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Visioning Transition: A Framework For Collaborative Change

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Conference

2000 Annual Conference

Location

St. Louis, Missouri

Publication Date

June 18, 2000

Start Date

June 18, 2000

End Date

June 21, 2000

ISSN

2153-5965

Page Count

10

Page Numbers

5.714.1 - 5.714.10

DOI

10.18260/1-2--8836

Permanent URL

https://strategy.asee.org/8836

Download Count

358

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Paper Authors

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Margarita Takach

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Yiyuan J. Zhao

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Reza Langari

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Ray Taghavi

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Mehrdad Ghasemi Nejhad

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Luigi Martinelli

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Linda Ann Riley

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K. Krishnamurthy

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Janet M. Twomey

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Degang Chen

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David Radcliffe

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Abstract
NOTE: The first page of text has been automatically extracted and included below in lieu of an abstract

Session 2793

Visioning Transition: A Framework for Collaborative Change

Degang Chen, K. Krishnamurthy, Reza Langari, Luigi Martinelli, Mehrdad Ghasemi Nejhad, David F. Radcliffe, Linda Ann Riley, Ray Taghavi, Margarita D. Takach, Janet M. Twomey, Yiyuan J. Zhao

Iowa State University/ University of Missouri-Rolla/ Texas A&M University/ Princeton University/ University of Hawaii at Manoa/ University of Queensland/ New Mexico State University/ University of Kansas/ Seattle University/ Wichita State University/ University of Minnesota

Abstract

Tomorrow's engineers will look nothing like the engineers of the past. Aside from a proficiency in core, technical knowledge, tomorrow's engineers will require a collection of non-engineering skills and competencies to successfully function in a dynamic, global environment. Technical competency will always be viewed as an integral skill; differential advantage however, will be gained by those individuals that can communicate effectively, and participate fully in an organization's different functional realms.

What has motivated this vision and rethinking of the engineering discipline? Where are we in the journey to prepare our students for an engineering working environment characterized by a global, integrated and multi-disciplinary nature? And finally, is it possible, or should it be necessary, for traditional engineering education systems to fundamentally change to meet corporate requirements? These are but a few of the compelling issues discussed in this paper.

1. Situational Background

During the summer of 1999, eleven individuals representing a variety of engineering disciplines and universities spent eight weeks at the Boeing Company as A.D Welliver Faculty Fellows. The primary objective of the Boeing sponsored A.D. Welliver Faculty Fellowship program is to "influence the content of engineering education in ways that will better prepare tomorrow's graduates for the practice of engineering in a world-class industrial environment." Now in its fifth year of existence, the Boeing faculty fellowship program has served as a premier, innovative example of university/industry partnership.

The summer of 1999 was a period of transition for the Boeing Company. Fellows gained invaluable experience and insight by closely observing, and participating in both the challenges and opportunities faced by the company as it continued the process of corporate reengineering. At the end of the eight-week experience, faculty fellows left their respective assignments with examples and class material unmatched by any textbook treatment. Furthermore, the engineer's cross-functional role in an organizational context, as well as the required skills needed by new

Takach, M., & Zhao, Y. J., & Langari, R., & Taghavi, R., & Nejhad, M. G., & Martinelli, L., & Riley, L. A., & Krishnamurthy, K., & Twomey, J. M., & Chen, D., & Radcliffe, D. (2000, June), Visioning Transition: A Framework For Collaborative Change Paper presented at 2000 Annual Conference, St. Louis, Missouri. 10.18260/1-2--8836

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