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Engineering/IT
Schools
Virginia
Business
June 2003
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Directory
of technology education in Virginia
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For
years the traditional career path of most business executives
included the requisite Masters of Business Administration,
or MBA. These days, however, there are hundreds of B-schools
churning out thousands of MBA graduates. Recent studies
have questioned the return on investment an MBA delivers.
And while theres already a plethora of qualified
MBAs in the business world, many professionals are looking
at alternative programs as they continue their education.
Today, many executives are gravitating toward specialized
Masters Degree programs, and many schools are
preparing programs that focus on technology or highly
specialized fields in engineering to accommodate these
students. One such facility is Cambridge College in
Chesapeake. This satellite school provides a unique
Masters in E-Commerce to small classes of hand-selected
executives. The average age of a student in the program
is 40 years old and prerequisites include five to 10
years of business experience, a Bachelors degree
and a working knowledge of the Microsoft Windows operating
system.
We spoke with the person who designed the course, Jim
Waldman, campus director of Cambridge College. According
to Waldman, We looked around at other Masters
programs and spoke with the business community. We found
that for years industries relied on MBAs to fill key
management positions. But now those same companies are
turning these people away in droves because MBA graduates
tend to be fiscally oriented and industries are looking
for managers who understand business and how to utilize
technology in that business. Our program stresses the
transactional side of economics and how technology is
a fundamental asset in todays business world.
CEOs
can hire technical people to perform IT department functions,
but what they desperately need is management skills
to go along with technical skills enabling managers
to deliver results through both manpower and technology.
The foundation for Cambridges program is data
management, with every student receiving an IBM laptop
loaded with the software for each class, including all
text materials. Class sizes are limited to 10 students
who stay together as a group until graduation. The program
takes 18 months to complete and involves night courses
and alternating weekends, to fit around the students
full-time job.
For
more specialized studies, Norfolk State University will
begin offering Virginias first and only degree
in optical engineering this fall. The Norfolk-based
campus currently offers several engineering programs
and optical engineering represents an emerging field
with great potential.
According
to Professor Christopher Washington, department head
for optical engineering at NSU, the program is a bridge
between existing studies in opto-electronics and opto-materials.
Optical engineering represents a truly new science
and will be the next important technology for telecommunications,
computing and medicine.
Optical
engineering deals with fiber optics and their applications
on communications devices, medical appliances and sensor-related
technology. Imagine the automobile of the future
where a central computer controls most functions of
the car, and fiber optic cables speed the information
from the brake pad, through the computer and eventually
to the brakes. It will take these ultra-fast impulses
to make the car react quickly enough.
Professor
Washington and his NSU staff developed the program by
researching the few schools that currently offer study
in optics. Specifically, they looked at the University
of Arizona and the University of Alabama (Huntsville)
to find out the essential components needed. What they
ended up with is a five-year BS/MS degree program that
accelerates the time it would normally take to receive
a masters degree from six years to five. So far
Professor Washington has more than 60 student applications
for the fall semester.
Eight
years ago, Old Dominion University applied for a federal
grant to train displaced civil servants as the government
embarked on an aggressive plan to close military bases
around the country. Through $7 million in federal funds,
the ITPro program was born. It was initially set up
to train approximately 1,000 people, with only about
one third of the training being IT-related. Based on
their early training successes, then-president of the
University, Jim Cook, declared we need to stay
in this, even without the federal grant. Cook
was a big proponent of economic development in the region
and recognized that there was a huge pool of ex-military
looking for this type of training.
So
he tapped John Gawne, now executive director of the
ODU Information Technology Program, to research which
skills were in demand in the work force. Gawne spent
the better part of his Christmas vacation looking at
employment Web sites to find out what companies were
looking for. Based on his findings, he put together
about a dozen certificate programs to launch ITPro as
a self-sustaining entity within the University.
In
five years we have educated more than 2,600 people in
the ITPro program, from Microsoft Certified Professionals
to Web Masters, says Gawne. And even in
a down economy, we are still getting people (in the
program) who are transitioning to new and exciting careers
in technology.
According
to Gawne, the secret of their success has been in listening
to their customers both the potential employers
and the students who are looking to boost their career.
Most of our adult students get through a certificate
program in a year, says Gawne. They are
not necessarily looking to leave their employer, just
move up in the organization. For instance, we may have
a nurse who is tired of working odd shifts so she acquires
the appropriate computer skills and goes back to work
at the hospital in the IT department.
Gawne
says that the skills in highest demand right now are
in the areas of enterprise security and the Certified
Security Specialist Program. Normally these types of
certifications take several years, but through ITPro
a student can get the basics to begin a career in that
field. Many ITPro students are minorities and women,
with about half coming from the military. The program
offers tuition assistance and job placement services.
Established
in 1996 under the guidance of Robert J. Mattauch, Ph.D.,
the VCU School of Engineering has been a leading source
of highly trained graduates serving the work force needs
of Richmond and central Virginia. Originally offering
courses in mechanical, electrical and chemical engineering,
the school has rapidly expanded its curricula to include
the emerging field of biomedical engineering in connection
with the Richmond Biotechnology Research Park.
In
June of 1998, two new teaching facilities supporting
the School of Engineering were opened totaling 147,000
square feet. The facilities include state-of-the-art
student labs, and a high-tech clean room for the fabrication
of microelectronic chips, biochips and micro electromechanical
systems. These impressive facilities, along with a high-caliber
faculty and curriculum, resulted in their induction
into the nations only honor society for engineering
Tau Beta Pi, which recognizes students of distinguished
scholarship and exemplary character. Founded at Lehigh
University in 1885, Tau Beta Pi has 233 collegiate chapters
in 16 districts and more than 410,000 members.
The
induction process can take up to 20 years but they did
it in six, Tau Beta Pi Executive Director James
D. Froula, Ph.D., told an audience of 100 people attending
an installation and dedication ceremony at the school
earlier this year. Were here because VCUs
School of Engineering believes in excellence as a way
of life.
A
recent example of a biomedical breakthrough at VCU would
be the development of fibrinogen strands. This blood-clotting
protein is spun into a strand that is 1,000 times thinner
than a human hair. Though a technique called electro-spinning
VCU researchers spray a fibrinogen solution onto a metal
target, where an electric field gradually transforms
the liquid jet into a dry fiber. The woven product looks
and feels like cloth and is readily accepted by the
body because it is a natural human protein.
VCU
engineering students are also doing advanced research
in the area of telemedicine and robotic-assisted surgery.
Sensitive robotic equipment is being developed that
reacts to human commands but eliminates the slight tremors
that accompany movement. Through this sophisticated
equipment, surgeons can perform delicate micro surgery,
whether they are in the operating room with the patient
or from a distance providing valuable surgical skills
to rural areas and Third World countries. Other areas
of growing importance include bioinformatics, bioengineering
and forensic sciences. In fact, VCU recently received
a major grant from the National Science Foundation for
bioengineering studies one of only six grants
funded in the U.S.
VCU is also heavily involved in several distance-learning
programs, where professors work in real time with students
though Web-based systems. This new technology is changing
the way students and professors interact and making
physical location less of an issue. Among
its programs currently in place, VCU is teaching a degree
in Computer Science to naval officers at the Naval Surface
Warfare Center at Dahlgren. As Mattauch puts it: The
important thing about these new graduate courses is
how the faculty works with the students. In this new
digital age, professors are no longer the sage on the
stage, but more like the guide on the side, helping
students with the curriculum.
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