Title :
An engineering curriculum track for IT for sustainability
Author :
Morell, L. ; Bash, Cullen ; Trucco, M. ; Patel, Chirag
Author_Institution :
Hewlett Packard Labs., Palo Alto, CA, USA
Abstract :
Information technology (IT) forms a crucial foundation for designing, building and managing future sustainable cities. This paper proposes a model to innovate the engineering and computing curriculum to include sustainability and IT topics in order to develop the skills and competencies that future professionals will need to design, build and manage future cities. Rather than developing a new program, we propose a curriculum model - called SustainIT -adapted from the successful 2006 US NAE Gordon Prize engineering curriculum innovation, The Learning Factory - as a possible roadmap to reform and complement existing Bachelors of Science (BS) degrees in engineering. By providing a series of guided electives, any engineering program may offer engineering, and/or computer science students the opportunity to learn about and become specialized in IT for Sustainability. Multidisciplinary topics include traditional ecological engineering; life-cycle design; design and application of resource microgrids; pervasive sensing and data aggregation; knowledge discovery, data mining and visualization; and, policy based control and operation for resource provisioning.
Keywords :
computer science education; data mining; data visualisation; ecology; engineering education; sustainable development; IT topics; SustainIT; The Learning Factory; bachelors of science degrees; computer science student; computing curriculum; data aggregation; data mining; data visualization; ecological engineering; engineering curriculum track; engineering program; information technology; knowledge discovery; life-cycle design; multidisciplinary topics; pervasive sensing; policy based control; resource microgrid; resource provisioning; sustainability; sustainable city building; sustainable city designing; sustainable city management; Cities and towns; Computer science; Data mining; Economics; Knowledge discovery; Sensors; Technological innovation; BS; curriculum innovation; engineering education; future cities; information technology (IT); sustainability;
Conference_Titel :
Frontiers in Education Conference (FIE), 2012
Conference_Location :
Seattle, WA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-1353-7
Electronic_ISBN :
0190-5848
DOI :
10.1109/FIE.2012.6462324