Continuing Professional Education -The Answer To Technological Obsolescence

- Organization:
- Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
- Pages:
- 2
- File Size:
- 933 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1966
Abstract
"IN any opportunity such as I am now given, I suppose that one should not fail to say that what the world has to offer to this year's graduates in science and in engineering is the greatest promise ever held out. High-ranking new scientists and engineers -particularly those with the Ph.D. degree -find themselves in an apparently delightful situation; the glow of attention that surrounds them and the dazzling starting salaries that are offered to them may indeed be turning their heads a bit and the attitudes of some of them are sometimes expressed with a smugness that can find its equivalent only in freshmen. On the average, however, the new graduates are, without any doubt, the best trained ever, or at least they have been the most expensive to train in the universities.There appear to be exciting opportunities for competent, well-trained and educated scientists and engineers far beyond the numbers that can be annually produced, and the demands for excellence in depth as well as in breadth of training probably will continue to increase for many years to come. The problem is visible all around us in Canada that there is much more money to buy brains than there are brains to be bought."
Citation
APA:
(1966) Continuing Professional Education -The Answer To Technological ObsolescenceMLA: Continuing Professional Education -The Answer To Technological Obsolescence. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1966.