Fla. Admin. Code Ann. R. 61G15-20.006 - Educational Requirements
(1) The
evaluation of curricula and standards of accreditation for approval of degree
programs required by Section
471.013, F.S., shall be made by
the Education Advisory Committee and shall be based upon an overview of
engineering programs within the United States accredited by the Engineering
Accreditation Commission or Engineering Technology Accreditation Commission of
the Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology, Inc., (EAC/ABET or
ETAC/ABET), and an evaluation of such programs and schools, following the
definition of the practice of engineering set forth in Section
471.005(7),
F.S. Acceptable curricula requirements and degree programs shall conform to the
criteria for accrediting engineering programs set forth by the Engineering
Accreditation Commission or Engineering Technology Accreditation Commission of
the Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology, Inc., (EAC/ABET or
ETAC/ABET) and found in the applicable Annual Report of EAC/ABET or
ETAC/ABET.
(2) A non-EAC/ABET or
ETAC/ABET accredited engineering program which seeks approval pursuant to
Section 471.013(1)(a),
F.S., shall submit the following to the Board:
(a) A completed application form "Request for
Evaluation" [FBPE/007 (11-07)] and "Self-Study Report" [FBPE/008 (1-08)] hereby
incorporated by reference (which may be obtained from the Board by writing to:
Executive Director, Florida Board of Professional Engineers, 2400 Mahan Drive,
Tallahassee, Florida 32308);
(b) A
current catalog and student and faculty handbook.
(3) The Board's survey and evaluation of an
engineering program shall consist of two elements:
(a) A review of the documents submitted by
the applicant. The purpose of the review is initially to determine if the
application is complete. The applicant will be notified if the application is
not complete. If the application is complete, the Board will begin the survey
and evaluation of the engineering program and will provide the documents to any
outside consultants which the Board may retain to survey and evaluate the
engineering program.
(b) A visit to
the engineering school, including visits to facilities at locations other than
the main campus, at the expense of the applying engineering program. This site
visit will encompass all elements of the standards for approval set forth in
this rule. A site visit is an essential requirement in the review of an
engineering program seeking certification, without which no approval may be
granted by the Board.
(4)
The Meaning of Approval.
(a) Purpose.
1. Approval of an engineering program is the
responsibility of the Board and is based on standards established by the Board.
The same standards as are applied in the accreditation of engineering programs
by EAC/ABET or ETAC/ABET will be applied for approval of an engineering
program.
2. In practical terms a
graduate of an engineering program that has been certified by the State of
Florida will be eligible for the Fundamentals and Principles and Practice
examinations, or for licensure by endorsement.
3. Application for approval is entirely
voluntary on the part of the school.
(b) Standards.
1. To be approved, engineering programs must
meet the standards set forth by the Board in this rule as judged by the Board.
These standards are sometimes stated in a fashion that is not susceptible to
quantification or to precise definition because the nature of the evaluation is
qualitative in character and can be accomplished only by the exercise of
professional judgment by qualified persons.
2. In these standards, the words "must" and
"should" have been chosen with care. Use of the word "must" indicates that
Florida considers meeting the standard to be absolutely necessary if the
program is to be certified. Use of the word "should" indicates that Florida
considers an attribute to be highly desirable and makes a judgment as to
whether or not its absence may compromise substantial compliance with all of
the requirements for approval.
(5) Objectives.
(a) An essential objective of a program in
engineering education leading to a Bachelor's of Science in Engineering (BSE)
or Bachelor's of Science in Engineering Technology (BSET) degree must be to
meet the standards herein described for approval that its graduates will be
prepared to qualify for licensure, to provide competent engineering services
and to have the educational background necessary for lifelong learning. An
engineering program may establish additional objectives consistent with its
available resources. Objectives must be defined in writing and made known to
faculty and students. While recognizing the existence and appropriateness of
diverse institutional missions and educational objectives, the Board subscribes
to the proposition that local circumstances do not justify approval of a
program that fails to meet the standards as set forth in this rule.
(b) Approval is granted on the basis of
evidence of an appropriate balance between the size of the enrollment in each
class and the total resources of the program, including the faculty, physical
facilities, curricular time and methods of instruction, and the budget. If
there is to be substantial change in any of the above functions, the Board must
be notified in writing so that reevaluation may be
instituted.
(6)
Governance.
(a) Preferably an engineering
school should be a component of a university that has other graduate and
professional degree granting programs. The environment of a university fosters
intellectual challenge, the spirit of inquiry, the seeking of new knowledge and
the habit of lifelong learning.
(b)
The engineering school must be accredited by an accrediting organization
recognized by the U.S. Department of Education.
(7) Administration.
(a) General.
1. Administrative officers and members of an
engineering school faculty must be appointed by, or on the authority of, the
governing body of the engineering school.
2. If the engineering school is part of a
university, the dean must have ready access to the university chief executive
officer and to such other university officials as may be necessary to fulfill
the dean's responsibilities. If the engineering school is not part of a
university, the dean must have ready access to the chief officer of the
governing body.
3. The dean must be
qualified by education and experience to provide leadership in engineering
education, in scholarly activity and research, and in the practice of
professional engineering. The dean should have the assistance of such
professional associates and staff as are necessary for administration of
admissions, student affairs, academic affairs, business affairs, physical
facilities and other activities normally associated with the office of the
dean.
4. The manner in which the
engineering school is organized, including the responsibilities and privileges
of administrative officers, faculty, students and committees must be formally
set forth in writing. It is through committee structure and function that
faculty and at times students and others become involved in decisions
concerning admissions, promotions, curriculum, library, research, etc. The
number and composition of committees may vary among engineering
programs.
5. A budget, showing
available revenue sources and expenditures must be prepared for the engineering
school at regular and specified periods. To facilitate effective planning, each
engineering program should know in advance a reasonable estimate of its
available operating resources.
(b) Geographically Separated Campuses.
1. If components of the program are conducted
at sites geographically separated from the main campus of the engineering
school, the administration of the engineering school must be fully responsible
for the conduct, and maintenance of the quality of the educational experiences
offered at these sites and for identification of the faculty at all sites. In
order to ensure that all educational components of the school's program are
equivalent in quality, the principal academic officer of each geographically
separated site must be administratively responsible to the chief academic
officer of the engineering school conducting the certified program. Similarly,
the faculty in each discipline, in all sites, must be functionally integrated
by administrative mechanisms that ensure comparable quality of the
geographically separated segments of the program.
2. A large number of program sites or a
significant distance between sites may require extra academic and
administrative controls in order to maintain the quality of the entire
program.
(c) Design and
Management.
1. The program's faculty must be
responsible for the design, implementation, and evaluation of the educational
program. A faculty committee should undertake this responsibility with full
support of the chief academic officer and staff. The curriculum of the program
leading to the professional engineering or engineering technology degree must
be designed to provide a general professional education, recognizing that, this
alone, is insufficient to prepare a graduate for independent, unsupervised
practice throughout a professional lifetime.
2. The committee responsible for curriculum
should give careful attention to the impact on students of the amount of work
required. The committee should monitor the content provided in each discipline
in order that objectives for education of an engineer are achieved without
attempting to present the complete, detailed, systematic body of knowledge in
that discipline. The objectives, content, and methods of teaching and learning
utilized for each segment of the curriculum, as well as for the entire
curriculum, should be subjected to periodic evaluation. Undue repetition and
serious omissions and deficiencies in the curriculum identified by these
evaluations should be corrected. Review and necessary revision of the
curriculum is an ongoing faculty responsibility.
(d) Content.
1. The engineering faculty is responsible for
devising a curriculum that permits the student to learn the fundamental
principles of engineering, to acquire skills of critical judgment based on
evidence and experience, and to develop an ability to use principles and skills
wisely in solving engineering problems. In addition, the curriculum must be
designed so that students acquire an understanding of the scientific concepts
underlying engineering. In designing the curriculum, the faculty must introduce
current advances in the basic engineering sciences.
2. The curriculum cannot be all-encompassing.
However, it must include the sciences basic to engineering and ethical,
behavioral, and socioeconomic subjects pertinent to engineering. There should
be presentation of material on engineering ethics and human values. The faculty
should foster in students the ability to learn through self-directed,
independent study throughout their professional lives.
3. The required subjects which must be
offered are probability and statistics, differential calculus, integral
calculus, and differential equations; general chemistry and calculus-based
general physics, with at least a two semester (or equivalent) sequence of study
in either area. Additional courses may include linear algebra, numerical
analysis, and advanced calculus, life sciences (biology), earth sciences
(geology), and advanced chemistry or physics.
4. The curriculum should provide grounding in
the body of knowledge represented in the disciplines that support the
fundamentals of engineering practice, such as, mechanics, thermodynamics,
electrical and electronic circuits, and materials science. Courses in
engineering design stress the establishment of objectives and criteria,
synthesis, analysis, construction, testing, and evaluation. In order to promote
breadth, at least one engineering course outside the major disciplinary area is
required.
5. The faculty committee
responsible for curriculum should develop, and the chief academic officer
should enforce, the same rigorous standards for the content of each year of the
program leading to the BSE or BSET. The final year should complement and
supplement the curriculum of the individual student so that each student will
acquire appropriate competence in general engineering care regardless of
subsequent career specialty.
6. The
curriculum should include elective courses designed to supplement the required
courses and to provide opportunities for students to pursue individual
scholarly interests. Faculty advisors must be available to guide students in
the choice of elective courses. If students are permitted to take electives at
other institutions, there should be a system centralized in the dean's office
to screen the student's proposed extramural program prior to approval and to
ensure the return of a performance appraisal by the host program. Another
system, devised and implemented by the dean, should verify the credentials of
students from other schools wishing to take courses at the school, approve
assignments, maintain a complete roster of visiting students, and provide
evaluations to the parent schools.
(e) Evaluation of Student Performance.
1. The faculty must establish principles and
methods for the evaluation of student performance and make decisions regarding
promotion and graduation. The varied measures utilized should determine whether
or not students have attained the school's standards of performance.
2. The faculty of each discipline should set
the standards for performance by students in the study of that discipline. The
faculty should review the frequency of examinations and their scheduling,
particularly when the students are enrolled in several subjects simultaneously.
Schools should develop a system of evaluation that fosters self-initiated
learning by students rather than frequent tests which condition students to
memorize details for short-term retention only. Examinations should measure
cognitive learning, mastery of basic engineering skills, and the ability to use
data in realistic problem solving. If geographically separated campuses are
operated, a single standard for promotion and graduation of students should be
applied.
3. The engineering school
must publicize to all faculty members and students its standards and procedures
for the evaluation, advancement, and graduation of its students and for
disciplinary action. The school should develop and publish a fair and
relatively formal process for the faculty or administration to follow when
taking any action that adversely affects the status of a student.
4. The institutions must maintain adequate
records. These records should include summaries of admission credentials,
attendance, measurement of the performance and promotion of the student, and
the degree to which requirements of the curriculum have been met. Evaluation of
each student in each course should be part of the record.
5. Academic Counseling. The chief academic
officer and the directors of all courses must design and implement a system of
evaluation of the work of each student during progression through each course.
Each student should be evaluated early enough during a unit of study to allow
time for remediation. Course directors and faculty assigned to advise students
should consider this duty a primary responsibility. All course directors or
departmental heads, or their designates, should serve as expert consultants to
the chief academic officer for facilitation of performance of both students and
faculty.
(8)
Resources for the Educational Program.
(a)
Finances. The cost of conducting a certified educational program leading to the
BSE or BSET must be supported by sufficient financial resources. Dependence
upon tuition must not cause schools to seek enrollment of more students than
their total resources can accommodate and provide with a sound education
experience.
(b) Faculty.
1. Members of the faculty must have the
capability and continued commitment to be effective teachers. Effective
teaching requires knowledge of the discipline, and an understanding of
pedagogy, including construction of a curriculum consistent with learning
objectives, subject to internal and external formal evaluation. The
administration and the faculty should have knowledge of methods for measurement
of student performance in accordance with stated educational objectives and
national norms.
2. Persons
appointed to faculty positions must have demonstrated achievements within their
disciplines commensurate with their faculty rank. It is expected that faculty
members will have a commitment to continuing scholarly productivity, thereby
contributing to the educational environment of the engineering
school.
3. In each of the major
disciplines basic to engineering sciences, a sufficient number of faculty
members must be appointed who possess, in addition to a comprehensive knowledge
of their major disciplines, expertise in one or more subdivisions or
specialties within each of these disciplines.
4. In addition, engineers practicing in the
community can make a significant contribution to the educational program of the
engineering school, subject to individual expertise, commitment to engineering
education, and availability. Practicing engineers appointed to the faculty,
either on a part-time basis or as volunteers, should be effective teachers,
serve as role models for students, and provide insight into contemporary
engineering methods.
5. There must
be clear written policies for the appointment, renewal of appointment,
promotion, retention and dismissal of members of the faculty. The appointment
process must involve the faculty, the appropriate departmental heads and the
dean. Each appointee should receive a clear definition of the terms of
appointment, responsibilities, line of communication, privileges and
benefits.
6. The education of
engineering students requires an academic environment that provides close
interaction among the faculty members so that those skilled in teaching and
research in the basic sciences can maintain awareness of the relevance of their
disciplines to engineering problems.
7. The dean and a committee of the faculty
must determine engineering school policies. This committee typically consists
of the heads of major departments, but may be organized in any manner that
brings reasonable and appropriate faculty influence into the governance and
policymaking processes of the school. The full faculty should meet often enough
to provide an opportunity for all to discuss, establish, or otherwise become
acquainted with engineering school policies and practices.
(c) Library.
1. The engineering school library should be a
major component of the school's program of teaching and learning. Attitudes of
lifelong learning can only be instilled by instruction in the production,
storage and retrieval of new knowledge. Use and importance of the library can
be imparted to students by example of faculty.
2. The engineering students and faculty must
have ready access to a well-maintained and catalogued library, sufficient in
size and breadth to support the educational programs offered by the
institution. The library should receive the leading national and international
engineering periodicals, the current numbers of which should be readily
accessible. The library and any other learning resources should be equipped to
allow students to learn new methods of retrieving and managing information, as
well as to use self-instructional materials. A professional library staff
should supervise the library and provide instruction in its use.
3. If the library serving the engineering
school is part of a university library system, the professional library staff
must be responsive to the needs of the engineering school, the faculty,
resident staff and students who may require extended access to a journal and
reference book collection, some of which may be virtual. The librarian should
be familiar with the methods for maintaining relationships between the library
and national library systems and resources, and with the current technology
available to provide services in non-print materials. If the faculty and
students served by the library are dispersed, the utilization of departmental
and branch libraries should be facilitated by the librarian and by the
administration and faculty of the school.
(9) Site Visit.
(a) The site visit team shall consist of the
Educational Advisory Committee and individual(s) designated by the Board who
are or have been engineering educators and practitioners experienced in
engineering program evaluation. The applicant must assist the Board in making
all necessary arrangements for the site visit, including the opportunity to
meet trustees, owners or their representatives, administrators, faculty,
students, and any others connected with the program.
(b) Following the site visit, the Educational
Advisory Committee will report its findings to the Board.
(10) Board Approval.
(a) Upon receipt of a report from the
Educational Advisory Committee, the Board will notify the applicant of its
intent to grant or deny approval. Approval must be denied if deficiencies found
are of such magnitude as to prevent the students in the school from receiving
an educational base suitable for the practice of engineering.
(b) If the Board gives notice of its intent
to deny the application for approval, the notice shall include a specific list
of deficiencies and what the Board will require for compliance. The Board shall
permit the applicant, on request, to demonstrate by satisfactory evidence,
within 90 days, that it has remedied the deficiencies specified by the
Board.
(c) If the Board gives
notice of its intent to approve the application, it shall specify which type it
intends to grant: provisional or full approval.
(d) Provisional approval may be granted where
deficiencies exist but are not of such magnitude to warrant denial entirely.
The Board shall determine the period of provisional approval, not to exceed
three (3) years, based on the nature of the deficiencies found, and an estimate
of the reasonable period of time which may be necessary to remedy the
deficiencies. Failure to remedy the deficiencies within the time specified by
the Board may be grounds for denial of approval. The Board may, however, extend
the period within which deficiencies may be remedied, if there is good cause to
do so. A site visit may be required by the Board if it deems it necessary to
determine whether the deficiencies have been adequately remedied and whether
any other conditions may have changed during the period of provisional
approval.
(e) Full approval will be
granted to an engineering school which is in substantial compliance with all of
the standards set forth in this rule. The school shall submit to the Board
evidence of continued compliance annually.
(f) Periodic surveys and evaluations of all
approved schools shall be made at least every four (4) years.
(g) Renewal applications will be evaluated on
the basis of standards existing at the time renewal is acted upon by the Board.
A site visit may be required as an element of the
evaluation.
Notes
Rulemaking Authority 471.013(1)(a)3. FS. Law Implemented 471.013(1)(a)3., 471.005(6) FS.
New 8-18-87, Formerly 21H-20.006, Amended 12-26-94, 4-10-08, 12-29-19.
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