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Tribulations of a new electrical engineering program: From program inception to ABET accreditation

  • Esteban Rodriguez-Mareka(Author)
    ,
  • Min Sung Koha(Author)
    ,
  • Michael Brzoskaa(Author)
    ,
  • aEastern Washington University
Research Output: Contribution to journal Conference article Peer-review

Abstract

In the Fall of 2002, Eastern Washington University (EWU) received a call from the American Electronics Association (AeA) requesting our institution to initiate the process to open an Electrical Engineering program to fill an existing gap in the State's labor force. The fact that our Department was exclusively dedicated to Engineering Technology put to the offer an even more exciting overtone, as we knew that it would not only be challenging, but that we would be walking on what for us was uncharted territory. On hindsight, the best thing that our Department had going in our favor is lacking the vision to anticipate the many hurdles that we would encounter. The first of these hurdles came in the form of state legislation. The State of Washington has a provision in its laws that precludes public comprehensive universities from offering engineering degrees, this privilege being reserved to public research institutions. After innumerable visits to the state capital and irrefutable evidence of the need for more electrical engineers in the state, the law was overturned, although only for Electrical Engineering. But the problems were just starting. We knew we had ahead of us a monumental competitor in the Higher Education Coordinating Board, an organization that rules and regulates approval of new programs in the State, but what we did not know is that fierce enemies would rise from within. The prospect of a new program, potentially very costly for the University, incited several programs at EWU to protest against the opening of an Electrical Engineering degree. Great temple and adroit political maneuvering by the administration, which was fully behind the new program, were required for the eventual internal approval of the degree. And the Higher Education Coordinating Board was still to come! This paper describes the trials and tribulations that were overcome by the Department of Engineering & Design from the initial idea to the final accreditation by the Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology (ABET) [1] in the summer of 2008.