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Transcript of Electrical and Computer Engineering Departmental Overview Prof. Mark E. Law Department of Electrical...
Electrical and Computer EngineeringDepartmental Overview
Prof. Mark E. Law
Department of Electrical and Computer Eng.
Outline
• Agenda
• State of the Department– Faculty– Graduate– Undergraduate– Campaign
• Conclusions
Agenda Thursday• 11:30 – 1:00 Lunch, Introductions, State of the Department – Law• 1:00 – 2:30 Undergraduate Program Issues• 1:00 ABET Review Results and Process – Law• 1:30 Counseling Assistants – Law• 1:45 IPPD – Eisenstadt• 2:00 ECE Seminar – Jordan• 2:15 ECE Adventures – Arroyo / Schwartz• 2:30 – 2:45 Break• 2:45 – 3:45 Research Overviews• NSF Reconfigurable Computing Center – Alan George• NIH Neural Recording Implant – Harris• NSF Entrepreneurship – Harris• 4:00 – 5:30 Senior Design Poster / Demos – Rotunda Area• 6:30 – Dinner at Hilton Hotel
Agenda Friday• 8:00 – 8:30 Continental Breakfast
• 8:30 – 9:30 Capital Campaign – Maltbie
• 9:30 – 10:00 Break
• 10:00 – 11:00 Graduate Student Panel Q&A
• 11:00 – 12:30 Research Posters - NEB
• 12:30 – 2:00 Wrap-Up and Feedback
US News Rankings
• Beauty Contest at the department level
• 31st Best Graduate Program in US News (2007) Down 2 from 2006
• Unranked Undergrad, same as 2005
Faculty 42 Tenure Track Faculty and 5 Lecturers 14 IEEE Fellows 13 Assistant Professors, 14 untenured
Relatively Young
ECE Faculty
Recent Faculty Honors• Dr. Liuqing Yang received ONR Young Investigator Award
• Dr. Dapeng Wu received NSF Career Award • Drs. Rakov and Principe
selected as a UF Research Foundation Professors.
• Dr. Mark Law receives SRC Aristotle Award
• Dr. Jenshan Lin received Walter Cox award for service to IEEE MTT Society
• Dr. Scott Thompson named IEEE Fellow
Recent Faculty Press• Dr. Martin Uman, Lightning and Climate Change, New York Times
• Dr. Martin Uman and Dr. Vladimir Rakov, "Engineers are first to measure lightning-caused polluting gas”
• Dr. Alan George, National Science Foundation Research Center Launched at UF
• Dr. Alan George, New NSF Center Targets Reconfigurable Computing, HPCwire
• Dr. Alan George, UF, Honeywell engineers building first space supercomputer
• Dr. Jenshan Lin, For the future hydrogen economy, a tiny, self-powered sensorDr. Vladimir Rakov, Lightning Sparks Interest at Capitol Hill Educational Luncheon
• Dr. W. Eisenstadt, University's Sensor Gets Fresh with Pharmaceuticals and Other Goods, Electronic Design
• Dr. Karl Gugel, New Student-Design System Tracks Firefighters, Special Forces, April 13, 2006
Hiring Plans and Recruitment
• Target 50 faculty (nearly ten in real growth)
• Lost 2 Faculty last year
• No New Hires in 05/06
• 06/07 Search– Hired Rob Moore - Atmospheric Electricity– Offers to 3 More
Strategic Goals - ECE• Goal was to double
Ph.D.’s• Project Steady
State in the mid 30’s
17 16
24
39
47
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
50
Ph.D. Graduates
2002-32003-42004-52005-62006-7
ECE Research Metrics
Awards are up, but expenditures are down
4.5
5.75
7.75
10.3
9.2
10.1
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
00/01 01/02 02/03 03/04 04/05 05/06
Academic Year
PublicationsVery Rapid Growth
171204
242
323
449
517
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
00/01 01/02 02/03 03/04 04/05 05/06
Exp
endi
ture
s ($
M)
Strategic Goals - ECE
• Funding Metric on Ph.D.’s - Achieved 05/06– Support approximately 200 to 240 Ph.D. students– $10 - $13M / year in external research expenditures
• Publications Metric on Ph.D. - Achieved 05/06– 120 to 150 journal pubs / year (0.6 / year / Ph.D. student)– 200 to 240 conference pubs / year (1 / year / Ph.D. student)
• Consistent with recruitment of 50 Ph.D. students / year
Publication Quality
• Classify publication quality– Benefit junior faculty– Allow us to present better cases to college, provost– Strengthen our Evaluation
• Tier Conferences and Journals - 3 tiers
• Top Tier– Selective, High Impact, Wide Recognition as “best” in a field
• Mid Tier– Less Selective, Moderate Impact, “Good” Conference
• Low Tier– Accepts almost all, good for student development, “Workshop” flavor
Publication Quality• Goal to have in place by end of summer
• 1st Pass Guidelines on definitions• 2nd Pass Sample publications in each area /
each tier• 3rd Pass Develop more detail and pub lists
• Looking for volunteers to help in this process
Number of Students
• Declines in Undergrad
• Slow recovery in grad
• More Later
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
800
900
1000
1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006
Year
Number of Students
Grad Applicants, Admission, Enrollment
0
500
1000
1500
2000
2500
Applied Admit Enroll Aid
Fall 2003 Fall 2004 Fall 2005 Fall 2006
• Incoming class recovered
• Achievement Awards
• Fall 2007 to date:– Over 1500 Applicants
– Made 89 offers
– 150 Achievement Awards Offers
– More AA’s to come
• Project need 150 students
• Difficulty Recruiting US
Applied Admit Enroll Aid
Fall ‘03 2011 800 140 70
Fall ‘04 1001 408 91 27
Fall ‘05 780 504 139 43
Fall ‘06 1300 500 137 40
Graduation Rates
0
50
100
150
200
250
M.S. 138 204 150 96 132Ph.D. 17 18 24 39 46Attrition 132 202 141 114 144
02/03 03/04 04/05 05/06 06/07
• Need a class of 150 to stay even for Fall ‘07• Applications are up, cautiously optimistic
Grad Student Stipend
• Living Estimate for Gainesville ~$10,500• 20% of student stipends are below living costs• Average is now $13,200• Up about 10% from last year
• Graduate Student Panel - Tomorrow
Changes• Recruiting Grad Students
• Prof. John Harris, Recruiting Coordinator
• Catherine Sembajwe-Reeves, Recruiting Director
• Active Committee– Alumni Fellows - increase from 14 to 23– TA’s
Graduate Student Organization• Active this year• Passed a faculty etiquette guidelines
– Clarify what students should do
– Clarify student expectations
– No “free” labor
– Funding Expectations Clear
• Publish C&G monthly, rather than annually
Undergrad Retention / Recruiting• National Problem
– Enrollment is down in EE, CprE– Shift to Mechanical– Retention is poor in the discipline
• Locally• Half has been in CprE
– Hardware down to 60 students– Software (CISE) down from 800 to 300
• We have no control over admissions
Impacts• SCH’s - summer budget, raise pool• Could hurt our budget outright• Leader in improving will help our rankings• Important to the state mission• Lose higher admission standards
• Exceptional High School Students • UCF, USF get lower quality freshmen (on average)
and do fine
Problems• Science and Math Based Curriculum for Engineering
– Lose a lot of students in the first two years– No engineering curriculum
• Diversity is bad– White, male undergrad body (ok with hispanics)– Female undergrad percentage is decreasing
• Perceived as difficult– C+ requirement in math and physics– Weed out in 3111 / 3135
• 12th Century Teaching Methods
Lots of National Research• Entry Level Courses
– Project Based Approaches– Team Learning, Alternatives to Lecture– More hands-on, less theory– We can make use of these concepts
• I think we need to begin to seriously adapt new strategies in entry level classes first two years
Examples• Project Based Learning
– Center Circuits I course design and build– Team Based / New Lecture Models
• Portable Lab– Students don’t have traditional lab– Students have 24/7 hour lab access– In class experiments and experience
Initiatives in Place
• Freshmen / Sophomore Classes– IEEE / HKN for Outreach– Freshmen Seminars (Two new courses - more later)
• Improved Starting Sequence– ECE Analysis Course– Signals and Systems Coupled
• New Student Groups– Audio Engineering Society– Women in ECE
• Counseling Associates (more later)
Publication Quality
• Classify publication quality– Benefit junior faculty– Allow us to present better cases to college, provost– Strengthen our Evaluation
• Tier Conferences and Journals - 3 tiers
• Top Tier– Selective, High Impact, Wide Recognition as “best” in a field
• Mid Tier– Less Selective, Moderate Impact, “Good” Conference
• Low Tier– Accepts almost all, good for student development, “Workshop” flavor
Publication Quality• Goal to have in place by end of summer
• 1st Pass Guidelines on definitions• 2nd Pass Sample publications in each area / each
tier• 3rd Pass Develop more detail and pub lists
• Looking for volunteers to help in this process
Capital Campaign• Goals
– Grow and Support Ph.D. Production
– Retain and Recruit Top Faculty
– Provide opportunity to top students
• Opportunity to make a difference through the Campaign
Department Foundation Cash Income
�Department Foundation (1811) Cash Income
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007(todate)
Fiscal Year (July-June)
$K
Department Foundation Expenditures
Department Foundation (1811) Expenses
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006
2007(to date)
Fiscal Year (July-June)
K$Sub/IEEE/SAEMealsTravel
Department Foundation Balance
Department Foundation (1811) Balance
0
50
100
150
200
250
1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006
2007(to date)
Fiscal Year (July-June)
K$
Conclusions• Hit initial research goals - maintain and grow• Challenged with enrollment
– Recruit harder, more effectively
– Raise stipends to competitive levels
• Developing Quality Metrics