Proceedings, 1. ciltAmerican Society for Engineering Education, Society for the Promotion of Engineering Education (U.S.) Society for the Promotion of Engineering Education., 1894 |
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39 sonuçtan 1-5 arası sonuçlar
Sayfa 17
... young engineers so mature in the exercise of all their professional functions that nothing is left for the years of subsequent practice to accomplish in the direction of education . This point should be emphasized at the outset , for ...
... young engineers so mature in the exercise of all their professional functions that nothing is left for the years of subsequent practice to accomplish in the direction of education . This point should be emphasized at the outset , for ...
Sayfa 20
... young engineers , a broad , liberal education in philosophy and arts , precedent to the purely profes- sional training . It would be well , although not imper- ative , that the liberal education should be given a trend , in its elective ...
... young engineers , a broad , liberal education in philosophy and arts , precedent to the purely profes- sional training . It would be well , although not imper- ative , that the liberal education should be given a trend , in its elective ...
Sayfa 25
... ; while the second results from the experience of the first few years of the young engineer's practical life , and it consists in attaining a capacity to submit the acquisitions of the first ENGINEERING EDUCATION . 25.
... ; while the second results from the experience of the first few years of the young engineer's practical life , and it consists in attaining a capacity to submit the acquisitions of the first ENGINEERING EDUCATION . 25.
Sayfa 29
... young men intending to become engineers . He frankly admitted that conti- nental and American engineers had , by pursuing the other course , gained such material advantages over those of Great Britain that the latter had lost perhaps ...
... young men intending to become engineers . He frankly admitted that conti- nental and American engineers had , by pursuing the other course , gained such material advantages over those of Great Britain that the latter had lost perhaps ...
Sayfa 38
... young engineer , for it is his last opportunity to secure it . The urgent demands upon the time and efforts of the young practitioner leave little or no opportunity and less inclination for study , and it is almost certain that ...
... young engineer , for it is his last opportunity to secure it . The urgent demands upon the time and efforts of the young practitioner leave little or no opportunity and less inclination for study , and it is almost certain that ...
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Sık kullanılan terimler ve kelime öbekleri
accuracy amount apparatus application better branches Braunschweig carried chairman character Civil & Mech civil engineering coast survey Congress construction course of study descriptive geometry devoted discussion division electrical engineering elementary engineering schools engineering student equipment exercises experience experimental fact field funicular geometry Germany give given graduates graphical methods graphical statics hydraulic ical important instructor instruments interest investigation Karlsruhe knowledge lectures Lehigh University MANSFIELD MERRIMAN Massachusetts material mathematics matter measuring mechanical engineering ment methods of instruction mineral mining engineering mining schools Munich nature necessary obtained original research paper plane plane table plane-table present principles problems Prof profes profession professional Professor purely purpose question R. C. CARPENTER regard School of Mines scientific seemed speaker strength of materials taught teacher teaching technical schools testing thesis thought tion topographical University writer
Popüler pasajlar
Sayfa 19 - ... broad and general cultivation prior to, and forming the foundation of, the subsequent professional training is well defined, and the ultimate nature of the case in engineering is precisely the same as that in law or medicine. By means of a liberal training the requisite powers of observation and a sound judgment are more symmetrically developed and far more accurately applied in consequence of truer conceptions of the object on which they are brought to bear, and a correspondingly enhanced power...
Sayfa 313 - ... these laboratories are the following : — First. To give the students practice in such experimental work as any engineer is constantly liable to be called upon to perform in the practice of his profession; as boiler tests, engine tests, power determinations, etc. Second. To give the students some experience in carrying on original investigations in engineering subjects with such care and accuracy as to render the results of real value to the engineering community. Third. By publishing from time...
Sayfa 50 - To him they are but little more than striking instances of how completely the most simple facts may be buried out of sight under heaps of mathematical rubbish.
Sayfa 21 - ... and wellrounded product of the ideal education in engineeering. The writer unhesitatingly places, therefore, as the first and fundamental requisite in the ideal education of young engineers, a broad liberal education in philosophy and arts, precedent to the purely professional* training." * * * * * * "The complete and satisfactory discharge of such functions cannot, from their very nature be accomplished on a bare possession of technical knowledge. This is, indeed, essential, but it is just as...
Sayfa 313 - ... systematic investigations of engineering problems ; and this can be done in a laboratory, whereas it is only with very great difficulty that it can be done in a machine-shop or a manufacturing establishment.
Sayfa 92 - It is through its practical value," say Professors Ayrton and Perry, that a knowledge of " mathematics must come ; and any teacher who refuses to consider the instinctive preference " of his pupils to reason about things rather than about ideas, is a man who persistently " refuses the powerful aid of Nature.
Sayfa 21 - ... complete and satisfactory discharge of such functions cannot, from their very nature be accomplished on a bare possession of technical knowledge. This is, indeed, essential, but it is just as essential, and perhaps more so, to know how to use it." * .••: * * * * "There are, then, few professional men to whom the broadly cultivating influences of a liberal education are more needful than to the engineer. His early professional practice does not induce any development which can fill the voids...
Sayfa 313 - Laboratories, the object being: (l) to give the student practice in such work as engineers in the pursuit of their profession are called upon to perform; (2) to enable him to base all his work upon some principles, not upon empirical rules; (3) to teach him to perform original investigations; and (4.) to enable him, by means of a thorough familiarity with both the theoretical and the practical aspects of his business, to deal intelligently with other...
Sayfa 19 - ... paper properly placed in the lead of a series of well written papers on Engineering Education, bound in the first volume of this Society's proceedings, and read before Division E. of the International Engineering Congress held at Chicago in 1893: "In the older learned professions this sequence of broad and general cultivation prior to, and forming the foundation of, the subsequent professional training is well defined, and the ultimate nature of the case in engineering is precisely the same as...
Sayfa 1 - Bonney, president of the World's Congress Auxiliary of the World's Columbian Exposition, declares : same religious liberty which is enjoyed under the Constitution of the United States, alike by natives and by foreign-born, by Roman Catholic, Protestant, Jew, and all others.