1 / 22

State of Power Engineering Education in the U.S. and Canada

Preliminary results of the 2014 PEEC Survey on power engineering programs in the U.S. and Canada, including information on students, faculty, courses, and research.

amarlon
Download Presentation

State of Power Engineering Education in the U.S. and Canada

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. State of Power Engineering Education in the U.S. and Canada Preliminary Results of the 2014 PEEC Survey Presentation at PEEC-NSF Workshop, Washington D.C., July 26-27, 2014 PEEC Survey Team: Sukumar Brahma, New Mexico State University Henry Louie, Seattle University Dennis Ray, PSERC

  2. Overview • Objective: Describe the state of power engineering programs in the U.S. and Canada • Students • Faculty and staff • Courses, research, etc. • Data source: 2014 PEEC Survey • Online survey • With revised and new questions from previous surveys • Preliminary analysis: These results should be considered as tentative. The survey data are still being collected and examined. • Survey website: http://www.ieee-pes.org/professional-development/education/peec-survey

  3. Uses of Survey Data • Website for parents, students, recruiters, faculty, others looking for university program information • Organized by University • On PES website: http://www.ieee-pes.org/professional-development/education/university-power-programs • State of Power Engineering Education Publications • Report, Transactions paper, etc.

  4. Universities Responding to PEEC Surveys(as of 7/15/2014)

  5. Faculty and Staff Delivering Course Instruction In the 2005/6 Survey, 380 faculty and staff were reported for the U.S. and Canada combined. 339 were faculty (full, associate, assistant).

  6. Historical Professorial Title Trends(% of all Reported Faculty and Staff) US and Canada combined. Comparables for 2014 Survey:

  7. Highest Degree for Faculty/Staff In 2005/6 Survey, 95.8% of faculty and staff has received PhD’s.

  8. Faculty/Staff who are IEEE PES Membersand/or IEEE Fellows In 2005/6 Survey, 91.8% of faculty and staff were PES members.

  9. Years in Academia Average reported power industry experience was 2.9 years in Canada and 3.9 years in the US. Due to survey response inconsistencies, these are only estimates by the Survey Team. In 2005/6 Survey, the average reported academic experience was 20.5 years and the average power industry experience was 4.14 years.

  10. Full-time Personnel Changes in Reporting Year and their Current Retirement Eligibility Status In 10 years, up to 42.9% of faculty/staff in the U.S. and 39.0% in Canada may need to be replaced due to retirements alone.

  11. Education Statistics

  12. Undergraduate Program Options

  13. Number of Reported Undergraduate Course Offerings (based on words in course titles) • Electronics (84 occurrences) • Renewable (17), Sustainable (8), Wind (7), Solar (5), Green (1) • Smart (13) {e.g., smart “grid”, smart “power system”} • Communication (1) Notes: (1) Total courses reported: 564 undergraduate (courses offered in past academic years were reported in some cases)(2) 4 faculty/staff reported to have taught power electronics in Canada in the last two years (undergrad and/or grad)(3) 43 faculty/staff reported to have taught power electronics in the U.S. in the last two years (undergrad and/or grad)

  14. Number of Reported Graduate Course Offerings (based on words in course titles) • Electronics (72 occurrences) • Renewable (19), Sustainable (9), Wind (11), Solar (2), Green (0) • Smart (27) {e.g., smart “grid”, smart “power system”} • Communication (3) Total courses reported: 631 graduate (courses offered in past academic years were reported in some cases)

  15. Graduate Degree Delivery Options • Courses with distance education students: • Graduate: 31.7% of all reported courses • Undergraduate: 13.3% of all reported courses

  16. Full-Time (FT) and Part-time (PT) Graduate Student Enrollments

  17. Average Number of Enrolled Graduate Students per Institution – Masters and PhD • 2014 Survey • Average Number of Masters: 22.5 • Average Number of PhD: 11.9

  18. Average Number of Domestic and International Grad Students per Institution • 2014 Survey • Average Number. of Domestic: 13.5 • Average Number of International: 20.9

  19. Research Expenditures ($) *A number of universities reported zero research expenditures. 16 universities reported zero non-equipment research expenditures and 37 universities reported zero equipment research expenditures. These responses may be valid or they may indicate missing data. The median values reported above ignore zero responses; thus, they are the median values for universities reporting non-zero expenditures. If zero responses are included, the median total research expenditures are $930,000 for Canada and $530,500 for the U.S.

  20. Reported Research Funding Outlook for Next 3 Years All Institutions 47 Institutions Above $600K in Non-equipment Expenditures

  21. Number of universities at which faculty participated in events designed to attract K-12 students to power engineering or to help K-12 teachers.

  22. Some Preliminary Conclusions • Strong growth in student interest • Healthier balance within faculty ranks with more assistant professor hires • High potential for faculty/staff retirements in next 10 years • More diverse course topics, but traditional topics seem to dominate (may be more diversity of material in the traditional courses) • Distance/online education options exist • Generally positive outlook for research $

More Related