National Academies Press: OpenBook

Assessment of Corrosion Education (2009)

Chapter: Appendix E: Agendas for Materials Forum 2007 and Committee Public Meetings

« Previous: Appendix D: Short Courses on Corrosion
Suggested Citation:"Appendix E: Agendas for Materials Forum 2007 and Committee Public Meetings." National Research Council. 2009. Assessment of Corrosion Education. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/12560.
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Page 146
Suggested Citation:"Appendix E: Agendas for Materials Forum 2007 and Committee Public Meetings." National Research Council. 2009. Assessment of Corrosion Education. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/12560.
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Page 147
Suggested Citation:"Appendix E: Agendas for Materials Forum 2007 and Committee Public Meetings." National Research Council. 2009. Assessment of Corrosion Education. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/12560.
×
Page 148
Suggested Citation:"Appendix E: Agendas for Materials Forum 2007 and Committee Public Meetings." National Research Council. 2009. Assessment of Corrosion Education. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/12560.
×
Page 149
Suggested Citation:"Appendix E: Agendas for Materials Forum 2007 and Committee Public Meetings." National Research Council. 2009. Assessment of Corrosion Education. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/12560.
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Page 150

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Appendix E Agendas for Materials Forum 2007 and Committee Public Meetings MATERIALS FORUM 2007: CORROSION EDUCATION FOR THE 21ST CENTURY March 30, 2007—Washington, D.C. SESSION I: MOTIVATION Moderator, Ralph Adler, Army Research Laboratory 8:00 am Welcome and setting the Fiona Doyle, Forum Chair scene 8:10 Introduction of Session I Gary Fischman, NMAB participants 8:15 Cost of corrosion Neil Thompson, CC Technologies 8:40 DOD’s mandate on Daniel Dunmire, DOD-OSD corrosion DOD’s corrosion and Lewis Sloter, DOD-OSD national security needs 9:05 The need for corrosion Aziz I. Asphahani and Helena Seelinger, engineering curriculum NACE Foundation 146

A pp e n d i x E 147 SESSION II: CURRENT PRACTICE Moderator, John Scully, University of Virginia 10:10 am Introduction of Session II Michael Moloney, NMAB participants 10:15 AMPTIAC ad hoc study on David Rose, Quanterion Solutions, Inc. corrosion education 10:30 Corrosion education: Gerald Frankel, Ohio State University materials science 10:45 Corrosion education: Matthew Begley, University of Virginia mechanical engineering 11:00 Corrosion education: Robert Schafrik, GE Aviation industry needs and response 11:15 Corrosion education: Ramesh Sharma, Raytheon industry needs and response 11:30 Panel discussion WORKING LUNCH WITH TALK Noon The Challenge of Change Luis M. Proenza, University of Akron in a Change-Resistant Environment SESSION III: IMPLEMENTATION Moderator, Ron Latanision, Exponent, Inc. 1:15 pm Introduction of Session III Gary Fischman, NMAB participants 1:20 Perspectives on Ron Latanision, Exponent, Inc. implementation 1:30 Response from panel members (2 minutes each) followed by panel discussion with audience participation George Dieter, University of Maryland Robert Dodds, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign David Duquette, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Mark Plichta, Michigan Technical University Lee Saperstein, University of Missouri, Rolla Mark Soucek, University of Akron

148 Assessment of C o r ro s i o n E d u c at i o n SESSION IV: NEXT STEPS Moderator, Fiona Doyle, University of California, Berkeley 3:00 pm Overview of workshop Fiona Doyle, Forum Chair 3:15 Looking forward to the Wesley Harris, ACE Chair follow-on study 3:15 Discussion of NRC’s corrosion education study 4:00 Adjourn MEETING OF THE COMMITTEE ON ASSESSING CORROSION EDUCATION (ACE) June 20, 2007—Washington, D.C. Noon MEETING CONVENES IN OPEN SESSION Lunch 1:00 pm Welcome and introduction Wesley Harris, Chair of committee and guests 1:05 Sponsor presentation, DOD Dan Dunmire, OSD-ATL 1:45 Other government Robert Hanrahan, DOE-NNSA perspectives Joseph Carpenter, DOE-EERE Harriet Kung, DOE-DMS&E 2:45 Break 3:05 Congressional perspective Vickie Plunkett, House Armed Services Committee 3:35 Origin of the study David Rose, Quanterion 4:05 Open discussion between panel and guests on presentations and implications for the study 6:00 MEETING CONVENES IN CLOSED SESSION

A pp e n d i x E 149 June 21, 2007 7:30 am MEETING CONVENES IN CLOSED SESSION Working breakfast and discussion, committee and staff 8:15 MEETING CONVENES IN OPEN SESSION Recalling the corrosion education workshop –Some retrospective thoughts on the workshop from Fiona Doyle, CEWOP Chair –Open discussion with all committee and guests, led by Fiona Doyle, CEWOP Chair 10:00 Break 10:20 MEETING CONVENES IN CLOSED SESSION MEETING OF THE COMMITTEE ON ASSESSING CORROSION EDUCATION September 17, 2007—Detroit, Michigan 9:45 am MEETING CONVENES IN OPEN SESSION Government panel session moderator: John Scully, ACE Kayle Boomer, Hanford Nuclear Waste Storage Facility Steven Carr, Army Aviation and Missile Command Vincent Hock, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Bill Kepler, U.S. Bureau of Reclamation Stephen Sharp, Virginia Transportation Research Council 12:15 pm Working lunch 1:15 University panel session moderator: Gerald Frankel, ACE Jo Howze, Texas A&M University Alex King, Purdue University Ian Robertson, University of Illinois Subra Suresh, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Peter Voorhees, Northwestern University 3:45 Break 4:00 Open microphone discussion (community input) 5:00 MEETING CONVENES IN CLOSED SESSION

150 Assessment of C o r ro s i o n E d u c at i o n MEETING OF THE COMMITTEE ON ASSESSING CORROSION EDUCATION December 17, 2007—Irvine, California 10:00 am MEETING CONVENES IN OPEN SESSION Industry panel session moderators: Gordon Bierwagen, ACE, and Gary Was, ACE Aziz Asphanhani, Carus Chemical Company William Hedges, BP Michael J. Maloney, Pratt & Whitney Robert Mroczkwski, connNtext Michael R. Ostermiller, General Motors Leslie Spain, Dominion Generation Darrel Untereker, Medtronic Noon Working lunch 1:00 pm University panel session moderators: Gerald Frankel, ACE, and John Scully, ACE Reza Abbaschian, University of California, Riverside Robert Cottis, University of Manchester Anthony Luscher, Ohio State Matthew O’Keefe, University of Missouri, Rolla Lt. Michael Plumley, U.S. Coast Guard Academy Bob Sinclair, Stanford University Dan Walsh, Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo Ward Winer, Georgia Institute of Technology 3:00 Break 3:30 NACE/University of Akron, Sue Louscher, corrosion survey 4:30 General discussion 5:00 MEETING CONVENES IN CLOSED SESSION

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The threat from the degradation of materials in the engineered products that drive our economy, keep our citizenry healthy, and keep us safe from terrorism and belligerent threats has been well documented over the years. And yet little effort appears to have been made to apply the nation's engineering community to developing a better understanding of corrosion and the mitigation of its effects.

The engineering workforce must have a solid understanding of the physical and chemical bases of corrosion, as well as an understanding of the engineering issues surrounding corrosion and corrosion abatement. Nonetheless, corrosion engineering is not a required course in the curriculum of most bachelor degree programs in MSE and related engineering fields, and in many programs, the subject is not even available. As a result, most bachelor-level graduates of materials- and design-related programs have an inadequate background in corrosion engineering principles and practices.

To combat this problem, the book makes a number of short- and long-term recommendations to industry and government agencies, educational institutions, and communities to increase education and awareness, and ultimately give the incoming workforce the knowledge they need.

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