Indiana
Related: About this forumProposed engineering school at Purdue faces opposition
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. Purdue University officials are mulling a proposal to form a school for environmental and ecological engineering, but the plan is facing pushback from some.
At its meeting Thursday, the Academic Affairs Committee of the Board of Trustees had a lengthy and, at times, tense discussion about the possibility of making the Environmental and Ecological Engineering division (EEE) into its own school.
The establishment of a school would allow it to have its own tenured faculty, which, in turn, would help it thrive and remain on the cutting edge of the field, said College of Engineering Dean Leah Jamieson, who recommended the plan to the committee.
" The program) has a breadth and a vision for what environmental and ecological engineering should be that does, admittedly, go beyond the traditional roots," she said. "Its a leader in a field that is growing rapidly. It does not look like other programs. I would say that with pride that we are ahead of other programs."
Read more: http://www.jconline.com/story/news/college/2016/12/08/proposed-purdue-engineering-school-faces-opposition/95150652/
TreasonousBastard
(43,049 posts)Civil Engineering enrollment is already down, and this apparently won't help.
Besides, faculty politics always gets in the way.
exboyfil
(18,052 posts)but why would Civil Engineering be down? That seems weird.
From a strictly personal view I often wonder about undergraduate specializations for majors. There is an advantage to having a more generic major (for example Mechanical Engineering instead of Agricultural Engineering or Aerospace Engineering). It turns out that for particular specializations in the last two majors you can cover most of it with just a careful selection of electives. You can save the specialization for graduate school. A lot more companies are willing to talk to a Mechanical Engineer than an Aerospace Engineer.