Degrees
Ph.D., Aerospace Engineering, Purdue University, 1993.
M.S., Mathematics, Purdue University, 1992.
M.S., Aerospace Engineering, Virginia Tech, 1987.
Eng.Dipl., Mechanical Engineering, National Technical University, Athens, Greece, 1986.
Georgia Tech Experience
Professor, Aerospace Engineering, 2005-present.
Associate Professor, Aerospace Engineering, 1998-2005.
Other Professional Positions and Consulting Experience
Visiting Research Fellow, INRIA, Rocquencourt, France, Nov. 2000 and Sept 2002-June 2003.
Assistant Professor, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia, 1994-1998.
Post-Doctoral Fellow, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana , 1993-1994.
Research Assistant, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana, 1989-1993.
Teaching Assistant, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana, 1989-1991.
Research Associate, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, Virginia, 1989.
Software Engineer, Hellenic Air Force General Command, Athens, Greece, 1987-1988.
Graduate Assistant, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, Virginia, 1986-1987.
Engineer (IASTE exchange student), SYDKRAFT AB, Malmoe, Sweden, 1985.
Selected Patents and Invention Disclosures
“Control of Magnetic Bearing-Supported Rotors,” R. Bartlett, P. Tsiotras and P. Allaire,
U.S. Patent No. 6,267,876 B1, Date Issued: July 31, 2001.
“An Active Safety System Using an Interactive Driving Advisor (IDA),” J. Lu, J., Rupp, P. Tsiotras and E. Velenis, (Invention Disclosure).
“An Active Safety Systems Using Vehicle Posture Control for Mitigating Severe Accidents,” J. Lu, J. Rupp, P. Tsiotras and E. Velenis (Invention Disclosure).
“A Multi-resolution Path-planning Algorithm using Wavelet Decompositions,'' P. Tsiotras, D. Jung, and E. Bakolas (Invention Disclosure).
“A Vehicle Control System for Mitigating Intersection Crashes,'' J. Lu, P. Prasad, P. Tsiotras, and E. Velenis (Invention Disclosure).
Selected Publications: 2005-2008
Shen H. and Tsiotras, P., Peer-to-Peer Refueling for Circular Satellite Constellations, AIAA Journal of Guidance, Control, and Dynamics, Vol. 28, No. 6, pp. 1220-1230, 2005.
Tsiotras, P. and P.-A. Bliman, “An Exact Stability Analysis Test for Single-Parameter Polynomially-Dependent Linear Systems,” IEEE Transactions on Automatic Control, Vol. 51, No. 7, pp. 1161-1164, 2006.
Dutta, A., and Tsiotras, P., “Asynchronous Optimal Mixed P2P Satellite Refueling Strategies,” Journal of the Astronautical Sciences, Vol. 54, No. 3-4, pp. 543-565, 2006.
Yoon, H., and Tsiotras, P., “Spacecraft Line-of-Sight Control Using A Single-Gimbal Variable-Speed Control Moment Gyro,” AIAA Journal of Guidance, Control, and Dynamics, Vol. 29, No. 6, pp. 1295-1308, 2006.
Chaplais, F., Tsiotras, P. and Jung, D., “Redundant Wavelet Processing on the Half-Axis with Applications to Signal Denoising with Small Delays: Theory and Experiments,” International Journal on Adaptive Control and Signal Processing, Vol. 20, No. 9, pp. 447-474, 2006.
Velenis, E., and Tsiotras P., “Minimum-Time Travel for a Vehicle with Acceleration Limits: Theoretical Analysis and Receding Horizon Implementation,” Journal of Optimization Theory and Applications, (to appear).
Selected Presentations and Keynote Addresses: 2005-2008
“Asynchronous Optimal Mixed P2P Satellite Refueling Strategies,” Malcom D. Shuster Astronautics Symposium, Buffalo, New York, June 2005, (invited).
“An Auction Algorithm for Allocating Fuel in a Satellite Constellation Using Peer-to-Peer Refueling,” American Control Conference, Minneapolis, MN, June 14--16, 2006, pp. 4214-4219, (invited)
“Putting the Dynamics Back in Control: The IPACS Case,” Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, UCLA June 9, 2006.
“Nonlinear Control in Aerospace -IPACS Design: Theory and Experiments,” Department of Mechanical Engineering, The University of New Mexico, Mechanical Engineering Excellence Seminar Speaker Series, February 17, 2006.
“Multiresolution Hierarchical Path-Planning for Small UAVs,” European Control Conference, Kos, Greece, July 2-5, 2007 (invited).
“Putting the Dynamics Back in Control: The IPACS Design Case,” Dept. of Electrical, Computer and Systems Engineering, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, NY, October 22, 2007.
Professional Service and Development Activities: 2005-2008
American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Associate Fellow, 1989-present
Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers, Senior Member, 1990-present.
Society of Professional Engineers of Greece, Member, 1987-present.
13th IEEE Med. Conf. on Control and Automation, Int. Program Committee Member, 2004-2005
AIAA Journal of Guidance Control and Dynamic, Associate Editor, 1999-2007.
IEEE Control Systems Magazine, Associate Editor, 2003-present.
AIAA Guidance, Navigation and Control Technical Committee, Member, 2008-present
Institutional Service and Development Activities: 2005-2008
AE Space Systems Faculty Search Committee, Member, 2006-present
AE Flight Mechanics and Control Disciplinary Committee, Member, 1998-present
AE System Design and Optimization Disciplinary Committee, Affiliated Member, 2005-present
AE Periodic Peer Review Committee, Chairman, 2005-2006
AE Dutton/Ducoffe Endowed Chair Faculty Search Committee, Chairman, 2004-2005.
AE Five-Year Strategic Plan Committee, Member, 2005-2007.
AE FMC Ph.D. Qualifying Examination Committee, Member, 1998-present.
AE Graduate Program Committee, Member, 2003-present.
AE Laboratory Facilities Committee, Member, 2000-present.
Selected Honors and Awards
Associate Fellow, American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, 2002.
Tibetts Award for Outstanding Research, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, 1999.
Sigma Xi, President and Visitors' Award for Excellence in Research, 1996.
NSF CAREER Award, 1996.
Sigma Gamma Tau, 1994.
Phi Kappa Phi, 1993.
Tau Beta Pi, 1991.
Vitali V. Volovoi, Ph.D.
Assisntant Professor of Aerospace Engineering
Degrees
University Diploma, Mechanics and Mathematics, Moscow State University, 1988.
Ph.D., Aerospace Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, 1997.
Georgia Tech Experience
Post-Doctoral Fellow, Aerospace Engineering, 1997-2000.
Research Engineer II, Aerospace Engineering, 2000-2005.
Senior Research Engineer, Aerospace Engineering, 2005-2006.
Assistant Professor, Aerospace Engineering, 2006-present.
Other Professional Positions and Consulting Experience
Consulting, IBM Global Services, 2005-2006.
Consultant, NASA Engineering and Safety Center, 2005
Selected Publications:
Volovoi, V.V., Hodges, D.H., Berdichevsky V.L., and Sutyrin, V.G. “Dynamic Dispersion Curves for Non-Homogenous, Anisotropic Beams with Cross-Sections of Arbitrary Geometry,” Journal of Sound and Vibration 115(5): pp. 1101–1120, 1998.
Volovoi, V.V., Hodges, D.H., “Theory of Anisotropic Thin-Walled Beams,” Journal of Applied Mechanics 67(3): pp. 453–459, 2000.
Volovoi, V.V., Hodges, D.H., Cesnik, C.E.S. and Popescu, B. “Assessment of Beam Modeling Methods for Rotor Blade Applications,” Mathematical and Computer Modelling 33(10–11): pp. 1099–1112, 2001.
Volovoi, V.V., Hodges, D.H., “Single and Multi-Cell Composite Thin-Walled Beams,” AIAA Journal 40(5): pp. 960–965, 2002.
Yu, W., Hodges, D.H., and Volovoi, V.V., “Asymptotic Generalization of Reissner-Mindlin Theory: Accurate Three-dimensional Recovery for Composite Shells,” Computer Methods in Applied Mechanics and Engineering, 191: pp. 5087–5109, 2002.
Volovoi, V.V., “Modeling of System Reliability Using Petri Nets with Aging Tokens,” Reliability Engineering and System Safety, 84(2): pp. 149–161, 2004.
Zhao, Y., Volovoi, V. Waters, M.H. and Mavris, D.N., “A Sequential Approach for Gas Turbine Power Plant Preventive Maintenance Scheduling,” Journal of Engineering for Gas Turbine and Power, 128 (4): pp. 796–805, 2006.
Zhao, Y., Volovoi, V. Waters, M.H. and Mavris, D.N., “A Profit Based Approach for Gas Turbine Power Plant Outage Planning,” Journal of Engineering for Gas Turbine and Power, 1128 (4): pp. 806–814, 2006.
Lee, J., Choi, D.-H., Volovoi, V., and Mavris, D., "An Enhancement of Constraint Feasibility in BPN Based Approximate Optimization", Computer Methods in Applied Mechanics and Engineering, 196(17-20), pp. 2147–2160, 2007
Selected Presentations and Keynote Addresses:
Volovoi, V., Kavalieratos, G., Waters, M.H. and Mavris, D.N., “Modeling the Reliability of Distribution Power Systems Using Petri Nets” 11th IEEE International Conference on Harmonics and Quality of Power, Lake Placid, New York, 2004.
Volovoi, V., “System Reliability Modeling with Stochastic Petri Nets,” Tutorial, Reliability and Maintainability Symposium, Los Angeles, California, 2004.
Volovoi, V., “Stochastic Petri Nets Modeling using SPN@,” Reliability and Maintainability Symposium, Newport Beach, California, 2006.
Volovoi, V. “Dynamic Approaches to System Risk and Reliability,” Tutorial, Reliability and Maintainability Symposium, Las Vegas, Nevada, 2008.
Professional Service and Development Activities:
American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Senior Member, 2000-present.
American Society of Mechanical Engineering, Member, 2005-present
Selected Honors and Awards
NASA Group Achievement Award, 2005
ASME/SERAD Certificate of Merit Advisor of the Second Place Winners of Student Safety Design Award, 2007
.
Mitchell L. R. Walker, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Aerospace Engineering
Degrees
BSE, Aerospace Engineering, University of Michigan, 1999.
MSE, Aerospace Engineering, University of Michigan, 2000.
Ph.D., Aerospace Engineering, University of Michigan, 2005.
Georgia Tech Experience
Assistant Professor, Aerospace Engineering, 2005-Present.
Other Professional Positions and Consulting Experience
Consultant, ElectroDynamic Applications, Inc., Ann Arbor, Michigan, 2007-Present
Consultant, American Pacific In-Space Propulsion, Niagara Falls, New York, 2006-Present
NASA Summer Faculty Research Fellow, Cleveland, Ohio, 2005
Graduate Research Assistant, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 2001-2005.
Selected Patents and Invention Disclosures
“High-Current Cathode for MPD Thrusters,” Walker, M. L. R., Invention Disclosure (GTRC ID 3461), July, 2005.
Selected Publications: 2005-2008
Walker, M. L. R., Gallimore, A. D., “Hall Thruster Cluster Operation with a Shared Cathode,” Journal of Propulsion and Power, Volume 23, Number 3, May 2007, pp. 528-536.
Yano, M., Walker, M. L. R., “Generalized Theory of Annularly-Bounded Helicon Waves,” Physics of Plasmas, Volume 14, Number 3, March 2007, pp. 033510 1-7.
Walker, M. L. R., Gallimore, A. D., “Performance Characteristics of a Cluster of 5-kW Laboratory Hall Thrusters,” Journal of Propulsion and Power, Volume 23, Number 1, January 2007, pp. 35-43.
Yano, M., Walker, M. L. R., “Plasma Ionization by Annularly-Bounded Helicon Waves,” Physics of Plasmas, Volume 13, Number 6, June 2006, pp. 063501 1-5.
Walker, M. L. R., Hofer, R. R., Gallimore, A. D., “Ion Collection in Hall Thruster Plumes,” Journal of Propulsion and Power, Volume 22, Number 1, Jan.-Feb. 2006, pp. 205-209.
Selected Presentations and Keynote Addresses: 2005-2008
Walker, M. L. R., “High Thrust-to-Power Hall Thrusters,” Virginia Tech, February 25, 2007 – Invited.
Palmer, D., Akinli, C., Walker, M. L. R., “Characterization of an Annular Helicon Plasma Source”, IEPC-2007-202, 30th International Electric Propulsion Conference, Florence, Italy, September 17-20, 2007.
Akinli, C., Palmer, D., Walker, M. L. R., “Comparison of the Theoretical and Experimental Performance of an Annular Helicon Plasma Source”, IEPC-2007-0236, 30th International Electric Propulsion Conference, Florence, Italy, September 17-20, 2007.
Yano, M., Williams, L., Walker, M. L. R. “Design and Operation of an Annular Helicon Plasma Source”, AIAA-2007-5309, 43rd Joint Propulsion Conference, Cincinnati, OH, July 8-11, 2007.
Palmer, D., Yano, M., Beal, B., Walker, M. L. R., “Characterization of Annular and Cylindrical Helicon Sources,” 9th International Workshop on the Interrelationship between Plasma Experiments in Laboratory and Space, Cairns, Australia, August 5-8, 2007.
Sharma, J., Walker, M. L. R., “START: Utilizing Near-Earth Asteroids with Tether Technologies,” NASA Institute of Advanced Concepts, Atlanta, GA, March 7, 2007.
Gilland, J. H., Walker, M. L. R., Pencil, E. J., "Thrust Stand for Applied Field MPD Thrusters", IEPC-2005-215, 29th International Electric Propulsion Conference, Princeton, NJ, Oct. 31-Nov. 4, 2005.
Professional Service and Development Activities: 2005-2008
Member, American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, (Electric Propulsion Technical Committee)
Member, American Society for Engineering Education
Member, Electric Rocket Propulsion Society
Reviewer for: Journal of Propulsion and Power, Journal of Spacecraft and Rockets, Journal of Physics D-Applied Physics, Journal of Plasma Sources Science and Technology, Journal of Thermophysics and Heat Transfer, Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion, IEEE Transactions on Plasma Science, Review of Scientific Instruments, and 2008 AIAA Joint Propulsion Conference Abstracts
Institutional Service and Development Activities: 2002-2005
Member, UG Enrollment Enhancement Committee, School of Aerospace Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology
Member, Laboratory Facilities Committee, School of Aerospace Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology
Member, Propulsion and Combustion Committee, School of Aerospace Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology
Member, System Design & Optimization Discipline Committee, School of Aerospace Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology
Member, Space Systems Search Committee, School of Aerospace Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology
Member, Chair Search Committee, School of Aerospace Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology
Selected Honors and Awards
Air Force Office of Scientific Research Young Investigator Program Award, 2006
NASA Summer Faculty Research Fellow, Glenn Research Center, 2005
Class of 1969 Teaching Fellow, 2005
Arnold M. Kuethe Aerospace Engineering Fellowship, 2004
Michigan Space Grant Consortium Graduate Fellowship, 2001, 2003
Rackham Merit Fellowship, University of Michigan (NSF sponsored), 2000
Consortium for Graduate Degrees for Minorities in Engineering (GEM) Fellowship, 1999
Aerospace Engineering Distinguished Achievement Award, University of Michigan, 1998
Ben T. Zinn
David S. Lewis, Jr., Chair of Aerospace Engineering and Regents’ Professor
Joint appointment – The George W. Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering
Degrees
B.S., Mechanical Engineering, New York University, 1961
M.S., Mechanical Engineering, Stanford University, 1962
M.A., Aerospace Engineering and M. Sci., Princeton University, 1963
Ph.D., Aerospace Engineering and M. Sci., Princeton University, 1965
Georgia Tech Experience
Assistant Professor, Aerospace Engineering, 1965-1967
Associate Professor, Aerospace Engineering, 1967-1970
Professor, Aerospace Engineering, 1970-1973
Regents’ Professor, Aerospace Engineering, 1973- Present
Other Professional Positions and Consulting Experience
Consultant, Lockheed Georgia Research Laboratories
Consultant, Naval Weapons Center, China Lake, California
Consultant, Westinghouse Electric Corporation, Orlando, FL
Consultant, Pratt & Whitney, West Palm Beach, FL
Selected Patents and Invention Disclosures (partial list)
United States Patent No. 6,732,515, “Traveling Wave Thermo Acoustic Engine with Internal Combustion”, June 11, 2004, co-inventor Nathan Weiland.
United States Patent No. 6,868,673 B2, "Traveling-Wave Thermoacoustic Engines with Internal Combustion and Associated Methods," co-inventor Nate Weiland, et. al, Atlanta, GA., March 20, 2005.
United States Patent No. 7,089,746, “System & Method for Detection of Blow- Out Precourses in Combustors”, August 15, 2006, co-inventors Y. Neumeier, T. Lieuwen, J. Seitzman, J. Jagoda, S. Nair, R. Rajaram, M. Thumurulu, D. Scarborough, T. O’Connell.
United States Patent No. 7,168,949, “Stagnation Point Reverse Flow Combustor for a Combustion System”, January 30, 2007 co-inventors Jeff Jagoda, Jerry Seitzman, Yedidia Neumeier, Ben Ami-Hashmonay, Atlanta, GA.
Selected Publications: 2003-2008 (partial list)
“Modeling of Finite Amplitude Acoustic Waves in Closed Cavities Using the Galerkin Method,” co-authored with Erickson, R., Journal Acoustical Society of America, 113 (4), Pt. 1 April, 2003
“Open Cycle Traveling Wave Thermoacoustics: Mean Temperature Difference at the Regenerator Interface,” co-authored with N.T. Weiland, Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 114 (5), Nov. 2003
“Active Control of Lean Blowout for Turbine Engine Combustors,” co-authored with T.M. Muruganandam, S. Nair, D. Scarborough, Y. Neumeier, J. Jagoda, T. Lieuwen, and J. Seitzman, Journal of Propulsion and Power, Vol. 21, No. 5, September-October 2005
“Active Instability Control Effectiveness in a Liquid Fueled Combustor”, co-authored with A. Coker, Y. Neumeier, S. Menon and T. Lieuwen, Combustion Science and Technology, Vol. 178: pgs. 1251-1261, 2006
“Characteristics of Combustion Processes in a Stagnation Point Reverse Flow Combustor,” co-authored with M.K. Bobba, P. Gopalakrishnan and J. M. Seitzman, GT2006-91217 in Proceedings of the ASME/IGTI Turbo Expo May 2006, Barcelona, Spain, May 8-11, 2006
“Stagnation-Point Reverse-Flow Combustor Performance with Liquid Fuel Injection,” co-authored with J. Crane, Y. Neumeier, J. Jagoda and J. Seitzman, GT2006-912338 in Proceedings of the ASME/IGTI Turbo Expo 2006, Barcelona, Spain, May 8-11, 2006
“Fuel Injection Scheme for a Compact Afterburner without Flameholders”, co-authored with S. Birmaher, P. Zeller, P. Wirfalt and Y, Neumeier, ASME Turbo Expo 2007, Montreal, Canada, May 14-17, 2007
Selected Presentations and Keynote Addresses: 2003-2008
“Active Control of Lean Blowout for Turbine Engine Combustors”, co-authored by T. M. Muruganandam, S. Nair, D. Scarborough, Y. Neumeier, J. Jagoda, T. Lieuwen and J. Seitzman, 46th AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting and Exhibit, Reno, Nevada, January 7-10, 2008
“Measurements and Modeling of the Flow Field in an Ultra-Low Emissions Combustor”, coauthored with P. Gopalakrishnan, S. Undapalli, M. Bobba, V. Sankaran, S. Menon and J. Seitzman, 46th AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting and Exhibit, Reno, Nevada, January 7-10, 2008
“Stagnation Point Reverse Flow (SPRF) Combustor”, co-authored by Y. Neumeier, J. Seitzman, J. Jagoda, S. Menon and T. Lieuwen, Power-Gen , Orlando, FL, November 29, 2006
“Control of Instabilities in Liquid Fueled Combustor by Modification of the Reaction Zone Using Smart Fuel Injector,” AIAA Joint Propulsion Conference, Ft. Lauderdale, FL, July 11-14, 2004
Professional Service and Development Activities: 2003-2008
AIAA, Fellow,
ASME, Fellow, 1996-present
AIAA Editorial Board, AIAA book series on Progress in Aeronautics and Astronautics, Member since 2000.
Institutional Service and Development Activities: 2003-2008
Academic Advisory Council, School of Aerospace Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, Chair, 1997-1998.
Chair, Propulsion and Combustion Discipline Committee, School of Aerospace Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, 1997-1998.
Selected Honors and Awards
Georgia Tech’s Combustion Laboratory was named “The Ben T. Zinn Combustion Laboratory” on May 18, 2006.
Member, National Academy of Engineering, 1995.
Director of the NASA University Institute on Aero-propulsion and Power at Georgia Tech, Ohio State and Florida A&M, 2002-2007.
Holder of the honorary David S. Lewis, Jr. Chair, Georgia Institute of Technology. July 1, 1992Feb. 1995
Honorary Professor, Beijing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Beijing, People Republic of China.
Recipient of the Westinghouse Gold Medal Award, 2005.
Recipient of the 2005 IGTI (International Gas Turbine Institute) Scholar Award.
Recipient of the IGTI 2005 Aircraft Engine Technology Award.
Recipient of the AIAA Air Breathing Propulsion Award, 2003.
Recipient of the 2002 Alfred C. Egerton Gold Medal of the Combustion Institute.
Member of the National Research Council Committee on the Future of Air Force Propulsion, 2006.
Represented the US on the International Committee that determined the 2025 aircraft engines emissions goals, 2006.
Delivered the honorary Paul E. Hemke Lecture” at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, April, 2007.
Delivered the honorary Fowler lecturer at Texas A & M University, February, 2004.
Delivered the honorary “Lichtenstein Lecture,” at Ohio State University, January 2006.
Delivered the Plenary Lecture at the Annual Symposium of the Israeli Section of the Combustion Institute, Technion, Haifa, Israel, December, 2005.
APPENDIX C – LABORATORY EQUIPMENT
Under construction
APPENDIX D – INSTITUTIONAL SUMMARY
The institution may employ any means it chooses to represent itself to ABET and the visiting team. Consequently, the references to specific tables in the following are for guidance only. The information may be presented in any manner the institution chooses.
The Institution
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Type of Control
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History of Institution
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Student Body
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Regional or Institutional Accreditation
<institution is currently accredited and the dates of initial and most recent accreditation evaluations>>
Personnel and Policies
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The promotion and tenure system
The process used to determine faculty salaries
Faculty benefits>>
Educational Unit
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Credit Unit
<Further, in cases where the Criteria specify curricular content in terms of years, the credit equivalent of one year is determined by dividing the number of credits required for graduation by the nominal length of the program in years. For example, if a four-year bachelor’s program requires 130 credit hours for graduation, then 130/4 = 32.5 is the number of credit hours equivalent to one year>>
Instructional Modes
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Grade-Point Average
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Academic Supporting Units
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Non-Academic Supporting Units
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Faculty Workload
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Tables
{{The tables that follow are simply a guide and are not required in the Self-Study Report. All are optional. The institution is encouraged to employ any means it chooses to represent itself to ABET and the visiting evaluation team.}}
Table D-1. Programs Offered by the Educational Unit
Program Title1
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Modes Offered2
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Nominal
Years to
Complete
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Administrative
Head
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Administrative
Unit or Units
(e.g. Dept.)
Exercising
Budgetary
Control
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Submitted for Evaluation3
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Offered, Not
Submitted for
Evaluation4
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Day
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Cooperative Education
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Off
Campus
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Alternate Mode
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Now
Accredited.
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Not Now
Accredited
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Now
Accredited
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Not Now
Accredited
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List the titles of all degrees offered by the educational unit responsible for the programs being evaluated, undergraduate and graduate, granted by the institution. If there are differences in the degrees awarded for completion of cooperative education programs, these should be clearly indicated.
1 Give program title as shown on a graduate’s transcript
2 Indicate all modes in which the program is offered. If separate accreditation is requested for an alternative mode, list on a separate line. Describe “Other” by footnote.
3 Only those programs being submitted at this time for reaccredidation (now accredited) or initial accreditation (not now accredited) should be checked in this column.
4 Programs not submitted for evaluation at this time should be checked in this column.
Table D-2. Degrees Awarded and Transcript Designations by Educational Unit
Program Title1
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Modes Offered2
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Name of Degree Awarded3
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Designation on Transcript4
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Day
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Co-op
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Off Campus
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Alternative Mode
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Complete the table for all programs, as follows:
1 Give the program title as officially published in catalog.
2 Indicate all modes in which the program is offered. If separate accreditation is requested for an alternative mode, list on a separate line. Describe “Other” by footnote.
3 List degree awarded for each mode offered. If different degrees are awarded, list on separate lines.
4 Indicate how the program is listed on transcript for each mode offered. If different designations are used, list on separate lines.
Table D-3. Support Expenditures {{This table should be completed for the Educational Unit and for each program being evaluated}}
<>
Fiscal Year
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(previous year)1
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(current year)2
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(year of visit)3
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Expenditure Category
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Operations (not including staff)4
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Travel5
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Equipment6
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(a) Institutional Funds
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(b) Grants and Gifts7
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Graduate Teaching Assistants
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Part-time Assistance8
(other than teaching)
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Faculty Salaries
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Report Department Level and Program Level data for each program being evaluated. Updated tables are to be provided at the time of the visit.
1 Provide the statistics from the audited account for the fiscal year completed year prior to the current fiscal year.
2 This is your current fiscal year (when you will be preparing these statistics). Provide your preliminary estimate of annual expenditures, since your current fiscal year presumably is not over at this point.
3 Provide the budgeted amounts for your next fiscal year to cover the fall term when the ABET team will arrive on campus.
4 Categories of general operating expenses to be included here.
5 Institutionally sponsored, excluding special program grants.
6 Major equipment, excluding equipment primarily used for research. Note that the expenditures (a) and (b) under “Equipment” should total the expenditures for Equipment. If they don’t, please explain.
7 Including special (not part of institution’s annual appropriation) non-recurring equipment purchase programs.
8 Do not include graduate teaching and research assistant or permanent part-time personnel.
Table D-4. Personnel and Students {{This table should be completed for the Educational Unit and for each program being evaluated}}
<>
Year1: _________
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HEAD COUNT
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FTE2
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RATIO TO FACULTY3
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FT
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PT
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Administrative4
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Other Faculty (excluding student Assistants)
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Others5
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Undergraduate Student enrollment6
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Report data for the program unit(s) and for each program being evaluated.
1 Data on this table should be for the fall term immediately preceding the visit. Updated tables for the fall term when the ABET team is visiting are to be prepared and presented to the team when they arrive.
2 For student teaching assistants, 1 FTE equals 20 hours per week of work (or service). For undergraduate and graduate students, 1 FTE equals 15 semester credit-hours (or 24 quarter credit-hours) per term of institutional course work, meaning all courses — science, humanities and social sciences, etc. For faculty members, 1 FTE equals what your institution defines as a full-time load.
3 Divide FTE in each category by total FTE Faculty. Do not include administrative FTE.
4 Persons holding joint administrative/faculty positions or other combined assignments should be allocated to each category according to the fraction of the appointment assigned to that category.
5 Specify any other category considered appropriate, or leave blank.
6 Specify whether this includes freshman and/or sophomores.
Table D-5. Program Enrollment and Degree Data {{This table should be completed for the Educational Unit and for each program being evaluated}}
<>
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Academic Year
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Enrollment Year
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Total
Undergrad
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Total
Grad
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Degrees Conferred
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1st
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2nd
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3rd
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4th
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5th
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Bachelor
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Master
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Doctor
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Other
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CURRENT
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FT
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PT
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1
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FT
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PT
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2
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FT
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PT
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3
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FT
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PT
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4
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FT
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PT
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5
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FT
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PT
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Give official fall term enrollment figures (head count) for the current and preceding five academic years and undergraduate and graduate degrees conferred during each of those years. The "current" year means the academic year preceding the fall visit.
FT--full time
PT--part time
Table D-6. Faculty Salary Data1
{{This table should be completed for the Educational Unit and for each program being evaluated}}
<>
Academic Year ______
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Professor
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Associate Professor
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Assistant Professor
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Instructor
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Number
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High
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Mean
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Low
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1 If the program considers this information to be confidential, it can be provided only to the Team Chair.
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