"Can you hold on a minute? I need to charge my robot."
Uri Kartoun is developing robots, nicknamed EDNex and
Clango, for handling suspicious packages. Down the hall,
classmate Juan Wachs is working on a computer interface
that responds to hand gestures.
Both are enrolled in a joint master's/Ph.D. program in
intelligent systems at Ben-Gurion University of the
Negev, located in Beersheba, Israel [see photo,
"School
Daze"]. But their reasons for choosing
Ben-Gurion were very different and illustrate the range
of issues prospective students should consider when
choosing an engineering graduate program.
Kartoun, an Israeli native, earned his bachelor's at
Ben-Gurion and went straight to grad school, staying on
to work with robotics experts Yael Edan and Helman
Stern. Wachs, who moved to Israel from Argentina, took a
more circuitous route. He earned a bachelor's degree in
education and science, then taught high school and
college electronics for four years. When he decided to
return to school, he had difficulty finding a program.
One university he applied to "wouldn't even consider
me unless I got another undergraduate degree in
engineering, which would have been four more years,"
says Wachs, who, like Kartoun, is an IEEE member. "But
Ben-Gurion was willing to let me prove myself. They
said, 'If you get good grades in certain engineering
graduate courses, we'll take you.'"
Many engineers,
regardless of where they work or what
they work on, are coming to regard graduate school as
inevitable. Engineering's ever-increasing complexity,
its cross-disciplinary nature, and its demand for
workers skilled both technically and managerially
require more education than can be crammed into a
bachelor's program.
Graduate school also trains students to focus on
problem solving instead of on achieving grades,
educators say. "If undergrad is where you learn the nuts
and bolts of engineering, graduate school is where you
learn how to apply those principles to solve problems,"
says Kevin Craig, a professor of mechanical engineering
at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, in Troy, N.Y.
The key to choosing a suitable graduate program is to
think less in terms of degree titles and more in terms
of the concrete things you will experience and learn.
For example, a department that has little interaction
with other departments on campus probably won't serve
students looking for an interdisciplinary approach. On
the other hand, a program that offers a flexible
curriculum can be tailored to suit a student's
individual goals.
"Curriculum flexibility is much more noticeable in
interdisciplinary graduate schools, where engineering
majors are increasingly adding nontraditional course
options," says Wade Shaw Jr., professor of engineering
management at Florida Institute of Technology, in
Melbourne, Fla., and editor of the IEEE Engineering
Management Review.
"Ask yourself: 'What do I want to know at the
completion of my school experience and what courses
support that?' and then work back to see how to craft a
custom curriculum," adds Shaw. "When you ultimately
market yourself, you're less likely to say, 'I have a
master's degree in computer science' than 'I'm an expert
in graphics or parallel processing.' Employers want to
understand what you can contribute, not what your degree
title is."
Engineering problems, especially in industry, tend to
require a working knowledge of several areas, such as
material, mechanical, and electrical systems. Employees
with broader engineering knowledge are often more prized
than those with niche expertise.
"Companies are desperate for people who can take a
product from conception to model to prototype to
testing," says Rensselaer's Craig. "Engineers are also
incorporating management, law, and medicine into their
studies. To be unaware of those fields will lead to a
narrow and limited career."
Graduate
school can also benefit those with
established careers. Despite a nine-year ascent through
the ranks at Sun Microsystems Inc., in Burlington,
Mass., Steve Klosterman realized that he needed a
graduate degree while interviewing engineering
applicants. "Many with backgrounds similar to mine were
being jettisoned from other companies," he says.
In 1998, Klosterman headed to the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology's System Design and Management
program, where courses in the engineering and management
schools enabled him to stay current with technology
while learning management and leadership skills. Since
graduating in 2000, he has leveraged his degree to
become Sun's product line director.
Most engineering master's programs offer tracks to
accommodate working engineers. So choosing one means
looking at the kinds of courses you need, how much of
the cost your employer will underwrite, the availability
of distance or part-time learning, and the presentation
of course material. To get a flavor of campus life,
consult university marketing sites like Peterson's
(http://Petersons.com). The
student-run College Prowler
(http://collegeprowler.com), although
focused on undergrad programs, offers tidbits on overall
campus culture, food, and faculty.
Nearly two decades after getting his master's in
electrical engineering from Pennsylvania State
University, in University Park, Hal Mueller, an IEEE
member for nearly 30 years, found himself searching
BusinessWeek.com's listings for distance-learning
technical MBAs. He was struck by Philadelphia-based
Drexel University's Web site and its program offering
some study abroad, so he decided to enroll there.
One course, on strategic thinking, proved particularly
valuable, Mueller says. "The Drexel program took all
this information I had in my head from years of work and
school experience and showed me where it all fits and
how it relates to each other." After graduating in June,
he landed a job as vice president of sales and marketing
at C&M Corp., a wire and cable manufacturer in
Wauregan, Conn. "I wouldn't have this job without this
degree, because I wouldn't have known the first thing
about running a marketing program."
Engineers pursuing a research career instead should be
prepared to do some—what else?—research. This will
allow you to target schools that do the kind of work you
want to do and will give you the greatest access to
professors engaged in those kinds of studies. If you
want to do robotics, for instance, and only one
professor at a school is doing robotics, the odds aren't
great that you'll get to work with him or her.
To get an idea of where research is being done in your
desired field, consult databases like IEEE Xplore or
attend conferences and professional society meetings.
Look at the papers and presentations that interest you
and find out where their authors are from.
Paying for grad school need not leave you broke. Many
schools have grant money to cover tuition and living
expenses. Ben-Gurion's Kartoun and Wachs earned
education subsidies and worked as teaching assistants to
get the school to waive their annual US $3000 tuition;
Israeli universities also offer scholarships based on
grades or national origin.
Engineering scholarships for U.S. citizens and legal
residents are available from the National Science
Foundation, the Department of Energy, and the Department
of Defense; one DOD program is the National Defense
Science and Engineering Graduate Fellowship Program. In
the European Union, the Researcher's Mobility Portal
allows you to search for EU-wide fellowships and grants
[see
http://europa.eu.int/eracareers/index_en.cfm].
If you're interested in a particular European country,
you'll have to dig a little deeper. For example,
Britain's Engineering and Physical Sciences Research
Council offers funding through universities based on a
specific research area, while the Royal Academy of
Engineering, in London, offers teaching fellowships.
Germany offers funding for research and study through
the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation's German
Chancellor Scholarships, among others.
There's been an increase in financial aid for women
and minorities wanting to study engineering and science.
The Society of Women Engineers, for example, maintains a
list of U.S. and international programs for women,
including the Third World Organization for Women in
Science, which offers training fellowships to female
Ph.D students from sub-Saharan Africa.
"The biggest mistake grad students make is not
realizing that they can get paid to go to grad school,"
says Thomas Kurfess, professor of mechanical engineering
at the Georgia Institute of Technology, in Atlanta. But
money isn't everything, he adds. "Do not just go for the
university that pays the highest stipend. Rather, choose
one that offers the best learning opportunity and career
options after graduation."
Finally, once you've narrowed your choices, visit the
campuses. No brochure or Web site will match a firsthand
assessment of the culture, student population, faculty,
and research facilities; nor will it offer impromptu
conversations with students about their advisors and
professors. A two-day trip could save you from deciding,
a year into a program, that you wish you were somewhere else.