewhere) • J.D., M.D., other (8%)
Career outcomes Looking at cohorts 10 and 20 years after graduation. • A.B. graduates • 44% in engineering and technology fields, 46% in business or consulting, 8% in law, medicine, education (including higher ed) • 28% in management after 10 years, 60% after 20 years • B.E. graduates • 50% in engineering and technology, 41% in business or consulting, 8% in law, medicine, education • 20% in management after 10 years, 55% after 20 years
Summary • A.B. in engineering sciences has been the basis undergrad engineering education at Dartmouth since mid-1960s • Preparation for subsequent engineering education and entry into profession • Liberal arts degree for other career paths • One-third liberal arts; one-half math, science, engineering; free electives • Common core of design and systems thinking • Enables foreign study, varsity athletics, performing arts, other extracurriculars.