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Some of America's university computer science programs have been devastated by off-shoring of IT work. Smart youngsters feared that software programming jobs would move off-shore or the wages would be depressed, and they chose other majors. The elite institutions, including Carnegie Mellon University, still attract plenty of computer science majors, but Pradeep Khosla, dean of CMU's college of engineering, isn't complacent. He aims to transform the undergraduate curriculum for all of the engineering disciplines.

Rather than just training engineers, he says, "I'm educating technical leaders who understand the process of enabling, managing, and deploying innovation." The idea is that CMU engineering grads won't be the ones who lose their jobs and careers to the globalization of work because they'll be managing the innovation process--from R&D, to product development, to sales and marketing.

Khosla thinks this is the right model for America, too. In the past, the United States has keep ahead of the game, economically speaking, by pioneering the newer industries and technologies even while surrendering older industries to lower-cost countries. In software, the United States need only give up the basic programming jobs. "Our 70,000 engineers should be managing their 700,000 engineers," he says.

http://www.businessweek.com/globalbiz/blog...response_t.html

Man is made by his belief. As he believes, so he is.

 

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