MINUTES
BIOSYSTEMS AND AGRICULTURAL ENGINEERING
INDUSTRY ADVISORY COUNCIL MEETING
Wednesday May 27, 1998
ATTENDANCE - excluding Biosystems and Agricultural Engineering Faculty
Mark Lamb, Deere and Co.
Rickey Heflin, Waldon Mfg.
Kelvin Self, Charles Machine Works
Ron Morgan
Sheri Smithey, Nestle Corp.
Ken Mouldenhauer, Excell Corp.
David Somerlot, Cargill, Inc.
Cassie Eigenmann, DICKEY-john Corp.
Flint Holbrook, Woolpert Engineering
Mitch Griffin, CH2MHill
Scott Henderson, US Army Corps of Engineers
Larry Caldwell, USDA NRCS
Harold Springer, Oklahoma Water Resources Board
Blaine Reeley, Envirotech Engineering
Otto Loewer, University of Arkansas
MEETING CONTENT
The meeting focused on common requirements for All Biosystems Engineers. The intent was to address two questions:
1. With regard to Criteria 3 (see attachment 4) of the ABET Engineering Criteria 2000, what common requirements do employers have for all Biosystems Engineers
MEETING SUMMARY
A welcome was delivered by Deans Curl, Thompson, and Hummer as well as Dr. Barfield. After the welcome, a presentation was given summarizing ABET 2000 criteria, and the current core curriculum.
An initial general discussion was held focused on assessment and an exchange of views regarding components of engineering education. Detailed summaries of the comments are given in the Attachment 1. The following general conclusions were made about the discussion:
During the last half of the discussion, discipline specific groups were identified (E&NR, BM and FE) and specific requirements for each discipline area were discussed, with the expectation that we could later discern the common curriculum requirements.
Reports were received on the deliberations of the groups. There was a significant focus on course level requirements (in absence of a list of non-course related requirements). A list of critical competencies for each group is given in Attachment 2.
The Council discussed the recommendations of each group. In general, it appeared that a smaller BAE core was being recommended with more specialization, although there was some desire for a well-rounded approach. A need for broadness to be able to pass PE was recognized.
Some concern was expressed about Engineering Economy and it's narrow focus on time series computation. There is a need to be able to interpret P&L statements, understand product costing, and have better understanding of the economics of business decision making.
The Committee was given 45 minutes to deliberate in private and make recommendations. They recommended:
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Item |
Completion Target |
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1. |
Minutes in 2-4 weeks. |
15 June 98 |
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2. |
Use IAC Core competency list and respond with a workplan. |
1 October 98 |
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3. |
Status Report to IAC |
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4. |
IAC Review / Teleconference - Comments to Faculty |
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5. |
1999 Assessment - Workplan review w/Independent Moderator) |
Each individual had the opportunity to comment to the group with summary comments.
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ATTACHMENT 1. DETAILED COMMENTS BY ADVISORY COUNCIL |
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TOPIC |
COMMENT |
COMMENTER |
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No. Credit Hours |
Opposed to yielding to pressure to reduce credit hrs. to 124 |
Morgan |
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Engineering Core |
Opposed to reducing below 18 hour engineering science core |
Morgan |
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Humanities and Social Sciences |
Social skills are critical. Need emphasis on team building-psychology, and decision making. Need understanding of behavioral sciences. |
Lamb |
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Communications Skills |
Critical skill for engineering Industry assumes that ABET graduates have adequate technical skills. Interviewees are screened on communication skills through oral evaluations. Engineers for first five years focus on technical skills. After that, success is based on communications skills Need to look for courses to provide practice in communications skills. Need to look for extracurricular activities and speaking experience for our students. |
Reely Morgan
Caldwell
Unknown Unknown |
|
Extracurricular Activities |
Excel looks for extracurricular activities as evidence of ability to apply social skills. We should spend more time on the informal social aspects |
Moldenhauer Loewer |
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Capstone Course |
Needs to be broadened beyond engineering. Need to add other disciplines to design courses. Teach teamwork, grade on teamwork, and ask team members to evaluate team participation, instruction time devoted to ethics/professionalism. |
Caldwell Unknown |
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Professionalism |
Involve students early in professional societies |
Morgan |
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International Experience |
Look for international experience and foreign language. Foreign language needed as elective. |
Smithey Unknown |
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Internships |
Very important source of employees. Want technical skills. |
Eigenmann |
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ABET 2000 |
Need documentation that is soft. Have to draw inferences from weak data. Have to collect data for a predefined inference. Recommends that we document everything. Need to not have open ended data collection, but focused on an end. Reviewer role is more personality based in current scheme. Arkansas assessed core by asking advisory council. We should look at ABET as an opportunity rather than minimum hurdle. Need to identify three things; what, who and how. What is products, who are the customers, and how is how are we doing. Students are products and customers. Who do we poll – industries with repeated recruiting history Government Performance Review Act requires answering question: How did we improve product. Need to consider costs of meeting standards. There is a point of diminishing returns. Need to devote a full time person to quality assurance. May have to disengage goals of quality in order to meet goals of meeting ABET 2000. Logistics of both must be handled. Can’t improve what you cannot measure. Can’t improve unless you find a defect. Need to define product. What does it look like? |
Loewer
Morgan
Not Recorded Caldwell
Morgan Reely & unidentified person Morgan Morgan |
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Assessment Material Needed for Next Meeting |
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Everyone |
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Team Building Skills |
Current team building & communications skills are pretty raw in undergraduates. Important in capstone course. Team building exercises in freshman year. |
Unknown
Unknown |
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Assessment (general) |
Assessment should include scores, evaluation, exit interviews. Need to be able to hear bad news as well as good news. Is our goal accreditation or improvement? Need comparative measures. Not achieving quality by lowering standards. Need heavy involvement of all faculty. FE could be used as an assessment. A critical competency is preparing students to do a critical evaluation. Exit interviews are low cost. We need to document the process that will cause improvements in program. Committee would like to see student evaluations. Assessment needs to occur from the point of view of the instructors, students, and employers. Matrix approach is possibly best for this. Gets third party view incorporated. Process follow through is needed. |
Reely
Unknown |
ATTACHMENT 2.
LISTING OF CRITICAL COMPETENCIES BY OPTION AREA
BIOMECHANICAL OPTION
Product definition: Strong mechanical design with strong understanding of how that interacts with biomaterials.
ENVIRONMENT AND NATURAL RESOURCES (Focused last two years of program)
FOOD AND BIOPROCESSING
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ATTACHMENT 3. Ronnie Morgan’s Product Performance Map |
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Capability/Competency |
Extra Activities |
General Education |
Math |
Physics |
Chemistry |
Biology |
Engr Sc Core** |
Program Specific Courses** |
1. Knowledge Base |
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2. Design/conduct experiments |
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3. Data analysis/interpret |
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4. Design of process/system components. |
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5. Modern engineering techniques/tools. |
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6. Problem solving |
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Interpersonal Interdisciplinary |
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8. Professionalism & Ethics |
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9. Communication |
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10. Societal impact |
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11. Lifelong learning |
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** These areas would be further broken down by individual courses |
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ATTACHMENT 4.
ABET ENGINEERING CRITERIA 2000, BASIC LEVEL ACCREDITATION CRITERIA
Engineering programs must demonstrate that their graduates have
(a) an ability to apply knowledge of mathematics, science, and engineering
(b) an ability to design and conduct experiments, as well as to analyze and interpret data
(c) an ability to design a system, component, or process to meet desired needs
(d) an ability to function on multi-disciplinary teams
(e) an ability to identify, formulate, and solve engineering problems
(f) an understanding of professional and ethical responsibility
(g) an ability to communicate effectively
(h) the broad education necessary to understand the impact of engineering solutions in a global and societal context
(i) a recognition of the need for, and an ability to engage in life-long learning
(j) a knowledge of contemporary issues
(k) an ability to use the techniques, skills, and modern engineering tools necessary for engineering practice.