Workforce Blog: Leapfrog to the New Generation of Engineers
Workforce Blog: Leapfrog to the New Generation of Engineers
With the tools that now exist, it is possible to skip past early stage technology and learning in nearly any field.
The clean energy transition is upon us. Energy companies, national labs, research universities, and other organizations are acting upon plans to reach net zero carbon emissions to meet global goals and timelines. Having made notable progress in reducing emissions, the energy sector is bringing along—and in fact will serve as the backbone to support—the transportation and industrial sectors in reducing emissions.
The extreme changes in our climate have made it clear that we need to act. Members of the energy sector have been meeting, talking, collaborating, and planning for years; the time has come to do. We learn and adjust by doing.
Much the same can be said of developing new mechanical engineers. Those of us in the economic sectors whose future success depends upon having a lot of engineers have been talking for years about the need for diversity and equity in engineering education and outreach.
ASME, the ASME Foundation, and other educational organizations understand the need for tools such as tailored educational programs, targeted scholarships to students of color and women, creative fellowships, and global innovation that demonstrates the critical role engineering plays in sustainability solutions worldwide.
Discover the Benefits of ASME Membership
Most importantly, engineering educators can learn from the energy industry and fast forward to new paradigms that take advantage of the latest technologies.
My organization, EPRI, is a 50-yearold nonprofit research institute with a mission to deliver independent, objective thought leadership and industry expertise to help the energy sector move through the energy transition that benefits society.
Today, 940 million people around the world do not have electricity—the same number as when Edison invented the light bulb 144 years ago. No one today supports the idea that developing countries need to move through the technology spectrum that developed countries already have to successfully electrify. They can bypass fossil fuel-dependent energy generation and move straight to clean grid technologies as they electrify today.
With AI and virtual tools that now exist to support and distribute innovation and progress of any kind around the world, it is more efficient than ever to “leapfrog” early stage technology and learning in nearly any field. Stakeholders can lean in on the actual solutions and not the steps taken to get there.
On this topic: Introduce STEM to the Next Generation of Diverse Talent
In the energy sector—as in many other fields—there is a shared purpose in quickly scaling those new technologies that will benefit society at a reasonable cost. We need to consider engineering education similarly—it simply takes too long to produce a productive and contributing new employee across the sectors that desperately need them to advance.
New engineering students today don’t need to hear about everything I have learned since 1974, but stakeholders that depend upon new talent need to understand their motivations and goals as we focus on and improve the curriculum they need to perform in today’s jobs. When we understand what works in one part of the world, we need to apply it globally rather than make every part of the world go through the same learning curve to arrive at the same place.
ASME’s name starts with “American,” yet ASME serves 25,000 students in 135 countries. Founded in 1880, ASME would not be successful if it clung to the approaches and values from nearly 150 years ago. An agile and expert organization, the ASME Foundation is at the table to do.
More on workforce issues: The Engineer of the Future
Do we talk and plan? Yes. Are we mindful of past history and the steps required to get from then to now? Of course. But to get from here to where we must go, we are focused on the activities needed on the ground today to successfully bring more curious and intellectually questioning youth to the engineering fields in the most efficient and productive way possible while continuing to feed their imaginations and desires to excel.
Neil Wilmshurst is senior vice president of Energy System Resources and chief nuclear officer at EPRI, the Electric Power Research Institute. For information about the ASME Foundation’s sustainability and workforce development programs, visit www.asmefoundation.org.
The extreme changes in our climate have made it clear that we need to act. Members of the energy sector have been meeting, talking, collaborating, and planning for years; the time has come to do. We learn and adjust by doing.
Much the same can be said of developing new mechanical engineers. Those of us in the economic sectors whose future success depends upon having a lot of engineers have been talking for years about the need for diversity and equity in engineering education and outreach.
ASME, the ASME Foundation, and other educational organizations understand the need for tools such as tailored educational programs, targeted scholarships to students of color and women, creative fellowships, and global innovation that demonstrates the critical role engineering plays in sustainability solutions worldwide.
Discover the Benefits of ASME Membership
Most importantly, engineering educators can learn from the energy industry and fast forward to new paradigms that take advantage of the latest technologies.
My organization, EPRI, is a 50-yearold nonprofit research institute with a mission to deliver independent, objective thought leadership and industry expertise to help the energy sector move through the energy transition that benefits society.
Today, 940 million people around the world do not have electricity—the same number as when Edison invented the light bulb 144 years ago. No one today supports the idea that developing countries need to move through the technology spectrum that developed countries already have to successfully electrify. They can bypass fossil fuel-dependent energy generation and move straight to clean grid technologies as they electrify today.
With AI and virtual tools that now exist to support and distribute innovation and progress of any kind around the world, it is more efficient than ever to “leapfrog” early stage technology and learning in nearly any field. Stakeholders can lean in on the actual solutions and not the steps taken to get there.
On this topic: Introduce STEM to the Next Generation of Diverse Talent
In the energy sector—as in many other fields—there is a shared purpose in quickly scaling those new technologies that will benefit society at a reasonable cost. We need to consider engineering education similarly—it simply takes too long to produce a productive and contributing new employee across the sectors that desperately need them to advance.
New engineering students today don’t need to hear about everything I have learned since 1974, but stakeholders that depend upon new talent need to understand their motivations and goals as we focus on and improve the curriculum they need to perform in today’s jobs. When we understand what works in one part of the world, we need to apply it globally rather than make every part of the world go through the same learning curve to arrive at the same place.
ASME’s name starts with “American,” yet ASME serves 25,000 students in 135 countries. Founded in 1880, ASME would not be successful if it clung to the approaches and values from nearly 150 years ago. An agile and expert organization, the ASME Foundation is at the table to do.
More on workforce issues: The Engineer of the Future
Do we talk and plan? Yes. Are we mindful of past history and the steps required to get from then to now? Of course. But to get from here to where we must go, we are focused on the activities needed on the ground today to successfully bring more curious and intellectually questioning youth to the engineering fields in the most efficient and productive way possible while continuing to feed their imaginations and desires to excel.
Neil Wilmshurst is senior vice president of Energy System Resources and chief nuclear officer at EPRI, the Electric Power Research Institute. For information about the ASME Foundation’s sustainability and workforce development programs, visit www.asmefoundation.org.