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OSU College of Engineering Overview William A

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1 OSU College of Engineering Overview William A
OSU College of Engineering Overview William A. “Bud” Baeslack, III, Dean Council of Deans November 20, 2007 College with a long history of commitment to undergraduate engineering education in an institution where our new president has stated distinctive undergraduate education as the second of six priorities, right after unifiying the University. As you will see the College has made considerable progress in quality and performance of students. We want to continue those trends. - Will be using the ABET Criterion (Students, Educational Objectives, etc.) as an Outline for Comments in this opening session. Will focus on College level activities and points of pride. We will have opportunity to see these in action at the program level. Hopefully this will help put the Geomatics program in perspective of the larger College and University efforts.

2 College of Engineering Vision
We will achieve world-class stature as a college of engineering through our excellence and impact in education, research and outreach. We will be nationally recognized as the pre-eminent college of engineering in achieving our land grant mission – ensuring Ohio’s global competitiveness and future prosperity.

3 CoE Performance Plan Excellence * Impact * Innovation : Advancing a Legacy of Learning and Leadership Globalization Anchors New Vision – NAE Engineer 2020 Competitive Forces in Engineering Education Drive Need for Change Importance of Ohio Roots

4 Performance Plan Goals
Deliver an Outstanding 21st Century Undergraduate Education Enrich and Advance Graduate Education Grow Research by Focused Investment in Key Areas Increase the Diversity of Students, Faculty and Staff Strengthen Stakeholder Relationships Optimize College Administration and Operations

5 College of Engineering Profile
Ten academic engineering departments and Knowlton School of Architecture 4,761 engineering, 591 KSA undergraduate students 1,303 engineering, 206 KSA graduate students >$100 million + in research expenditures 6th in nation in industry-supported research Ranked Top-15 Public College (#25UG, #26G, USNWR) 260 Full-Time Faculty (10 NAE, 10% women) 1,180 Engineering degrees in FY07 (795 BS, 266 MS, 119 Ph.D.)

6 OSU CoE Academic Programs
Aerospace Engineering Architecture Aviation Biomedical Engineering Chemical Engineering City and Regional Planning Civil Engineering Computer Science and Engineering Electrical and Computer Engineering Environmental Engineering Engineering Physics Food, Agricultural and Biological Engineering Geodetic Science Geomatics Engineering Industrial and Systems Engineering Landscape Architecture Materials Science and Engineering Mechanical Engineering Nuclear Engineering Welding Engineering

7 USNWR #25 Undergraduate; #26 Graduate #14 UG Public; #16 G Public
#10 UG Land Grant Institutions Agricultural Engineering #8 UG Chemical Engineering #26G Computer Engineering #23G Electrical Engineering Industrial Engineering #14 UG, #19G Materials Engineering #12 UG, #14G Mechanical Engineering #21 UG, #21G The average ACT of entering engineering students has been significantly increasing. Quality of our incoming class in engineering continues to improve as 1) selective admission of the University continues to raise the admission standards of the University 2) the College starting in 2001 set an additional standard for enrollment in engineering (currently Math ACT 24) 7

8 Major Supporting Programs
Cooperative Education and Internship Career Services Student Projects and Student Organizations Minority Engineering Program Women in Engineering Computer Laboratory Support Honors Program College Enrolled 443 Honors NFQF Au 2007 This represents 1/4 of honors coming to OSU You likely noted that in our self-study we added a section on Supporting Programs. We feel that these programs are very important to the quality of the experience and education for our undergraduates. If you would like more details, we would be pleased to present those. Cooperative Education and Internship (not mandatory, but approx. 80% have intern or coop experience at graduation) Underrepresented Student Support Women in Engineering Support Honors Program Student Projects and Student Organizations (17 college supported student projects, 42 dept and college-wide professional organizations, 15 honoraries)

9 The average ACT of entering engineering students has been significantly increasing.
Quality of our incoming class in engineering continues to improve as 1) selective admission of the University continues to raise the admission standards of the University 2) the College starting in 2001 set an additional standard for enrollment in engineering (currently Math ACT 24)

10 NFQF - New Fall Quarter Freshman is a good indicator of entering class size. The graph shown indicates the number of students admitted to engineering over the past 10 years.

11 Undergraduate Enrollment

12 Graduate Enrollment

13

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15 Growing Research by Focused Investment
Targeted Investment in Excellence Cluster Hires IWSE – Suresh Babu, Computational Materials MSE – Ji-Cheng Zhao, Computational Materials ECE – Alexander Demkov, Computational Materials (pending) ME – Carol Smidts, Energy, Nuclear Engineering ME – Jeffrey Sutton, Energy, Fluid Mechanics New Research Centers Institute for Sensing Systems (TIE) Center for Occupational Health in Automotive Manufacturing Center for Sustainable Energy and Environment (TIE) Institute for Energy and Environment (University- level)

16 Key Plans/Priorities for AY07/08
Update CoE Performance Plan and Align with New Institutional Priorities and Fiscal Conditions/Realities Complete Unit Level Strategic/Performance Plans that Align with Updated CoE Performance Plan Hire Director of EEIC, Implement Interdisciplinary Capstone Design Program, Innovation and Entrepreneurship and Program Make Highly-Selective Faculty Hires through TIE Program; Limited Replacement Hiring – Emphasis on Diversity

17 Key Plans/Activities for AY07/08
Maximize Opportunities with OBR Research Scholar Program to Support Key Research Focus Areas Finalize Approvals and Plans for BME UG Program Submit Proposal for Professional Master’s Degree for OAA and OBR Approval – Collaborative with Fisher College of Business, Moritz College of Law, Glenn Center for Public Policy Further Enhance Undergraduate and Graduate Student Recruitment, with Focus on Women and Under- represented Minorities 17

18 Increase Opportunities for Collaboration
Biotechnology (Tissue Engineering, Robotics, Imaging, Informatics) Alternative Energy, Environment and Sustainability Materials Innovation , Entrepreneurship and Commercialization Diversity, Outreach and Engagement We have worked towards an on-going, sustainable assessment process that is based on College mission and vision. We have a college outcomes assessment model (in Appendix II) that we continue to review and refine over time.

19 Key Challenges for FY08 and Beyond
Providing Resources Required to Achieve Goals of Performance Plan National and Global Competition in Engineering Education – Must be Competitive in OBR/ODOD Competitions – Cost sharing? Preparing students for Globally Competitive Workplace – Providing International Experiences We have worked towards an on-going, sustainable assessment process that is based on College mission and vision. We have a college outcomes assessment model (in Appendix II) that we continue to review and refine over time. 19

20 We have worked towards an on-going, sustainable assessment process that is based on College mission and vision. We have a college outcomes assessment model (in Appendix II) that we continue to review and refine over time. 20


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