Thursday, July 21, 2005

Conference to discuss declining enrollments

Next week, July 25-28 in San Jose, CA, the Maricopa Advanced Technology Education Center (MATEC) is putting on their SAME-TEC conference. SAME-TEC means Semiconductor, Automated Manufacturing, Electronics, Traning and Education Conference. It has been going on for three years and even before that as a conference devoted to semiconductor manufacturing. Today the emphasis is broader convering manufacturing and more generic electronic education at the community college level. Already over 200 community college faculty and administrators have signed up and that figure is up over last year. So while there is a general decline in enrollments, interest in this conference is growing.

One of the key sessions this year is one addressing the declining enrollment problem many schools have been experiencing. The session will feature an audience polling system to get real-time input from the faculty present. Accompanying this session is a panel discussion with representatives from industry, book publishing, and academia. I am on that panel as well. We hope this session will better clarify the depth of the problem and begin to identify solutions.

It is still not too late to sign up for this terrific conference. The first day features a workshop on the Work-Ready Electronics project, an NSF funded development program to create online modules to update electronic courses and curricula. The major topic is how to teach DSP at the technician level and a look at what is being done to teach at the systems level rather than the old style component level. It should be interesting. For more information on this conference, go to www.matec.org and look under Conferences. Hope to see you at the Santa Clara Marriott.

If you are unable to attend, I will give a summary of these important sessions in this space week after next.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Greetings from Steve Fleeman at Rock Valley College:

The CIEC conference described below also seems to have several sessions that deal with the future of engineering technology, and marketing programs to industry.

The 2006 CIEC-Conference for Industry and Education Collaboration will be held in New Orleans, LA on Tuesday, January 31 - Friday, February 3, 2006. The
conference theme is "Industry and Education: A Century of Collaboration"

Session titles are:

1. Title: New Directions in Engineering Technology
Description: New industry driven programs in ET such as mechatronics and
renewable energy present challenges and opportunities for educators

2. Title: Ethical Case Studies
Description: The teaching and practice of ethics in Engineering and ET

3. Title: Marketing Engineering Technologists to Industry
Description: Problems and solutions encountered when engineers and
engineering technologists compete in industry

4. Title: Panel Discussion of Major Engineering Technology Issues
Description: "No papers will be accepted in this session"

5. Title: Distance Learning: Communicating with Students
Description: ET courses and curricula offered to the working
professional
and traditional student

6. Title: Assessment: Student Internships/Co-ops and Learning Outcomes?
Description: Innovative approaches that tie assessment outcomes to
student
internships and co-ops

7. Title: Professional Development of ET Faculty
Description: The focus is how to enable ET faculty the opportunity to
achieve university promotion

8. Title: The Future of Engineering Technology
Description: Attempt to forecast the status of ET programs in 5 to 10
years.


9. Title: Drafting/CAD/Solid Modeling
Description: Topics may include: a survey of industry needs, innovation
in
the sequencing of courses, and is manual drafting necessary

10. Title: Collaborative Teamwork with Industry
Description: Successful/unsuccessful examples of academics and industry
teaming together. Lessons learned.

11. Title: Industry/Education collaboration in K-12 pre-engineering
curriculum
Description: Several states have strong industry support for pre-college
programs such as Project Lead the Way. What strategies are successful?
Who
benefits? Articulation strategies.

12. Title: Nationally Normed Exams and Other External Tools for Program
Assessment
Description: Survey of options for programs to satisfy ABET criteria

13. Title: Baccalaureate Programs in Community Colleges * Problems and
Promises

14. Potpourri: Miscellaneous ET and Industry Issues