{"id":400852,"date":"2019-10-09T12:04:49","date_gmt":"2019-10-09T16:04:49","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.rochester.edu\/newscenter\/?p=400852"},"modified":"2019-10-14T12:43:05","modified_gmt":"2019-10-14T16:43:05","slug":"what-engineers-and-humanists-can-learn-from-one-another-400852","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.rochester.edu\/newscenter\/what-engineers-and-humanists-can-learn-from-one-another-400852\/","title":{"rendered":"What engineers and humanists can learn from one another"},"content":{"rendered":"
The Wells Award<\/a> is given annually to students in the Hajim School of Engineering & Applied Sciences<\/a> who excel in both engineering or computer science and in the humanities. The award was created by the family of Robert L. Wells, a \u201939 graduate of mechanical engineering who became a top executive at Westinghouse. Wells felt strongly that engineers \u201cneeded the balance of the humanities\u201d to be competent in their field. Is that still true, and why?<\/em><\/p>\n To Wendi Heinzelman, dean of the Hajim School and a professor of electrical and computer engineering<\/a>, and Joan Shelley Rubin, the Ani and Mark Gabrellian Director of the Humanities Center<\/a> and Dexter Perkins Professor of History, the answer is an emphatic \u201cYes!\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n They explain why in this recent conversation.<\/em><\/p>\n Heinzelman:<\/strong> What really sets top engineers apart is having not just technical skills but humanistic skills, such as the ability to create, to convince people, and to see multiple points of view. The humanities give you that in spades.<\/p>\n When I greet our first-year engineering students, I tell them to look at the people who have been really successful in their careers\u2014like George Eastman and Steve Jobs. They were really great technically, but they also understood that you have to connect with people. You have to connect the technology with how people use it in their everyday lives and how it can make their lives better. That\u2019s what really sets the great engineers apart from the good engineers. So, having that background in the humanities is still really, really valuable.<\/p>\n Rubin:<\/strong> And maybe even more valuable than it was in the past because we are a very specialized society in the way we approach the acquisition of knowledge. Look at the history of education over time. You see a relentless, increasing specialization.<\/p>\n The humanities are about the nature of the human experience in different times and places and cultures. And engineers are designing\u2014or should be designing\u2014with the human experience in mind. We had a really good example of this recently when the Humanities Center sponsored a visit by Bryan C. Lee Jr., an African-American architect from New Orleans<\/a> who talked about his crusade on behalf of what he calls design justice. It\u2019s about the values that should come into play when you design buildings or other public spaces. Where do you locate a building, how do you think about the community where the building will be located, and involve that community in the design process? That\u2019s a really great example of the convergence of engineering skills and humanistic inquiry.<\/p>\n The 人妻少妇专区<\/a> offers students many opportunities to step outside their majors and explore other disciplines.<\/p>\n Rochester Curriculum\/cluster system<\/a> Take 5<\/a> iZone<\/a> Grand Challenges Scholars<\/a> Humanities Center<\/a>A multidisciplinary climate<\/h3>\n
\nInstead of general education or foundation requirements, our students choose a major and two clusters (one for engineering students) that interest them.<\/p>\n
\nUnique to the 人妻少妇专区, this program provides an additional semester or year, tuition-free, to qualified students to pursue a special academic interest.<\/p>\n
\nA creative problem-solving space, program and community that empowers students of all disciplines to explore and imagine ideas for social, cultural, community, and economic impact.<\/p>\n
\nA program that allows students to unify their classwork, research, global experiences, and entrepreneurial activities under a unifying theme\u2014one of the 14 grand challenges identified by the National Academy of Engineering.<\/p>\n
\nThe University\u2019s home base for exploring the exploring the varied dimensions of the human experience through interdisciplinary exchange and collaboration.<\/p>\n