Title :
Should distribution systems engineering be taught at the undergraduate level?
Author :
Chowdhury, Badrul ; Pahwa, Anil
Author_Institution :
Electr. & Comput. Eng. Dept., Missouri Univ. of Sci. & Technol., Rolla, MO, USA
Abstract :
Although there are some exceptions, a distribution systems course is not part of a typical undergraduate curriculum. The course is usually taught at the graduate level. Teaching a distribution systems course requires the student to have a background in balanced three-phase power system modeling such as that obtained from a first power systems analysis course. The requirement to add breadth to an undergraduate curriculum often precludes the notion of depth in any one area unless a student takes the depth courses as technical or free electives. An argument could be made that a distribution systems course does not contain much power engineering fundamentals beyond what is covered in a first power systems course. Conversely, much of the interesting concepts including load characteristics, transformer configurations, unbalanced system modeling, power quality modeling, radial system protection coordination, etc., occur at the distribution level. In addition, much of the smart grid innovations will occur at this level. This paper discusses some of the merits and demerits of developing and teaching a distribution systems course at the undergraduate level and also focuses on the difficulties of developing the contents of such a course.
Keywords :
power distribution protection; power engineering education; power supply quality; smart power grids; teaching; balanced three-phase power system modeling; depth courses; distribution systems course; distribution systems engineering; graduate level; load characteristics; power engineering fundamentals; power quality modeling; radial system protection coordination; smart grid innovations; teaching; transformer configurations; unbalanced system modeling; undergraduate curriculum; undergraduate level; Educational institutions; Power distribution; Power system reliability; Reliability; Smart grids; Software; Smart grid; microgrid; power engineering education; power quality; system reliability;
Conference_Titel :
Power and Energy Society General Meeting, 2011 IEEE
Conference_Location :
San Diego, CA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4577-1000-1
Electronic_ISBN :
1944-9925
DOI :
10.1109/PES.2011.6039194