Postwar Education for Mining Engineers - Basic Engineering Training Needed to Meet Problems of Management

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 2
- File Size:
- 219 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1946
Abstract
DURING the past 25 years, mining engineers have seen the development of a multitude of specialized engineering curricula in the mineral industry field. Bachelor degrees are now !ranted in the fields of mineral dressing petroleum engineering, geological engineering, fuel technology, and many others. These fields were all, previously considered to be part of a mining enginieer's work and elementary phases of them were included in mining engineering curricula. Their emergence has left some mining engineers with the fear that nothing will he left for a purely mining engineer to teach, or that mining engineering graduates will be unable to complete in any of these fields with the more specialized students and thus will have neatly restricted employment opportunies. A secondary reaction has been that if students who began to say that the pining engineering curriculum taught everything but mining, since so many of :he subjects that had always been udedAuded in the mining engineering curriculum now were fields in their own right.
Citation
APA:
(1946) Postwar Education for Mining Engineers - Basic Engineering Training Needed to Meet Problems of ManagementMLA: Postwar Education for Mining Engineers - Basic Engineering Training Needed to Meet Problems of Management. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1946.