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An Interdisciplinary Program of Engineering and Science Ken Vickers Director, microEP Graduate Program Research Professor, Physics vickers@uark.edu 501 575-2875. Program Scope Program History Philosophy Curriculum issues. PhD Candidacy Exam Student Results Implementation Barriers
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An Interdisciplinary Program of Engineering and Science Ken Vickers Director, microEP Graduate Program Research Professor, Physics vickers@uark.edu 501 575-2875 • Program Scope • Program History • Philosophy • Curriculum issues • PhD Candidacy Exam • Student Results • Implementation Barriers • Summary
(a) 50º 30º 30º [1-10] [110] 15nm Scope of microEP Research (also known as living in the boundary layers) from Nanoscale Quantum Dots and Devices… …to 3-dimensional High Temperature Superconducting Electronic-Photonic Systems
History of microEP Program 08/97 03/98 06/98 06/99 07/99 08/99 05/00 06/00 07/00 08/00 08/00 08/00 09/00 12/00 01/01 02/01 02/01 NSF EPSCoR grant (Ultra-Fast Electronics/Interdisciplinary Ed) Program Director hired (Ken Vickers, Engineering Manager, TI) Cohort 1 formed: Eleven BS graduates Cohort 2 formed: Eight BS graduates, four MS graduates MS Microelectronics-Photonics (microEP) fully approved microEP is educational base for UA 1999 NSF IGERT award microEP Program Specialist hired (IGERT funding) Cohort 3 formed: Nine BS graduates, seven MS graduates PhD microEP fully approved microEP is research/ed base for UA 2000 NSF MRSEC award microEP is concentration area for UA 2000 NSF PFI award Six Cohort 1 students enter industry microEP is educational model for UA 2000 FIPSE (Physics) Four Cohort 1 students enter industry, one continues for PhD microEP Accountant hired (FIPSE funded) microEP Education Outreach Director hired (MRSEC funded) microEP Innovation Incubator Director hired (FPI/FIPSE funded)
Comparison of Industrial and Academic Research and Work Practices • Management aligned job goals support group goals/objectives. • Creative work is balanced between management assigned tasks and self defined tasks. • Work hours are set in a coordinated fashion to optimize group performance. • Technical organizations require staff to work at a common location to support ad-hoc work groups. • Compensation systems first reward group performance, then reward individual contribution. • Not collaborating in problem solving is viewed as a negative attribute in technical personnel. • Job goal alignment is voluntary to other departmental efforts. • Creative work is self defined, with possible voluntary collaborations on large projects. • Faculty work hours are self scheduled to meet personal goals and institutional assignments. • Faculty independently set hours between home and campus to meet needs and office hours. • Compensation systems reward individual accomplishments, not departmental success. • Student collaborations are not allowed in typical class room or research efforts.
Enhancement of Traditional Graduate Degrees through microEP Program Methods Traditional Departmental Education Supplemental microEP Elements • Technical Knowledge • Core classes in undergrad dept • Most electives in department • Few other technical electives • Technical Knowledge • Core of interdisciplinary classes • Applied technical electives • Business classes • Research Methods • Slow student initiated linkage to research prof • Professor’s group meetings • Research Methods • Design of Experiments class during summer • Quick assignment to research prof • Formal research project plan • Team Skills • Project teams in classes • Team Skills • Pseudo-industry engineering group • Weekly operations management seminars • Invention and innovation • Individual mentoring within research group • Invention and Innovation • Summer inventiveness workshops • Personality and learning methods mapping • Intro summer camp for all microEP students Results in • Broadened technical knowledge • Rapid acclimation to first job • Early leadership roles • Earlier significant personal success Sound technical graduate degree
microEP Program Curriculum Planning • Areas of Emphasis for curriculum definition • Photonics – The study of light and its interaction with matter • Microelectronics – The study of electronic devices and systems at the micro and nanoscopic level • Materials and Processing – The study of the science and engineering necessary to fabricate microelectronic-photonic devices and systems • Matrix of classes required by Area of Emphasis
PhD Candidacy Examination Practice • Traditional University of Arkansas Science/Engineering Process • Research proposal presented to committee for review. • Written exam based on content of specific undergraduate and graduate course knowledge content. • Oral examination by faculty of all subject matter. • Experimental microEP approach • To provide guidance to student and faculty on likelihood of student’s success in PhD studies. • Research proposal in NSF format submitted to committee, and presented in open forum for comments and approval. • Written exam is a scenario based complex technology problem • One week duration (spring break), answer limited to 15 pages • Open written resource, no discussion allowed • Includes technical solution, implementation method, etc. • Oral presentation may be required by committee if needed
microEP Cohort 3 (AY 2000-2001) Career prior to microEP program application
Student Prior Degree vs Maj Prof Dept IGERT Fellows/Total microEP Students
Careers of microEP Cohort 1 Graduates Candita Meek BS EE/MS microEP Texas Instruments Product Eng Jorge Vega BS EE/MS microEP Motorola, Device Eng Muhammad Anser BS Physics/MS microEP Amer. Microsystems, Wafer Fab Eng Alfred Estevez BS Physics/MS microEP Texas Instruments, DLP Product Eng Brian Hart BS Physics/MS microEP Lucent, Optical Design Eng Barry James BS Math/MS microEP Texas Instruments, Yield Engineer Shi Yan BS EE/MS microEP Intel, IC Design Systems Eng Roger Owings BS EE/MS microEP Entergy Corp, Systems Eng Wee Lee Ng BS ChE/MS microEP Texas Instruments, IC Packaging Eng Yue Fan BS Mat Sci/MS microEP Intel, IC Design Systems Eng Clayton Workman BS EE/MS microEP PhD microEP student • Rick Wise, Texas Instruments Fellow • “This is the type of training that we need in Ph.D. graduates for them to be immediately successful in our advanced development facilities.”
microEP Style Program Institutional Barriers to Implementation • Barriers to success • Student academic metrics based on individual performance • Graduate research required to be individual effort • Faculty reward and recognition based on individual performance • Resources required for “extra” industrial experience are high • Requirements to overcome barriers • University-level administrators support general concepts • Program manager’s passionate belief in the program need • Program manager assigned only to program during startup phase • Program manager practiced in industrial teamwork atmosphere • Financial seed money support is critical • Customer feedback (industry) must be continuous
University of Arkansas Graduate Program in Microelectronics-Photonics An Interdisciplinary Program between Engineering and Science Contact: Ken Vickers, Director Co-PI’s Greg Salamo, Len Schaper Phone: 501 575-2875/3175 Email: microEP@cavern.uark.edu Sponsors: NSF IGERT & EPSCoR Ark Science &Tech Auth. Degrees: MS/PhD microEP http://www.uark.edu/depts/microep Mission The educational objective of the microEP program is a graduate fully prepared to drive the advancement of the combination of microelectronics and photonics. A rigorous interdisciplinary graduate technical education, including soft skills training, will be used to accomplish this mission. New Tactics • Summer creativity • workshops • Interdisciplinary • curriculum • Entrepreneurial • methods seminars • Pseudo industrial work • group environment • Early research • internships • International • internships • Soft skills training and • practice