National Academies Press: OpenBook

Reshaping the Graduate Education of Scientists and Engineers (1995)

Chapter: APPENDIX E: PANELISTS

« Previous: APPENDIX D: RESPONDENTS TO CALL FOR COMMENTS
Suggested Citation:"APPENDIX E: PANELISTS." Institute of Medicine, National Academy of Sciences, and National Academy of Engineering. 1995. Reshaping the Graduate Education of Scientists and Engineers. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/4935.
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Page 179
Suggested Citation:"APPENDIX E: PANELISTS." Institute of Medicine, National Academy of Sciences, and National Academy of Engineering. 1995. Reshaping the Graduate Education of Scientists and Engineers. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/4935.
×
Page 180
Suggested Citation:"APPENDIX E: PANELISTS." Institute of Medicine, National Academy of Sciences, and National Academy of Engineering. 1995. Reshaping the Graduate Education of Scientists and Engineers. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/4935.
×
Page 181
Suggested Citation:"APPENDIX E: PANELISTS." Institute of Medicine, National Academy of Sciences, and National Academy of Engineering. 1995. Reshaping the Graduate Education of Scientists and Engineers. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/4935.
×
Page 182

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PANELISTS 179 E PANELISTS A number of panels provided input to the committee deliberations on graduate education. These panelists, which represent faculty, graduate school deans, students, post-doctorates, women, minorities, and industry are listed below. John A.Armstrong Erich Bloch South Salem, NY Distinguished Fellow Robert H.Atwell Council on Competitiveness President Washington, DC American Council on Education Joseph Bordogna Washington, DC Assistant Director Kevin Aylesworth Engineering Directorate AAAS Congressional Fellow National Science Foundation Washington, DC Arlington, VA Albert T.Bellino Dennis Brown Managing Director, College and University Provost and Senior Vice President, Academic Affairs Relations, Recruiting and Retention, Internal Communications, Drexel University and Advertising Philadelphia, PA Banker's Trust New York, NY

PANELISTS 180 Sarita E.Brown Aaron M.Ellison Principal Partner, Education Trust Assistant Professor American Association for Higher Education Department of Biological Sciences Washington, DC Mount Holyoke College David Capco South Hadley, MA Professor of Zoology Richard Fink Arizona State University Amherst College Chair, Education Committee Amherst, MA Society for Developmental Biology Gideon Frieder Leonard N.Carter, Jr. Dean of Engineering Postdoctoral Fellow George Washington University Center for Space Physics Washington, DC Boston University Bob Frosch Boston, MA Kennedy School of Business Paul Christiano Harvard University Provost Cambridge, MA Carnegie Mellon University Mark Furth Pittsburgh, PA Glaxo Research Institute Edward E.David, Jr. Research Triangle Park, NC EED, Inc. Charles A.Gray Bedminster, NJ Vice President, Technology Frank A.DeCosta, III Cabot Corporation Member, Technical Staff Bilterica, MA Mitre Corporation Paula Therese Hammond McLean, VA Postdoctoral Associate Denice D.Denton Harvard University National Research Council Board on Engineering Education Cambridge, MA Assistant Professor Barry J.Hardy University of Wisconsin Computer-Aided Molecular Design Group Washington, DC Physical Chemistry Lab Mildred S.Dresselhaus Oxford University Professor Oxford, UK Massachusetts Institute of Technology Bradley T.Hargroves Cambridge, MA Mitre Corporation McLean, VA

PANELISTS 181 Richard Herman Peter Magrath Dean of Science President University of Maryland National Association of State Universities and Land Grant Colleges College Park, MD Washington, DC Chris Jacobsen Simon Ostrach Department of Physics Wilbert J.Austin Distinguished Professor of Engineering State University of New York Case Western Reserve University Stony Brook, NY National Academy of Engineering Home Secretary Ruth Kirschstein Feniosky Pena-Mora Deputy Director Massachusetts Institute of Technology National Institutes of Health Cambridge, MA Bethesda, MD Thomas D.Pollard Leonard Kline Johns Hopkins University Associate Director for Career Entry School of Medicine Office of Personnel Management Baltimore, MD Washington, DC Cornelius J.Pings Joyce Ladner President Vice-President, Academic Affairs Association of American Universities Howard University Washington, DC Washington, DC Theodore Poehler Neal Lane Vice-Provost of Research Director Johns Hopkins University National Science Foundation Baltimore, MD Bethesda, MD James L.Powell Jules B.LaPidus Franklin Institute President Philadelphia, PA Council of Graduate Schools Martin Ramirez Washington, DC Department of Civil Engineering Johns Hopkins University Baltimore, MD Roland Schmitt Clifton Park, NY Gerald M.Stancil New Jersey Alternate Teacher Certification Program East Orange, NJ

PANELISTS 182 Peter Wayner NewRay Software Frank Wazzan Dean of Engineering University of California, Los Angeles Los Angeles, CA Luther S.Williams Assistant Director Directorate for Education and Human Resources National Science Foundation Washington, DC Linda S.Wilson President Radcliffe College Cambridge, MA

Next: APPENDIX F: CALL FOR COMMENTS: SUMMARY OF RESPONSES »
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Are we producing too many PhDs? Does the current graduate education system adequately prepare science and engineering students for today's marketplace? How do foreign students enter the picture? What should be the PhD of the future? These and other questions are addressed in this book by a blue-ribbon panel of scientists and engineers. Recommendations are aimed at creating a new PhD that would retain the existing strengths of the current system while substantially increasing the information available, the potential versatility of students, and the career options afforded to them by their PhD education.

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