Engineering:Professional Doctorate in Engineering
The Engineering Doctorate (EngD previously Profesional Doctorate in Engineering or PDEng) is a Dutch degree awarded to graduates of a Technological Designer (engineering) program that develop their students' capabilities to work within a professional context. These programs focus on applied techniques and design, in their respective engineering fields. The technological EngD designer programs were initiated at the request of the Dutch high-tech industry. High-tech companies need professionals who can design and develop complex new products and processes and offer innovative solutions. All programs work closely together with high-tech industry, offering trainees the opportunity to participate in large-scale, interdisciplinary design projects. With this cooperation, EngD programs provide trainees a valuable network of contacts in industry. Each program covers a different technological field, for example managing complex architectural construction projects, designing mechanisms for user interfaces for consumer products or developing high-tech software systems for software-intensive systems. Participation in a program that awards the abbreviation EngD requires either a Master's degree in a related field[1] or an accredited B.Sc. degree (at least three years and 180 ECTS) in computer science (or a strongly related scientific or engineering discipline) combined with min. 5 years of relevant academic work experience.
PDEng degrees can be obtained at four technical Universities in the Netherlands, Delft University of Technology, Eindhoven University of Technology, University of Twente, and Wageningen University & Research. Between these universities interscholastic cooperation programs exist like the 4TU Federation and its Stan Ackermans Institute.[2]
The title PDEng is regarded as equivalent to the Engineering Doctorate (EngD), and as of 1 September 2022, the PDEng title in the Netherlands has been renamed to EngD.[3]
Accreditation
The three or two-year, full-time post-master programs all lead to a Professional Doctorate in Engineering (PDEng) degree. At the end the university confers a Doctoral level degree, a PDEng, upon the candidate. The programs are certified by the Dutch Certification Committee for Technological Design Programs (CCTO or Dutch: Nederlandse Certificatiecommissie voor Opleidingen tot Technologisch Ontwerper), which represents the interests of the organization of Netherlands Industry Entrepreneurs and Employers (VNO-NCW/MKB Netherlands) and the Royal Netherlands Society of Engineers (Dutch: Koninklijk Instituut Van Ingenieurs - KIVI).[4] The CCTO's main goal is to ensure that such degrees hold to the high standards established by both academia and industry. The committee reviews these degree programs every five years to ensure continued standards compliance.[5]
Although the PDEng and PhD are both recognised as postgraduate degrees, they are not the same. A PDEng is practically oriented and does not require a body of original academic research to graduate. [6]
History
The Professional Doctorate in Engineering (PDEng) name owes its existence to the adoption of the Bachelor/Master (Ba/Ma) degree system after the Bologna Process. While most Dutch universities adopted the Ba/Ma system in 2001, the PDEng was known as the official Master of Technical Design (MTD) degree until 2004. From that date the Executive Boards of TU/e, TUD and UT decided jointly to use PDEng.
Admission
Application is open to university graduates from the Netherlands and other countries. A trainee must hold at least a Master of Science degree or equivalent, preferably in the exact sciences. Besides, applicant must have an interest in designing solutions for complex technological problems. There can be an assessment and selection procedure before entering a program. The PDEng programs use strict selection criteria to ensure the required high quality. Excellent marks, motivation and a design-oriented attitude are vitally important. A trainee should also have an excellent command of the English language. The exact admission and selection procedures are different at the three locations. All applications are judged by the Selection Committee.[1]
EngD programs at each location
EngD programs at the Delft University of Technology
- Civil and Environmental Engineering (BPE)
- Bioprocess Engineering (BPE)
- Chemical Product Design (CPD)
- Process and Equipment Design (PED)
EngD programs at the Eindhoven University of Technology
- Automotive Systems Design (ASD)
- Clinical Informatics (CI)
- Data Science (DS)
- Design of Electrical Engineering Systems - Track Healthcare Systems Design (DEES - HSD)
- Design of Electrical Engineering Systems - Track Information and Communication Technology (DEES - ICT)
- Industrial Engineering (IE)
- Mechatronic Systems Design (MSD)
- Process and Product Design (PPD)
- Qualified Medical Engineer (QME)
- Smart Energy Buildings and Cities (SEB&C)
- Software Technology (ST)
- User System Interaction (USI)
EngD programs at the University of Twente
- Business & IT (BIT)
- Civil Engineering (CE)
- Energy & Process Technology (EPT)
- Maintenance (MT)
- Robotics (R)
EngD programs at the Wageningen University & Research
- Design for AgriFood and Ecological Systems
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Requirements and eligibility
- ↑ Stan Ackermans Institute home page
- ↑ "PDEng becomes EngD as of 1 September 2022" (in en). https://www.4tu.nl/sai/PDEng%20becomes%20EngD%20as%20of%201%20September%202022/.
- ↑ KIVI, Ned. Certificatiecom. voor Opleidingen tot Technologisch Ontwerper | "Home". Archived from the original on 2013-02-21. https://archive.today/20130221204351/http://afdelingen.kiviniria.net/ccto. Retrieved 2009-03-25.
- ↑ "PDEng degree program". http://tue.nl/en/university/departments/mathematics-and-computer-science/education/graduate-programs/pdeng-programs/software-technology/about-st/pdeng-degree-program/.
- ↑ Data science projects