Engineering education in Europe and the U.S.A., 1750–1930: The rise to dominance of school culture and the engineering professions [Book Review]

Annals of Science 47 (1):33-75 (1990)
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Abstract

Summary The rise to dominance of school culture in engineering education took place much later in England and the U.S.A. than in France or Germany. Why? This comparative essay argues that explanations are to be sought within the context of bureaucracy rather than in that of industrialization. The academic training of state engineers set a powerful role model in Continental Europe but was absent in Anglo-America. Consequently, the academic training of engineers for the private sector of the economy started earlier in Continental Europe, and the professional strategies of the engineers included emulating the public service. During the late nineteenth century a general belief in education as a key to international competition joined forces with a thorough transformation of the economy in providing new job markets for engineers graduating from colleges and universities

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