|
|
|
|
|
by c4b3r42
4087 days ago
|
|
My position may be antiquated (I became engineer in 1995), but still valid. ABET accreditation requires that a person graduate from an accredited program and degree, the only degree that applies here is Software Engineer. http://www.abet.org/uploadedFiles/Accreditation/Accreditatio... How many programmers are Software Engineers? Not many from my perspective as a hiring developer.
So again I say Programmer != Engineer
PS For a program to be ABET the instructors must be Professional Engineers (Pass the PE Exam) go figure:
"The overall competence of the faculty may be judged by such factors as education, diversity of backgrounds, engineering experience, teaching effectiveness and experience, ability to communicate, enthusiasm for developing more effective programs, level of scholarship, participation in professional societies, and licensure as Professional Engineers. " |
|
> ABET accreditation requires that a person graduate from an accredited program and degree, the only degree that applies here is Software Engineer.
Wrong again. First off, there are 271 ABET-accredited Computer Science degree programs. Holders of those CS degrees are eligible to call themselves engineers by the IEEE's criteria as well as to sit a PE exam. Second, the subject of the degree is irrelevant. I have a a Bachelor's of Science in Electrical Engineering, but have been an electrical engineer, systems engineer, and software engineer at various points of my career. I do not have to stop using "engineer" just because I lose the "electrical". I can sit for any PE exam I wish.
> (You) For a program to be ABET the instructors must be Professional Engineers
> (ABET) The overall competence of the faculty may be judged by such factors as ... licensure as Professional Engineers
How did "may" turn into "must"? I wonder how my university has been pulling the wool over ABET's eyes for so long, since most of the engineering professors are not PEs. Hell, I don't think some of them have any industry experience at all.