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The Entrepreneurial Engineer

May 14, 2010

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The undergraduate offerings at Stanford University’s School of Engineering could be engaged in a tug of war.

On one side is the foundation of math, science and major-specific courses students need to earn a degree now, or four years from now. On the other, the skills, curiosity and bent toward problem solving that students will need in their first job and in the job they get 20 or 40 years into their careers.

But, with a rope between them, the battle would end up a draw, at least in the eyes of James D. Plummer, who has been the school’s dean since 1999. “What we’re trying to do in the engineering school is … taking the traditional picture of an engineering classroom,” he said at a university faculty meeting earlier this year, pointing at a black and white photo of students taking notes in a lecture hall, “and turning it into something that looks a little more like this” -- a man, in vivid color, bungee jumping over craggy terrain.

Students still learn the basics, just as they would have back in the era of black-and-white film, but they’re also given a chance to at least consider intellectual bungee jumping. “We can’t just teach the things that students need to know now,” Plummer says. “The half life of information in engineering is three, four, five years, so much of what a student learns now will be obsolete only a few years down the line.”

Over the course of their careers, current students will probably end up with jobs requiring expertise that can’t yet be imagined. The undergraduate engineering curriculum’s emphasis on current state-of-the-art technical knowledge must be complemented with an openness to change, he says. “We need to teach our students to be lifelong learners, to be able to keep updating themselves to be the best they can possibly be throughout their careers.”

This mission, balancing knowledge and skills, is a departure from the cram-it-all-in mentality that undergraduate engineering programs -- at Stanford, and nationally -- subscribed to, Plummer says, until the Accrediting Board of Engineering and Technology began implementing more holistic standards for accreditation in the late 1990s.

The standards, Engineering Criteria 2000, allow engineering schools to “be less conservative and risk averse,” says Michael Milligan, ABET’s executive director. “Programs can be unique, innovative, fulfilling the needs of their constituents.”

He adds: “Instead of us going and counting numbers of credit hours in each area, we rely on outcomes that are developed by the profession … and each institution can add its own outcomes.”

Nonetheless, Plummer still worries about people who are “basically, bean counters,” as he characterized them at the faculty meeting earlier this year. “Historically, we have always been on the edge of not being accredited because we have pushed as far as we could,” he said. Though ABET's criteria have evolved, “the problem is that the visitors who come and actually evaluate the programs are still very often bean counters.”

So, rather than giving up on the bean-counting basics, Plummer frames them as just one component of the “T-shaped people” he’s trying to educate. The base is “deep technical education, we’re certainly not backing away from that,” he says. The crossbar of the “T” is “a set of skills that we think are really important to our graduates throughout their careers” -- innovation, creativity, an entrepreneurial sense.

Building the base of the “T” is pretty onerous. Engineers must take a year’s worth of math and science courses, three introductory courses in various engineering disciplines and a course on “technology in society.” Depending on the major, the school’s requirements total between 100 and 119 of the 180 credits needed to earn a Stanford bachelor’s degree (and even more credits are taken up by the university’s general education requirements).

Stanford's engineering school has for decades been considered one of the nation's best, its history intertwined with the development of Silicon Valley. Though plenty of graduates (and drop-outs) went on to found or staff technology companies, it wasn't until about 15 years ago that faculty started thinking about teaching students to be innovators and entrepreneurs.

“Stanford’s an incredibly innovative and entrepreneurial place," says Andrea Goldsmith, a professor of electrical engineering who is also chair of the Faculty Senate. "People create a vision and get a bunch of like-minded people together. It rubs off on our students.”

Though freshmen take “a lot of basic courses to learn what they need to know in math and physics,” she says, “we can still give them a taste of what they can do as engineers.”

She often teaches a freshman seminar called “The Art and Science of Engineering Product Design,” which includes trips to Google and the design firm IDEO, lectures on successful products, and a team-based project. In 2006, students designed a waterproof cell phone, a dorm powered by green energy and a website that allowed users to access their own personal preferences on any public computer.

That early taste of innovation during freshman year -- or at any time during an undergraduate’s course of study -- can “change a student’s perspective dramatically,” says Brad Osgood, the engineering school’s senior associate dean for undergraduate student affairs. “Students are interested in those things naturally and we’re just giving them the tools, as undergraduates, to begin to be entrepreneurial.”

Entrepreneurship, he adds, "is very much in the air these days." Administrators at several engineering schools have told him that they have in recent years looked to Stanford for inspiration in creating their own undergraduate programs.

Regardless of students’ career aspirations or eventual trajectories, entrepreneurship and innovation are “the skills that successful folks have,” says Tom Byers, a professor of management science and engineering, who has been part of several tech startups. “The leading edge technology stuff is important, sure, and so are the basics of engineering and science and math, this is a world that’s constantly changing but can be tackled with a certain set of tools that have to do with being creative and innovative.”

While the engineering school offers plenty of courses on innovation and entrepreneurship – some of which can count toward other requirements – much of the inventiveness he’s encouraging is “best learned outside the classroom, best learned by actually doing things, as opposed to listening to somebody lecture,” says Plummer. “It’s not a matter of substitution as you might think.”

Byers is co-director of the Stanford Technology Ventures Program, which he founded in 1995 to help connect undergraduates with internships at start-up technology firms. Since then, he says, it’s become Stanford’s “entrepreneurship center,” sponsoring competitions, conferences and weekly lectures by entrepreneurial leaders. It also offers about two dozen courses each academic year.

When he created the program, Byers says, it was among the first of its kind. Today, most institutions with an engineering school or a business school have some sort of center or program on entrepreneurship. Stanford's is primarily focused on research and teaching students skills beyond their majors, but at other institutions, entrepreneurship programs don't conduct much research but do award bachelor's, master's and doctoral degrees. "There's no one model that works for everybody," he says. "Different schools dial in different recipes."

STVP also runs the Mayfield Fellows Program, which selects 12 undergraduates each year to go through a three-quarter sequence of courses and a paid summer internship at a start-up company. “It’s really fun to try to build bridges between what practitioners do and what happens in an intellectual, scholarly place like Stanford,” Byers says. “We’re giving students a way to start to understand the ecosystem. These are really universal skills that will enable success or accelerate success no matter what a student ends up doing.” Students in the program have gone on to become lawyers, physicians, consultants, academics and all breeds of techie and start-upper.

Though Mayfield is a selective program, the engineering school has resisted the urge to cordon off entrepreneurship as its own field. “We have not created new majors for entrepreneurship,” Plummer says. “It would be a mistake to educate a few students rather than that all of our students get exposure to the horizontal part of the ‘T.’”

Byers is also considering what comes next in the evolution of the school's undergraduate curriculum. “Should courses or experiences on entrepreneurship and innovation be required? Should there be a certificate? It’s a really exciting part of the debate and I don’t think we’ve figured it out yet.”

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Comments on The Entrepreneurial Engineer

  • Stanford Undergraduate Curriculum
  • Posted by Jameel Ahmad , Civil Engineering at Cooper Union on May 14, 2010 at 10:00am EDT
  • I applaud Stanford's efforts to broaden the undergraduate student's perspective through exposure to innovative projects or industry internships. Much of the world lacks basic necessities such as clean water and adequate electricity generation capacity. It is my hope that a strong commitment to help solve these global problems would be as much a part of Stanford's focus as the waterproof cell phone. The goal of innovative or entrepreneurial engineering education should extend beyond making tons of money to serving the society at large and instilling this spirit in the engineers of the future.

  • Already available
  • Posted by Nick , prof/chem at Hamline University on May 14, 2010 at 11:15am EDT
  • Its called getting a science degree at any of the top liberal arts schools in the country followed by graduate school in engineering at Stanford, MIT, etc. : )

  • 2 degrees don't equal life-long learning
  • Posted by Randy Hutchison , Ph. D Candidate Bioengineering/Engineering & Sci. Ed. at Clemson University on May 14, 2010 at 12:15pm EDT
  • More time in school and/or more degrees doesn't necessitate the appreciation of life-long learning skills. The focus of the curriculum needs to be changed. I applaud Stanford for their efforts.

  • Posted by TC on May 14, 2010 at 2:15pm EDT
  • I agree Randy. In most of the traditional engineering schools, the graduate curriculum is more of the same “bean-counting” that can be found in the undergrad program. When I think of the marvelous engineering feats of the past and present, I think of creativity and risk-taking, not someone sitting around reading text books trying to figure out what numbers to plug into which formula.

    Unfortunately, many of the traditional eng programs seem to cater to and promote the attitude of there is only one right way to do things and tends to attract those that don’t like taking risks and being creative while scaring off those that do. The more creative and/or entrepreneurial types leave engineering to study business or something else either during or after undergrad education because from an academic standpoint, engineering seems dull, boring, and one-dimensional.

    I wish that I could have participated in an integrated program like this during my undergrad study, but fortunately, I am dedicated to life-long learning and have taken the initiative to learn about a variety of things on my own; though I work with some that look down upon anything outside of “textbook learning” as being a waste of time.

  • Ironic
  • Posted by David , Professor of Chemistry on May 14, 2010 at 5:00pm EDT
  • “We can’t just teach the things that students need to know now,” Plummer says. “The half life of information in engineering is three, four, five years, so much of what a student learns now will be obsolete only a few years down the line.”

    It's ironic. The half-life of engineering information is so short. On the other hand the half-life of chemistry, mathematics, technical communication, and ethics isn't. Yet these latter are, from my experience of 30 years at a primarily engineering institution, the very subject areas engineering faculties and their students devalue the most. Ethics, for instance, is a branch of philosophy. Yet engineers want to teach their own form of ethics, disjointed from its larger philosophical and societal context, relegating it to posters on the Tacoma Narrows Bridge failure. Similarly, general chemistry taught by reputable and qualified chemistry faculties the freshman year has perpetually failed to satisfy mechanical engineering faculties or their students, as fundamental as the material content is to life-long career development of quality engineering graduates. Reasons for this are legion--chemistry doesn't look enough like a race-car?--although engineering faculties who are among the highest paid faculties on campuses with market-driven salaries no doubt have some tendency to devalue other disciplines from the get go and pass the same attitudes on to their students. RPI years ago, for example, was forced into styling general chemistry as "materials" chemistry to make the subject "palatable" to engineering students and faculties--or the engineers threatened they would teach it themselves. The price to pay is clear here: incorporation of outside 'relevant' material with a short half-life into basic courses designed to teach basic, long-term content knowledge simply feeds the problem that Plummer admits exists. Dilution is not the solution. As far as basic mathematics, neither is it ever good enough, relevant enough to engineering departments, similar to the manner that technical communications taught by professional English faculty is never good enough.

    One has to wonder if something else isn't at work since engineering faculties and accrediting agencies have been lamenting for decade--and thus devaluing--fundamental disciplinary knowledge outside their profession, as central as such basic knowledge is to the education of their future engineers. Clearly, engineering faculties and accrediting agencies are also displeased with their own curricular offerings to the extent that "innovation" becomes the by-word within their profession, both in the corporate sector (understandably) as well as within university engineering education (and 'innovation' is far from a new word). There seems to be a fundamentally self-deprecatory attitude if not a projection of that attitude onto other disciplines. The answer? Attempts to create engineering "experiences" for engineering students in the first year (so-called "first year experiences"--how innovative!). In part isn't this a response to student complaints, namely, that the students have to "wait" until the third or fourth year before they can take the actually "relevant" engineering courses, as though the freshmen courses were nothing but irrelevant and a nuisance? "Vitalizing" the curriculum, or catering to student complaints about basic content knowledge students "have" to learn? The strategy of the 'first year experience' would seem to serve to only further distract freshmen from student mastery of traditional (a bad word where "innovative" wants to incessantly substitute itself) freshman course content, namely, mathematics, chemistry, and English. Anything traditional in the freshman year pales by comparison in the minds of freshman engineering students who can now do all kinds of "team" activities which are "fun," be it race car driving, or other low-level social activities in the name of "teaming." And which are labor- and cost-intensive, taught as they often are by groups of engineering faculty to freshmen who come to further crave such attention in their other courses.

    Aversion to "traditional" and "basic" subject content, particularly content outside the engineering courses is increasingly a hallmark of engineering departments, it seems, although not in their provenance alone since rigorous educational basics taught rigorously receive castigation from many angles. I question whether engineering faculties haven't to some extent been their own worst enemies in much of this by passing negative attitudes on to their students. Advisory boards seem to value basic education, mathematics, communications, and science skills, not to mention ethics. As long as any of these are watered-down for whatever reason engineering education is doomed to "innovate" rather than educate their own students as to the reasons "traditional" subjects must come first in the curriculum and are necessary to it. I like Nick's idea. Barring that I suggest a return to a traditional engineering model will do much more benefit to the professions than its constant attack upon itself and courses external to it.