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Reimagining how to train engineers

The new Global Engineering Program is a unique partnership between ۲ݮƵ and one of France’s top engineering schools. It takes elements from both the European and North American approaches to training engineers, and its graduates will be equipped to flourish in a variety of environments.

The new Global Engineering Program, a unique partnership between ۲ݮƵ’s Faculty of Engineering and France’s CentraleSupélec, has an ambitious aim – to reimagine what an undergraduate degree in engineering can look like.

Students in the four-year program will spend the first two years at CentraleSupélec, located 20 kilometres south of Paris in a region known as France’s Silicon Valley. The final two years of the program will take place at ۲ݮƵ. The overall goal is to combine the distinct strengths of the European approach to training engineers with the advantages of the North American model.

“This is an innovative undergraduate engineering program like no other in the country,” says Laurent Mydlarski, a professor of mechanical engineering at ۲ݮƵ and the program’s co-director. He says the Global Engineering Program “offers more breadth, in both scientific and non-technical matters” than conventional engineering degrees.

“This program has been developed from scratch, drawing on the strengths of two institutions,” says Mydlarski.

Laurent Mydlarski

CentraleSupélec, affiliated with the Université Paris-Saclay, is one of France’s top engineering schools (it was ranked second in the country by Le Figaro) and has strong ties with the businesses in its region. Like ۲ݮƵ, it has an international orientation – 26 per cent of its students come from outside France.

The Global Engineering Program, for its first two years, follows a French model, establishing a broad foundation with a focus on science courses – primarily math, physics, chemistry, biology and computer science. Students are also required to take non-science courses in areas such as economics, project management and ethics.

Following this, students come to Montreal for two years at ۲ݮƵ (the first cohort will arrive next fall), where they will specialize in one of nine engineering streams.

While many of the streams relate to existing ۲ݮƵ engineering programs – bioengineering, chemical, civil, electrical, materials, and mechanical engineering – there is also a data science stream along with entrepreneurial and breadth streams, the latter providing a general engineering education.

“Obviously there’s the international aspect, which makes it global. But another definition of ‘global’ is all-encompassing.”

- Professor Laurent Mydlarski, co-director of the Global Engineering Program

After four years of study, students graduate with degrees from both institutions, having completed a program that is more specialized than they would receive at CentraleSupélec, but more generalized than the typical ۲ݮƵ offering.

Mydlarski believes this balance reflects the experiences of a significant proportion of engineering graduates in Canada who might not need such highly specialized training, and who would benefit from exposure to a broader range of subjects.

According to Engineers Canada, only 38 per cent of graduates of engineering programs ever get professional licensure as engineers – and while not all engineering jobs require this license, the numbers indicate that many graduates take their engineering skills to successful careers in other areas.

“The basic understanding that an engineering education gives you in problem solving is a skill that goes well beyond engineering,” says Mydlarski.

Mydlarski says the program might also appeal to students who aren’t yet certain about what area of engineering they want to focus on.

“When you apply to engineering at ۲ݮƵ, you have to choose your specialization right away, at age 18,” he says. The Global Engineering Program offers students an opportunity to experience a variety of subject matter before deciding on a specialization.

Franck Richecoeur is the dean of undergraduate and graduate studies at CentraleSupélec and the co-director of the Global Engineering Program.

“We wanted to create a bachelor’s program that was different,” Richecoeur says. “In France, we know how to train generalist engineers, not specialized engineers. We wanted to have international cohorts and train students within an international environment.”

While the program is based in France and Montreal, the language of instruction for all courses is in English – a request from CentraleSupélec, which wanted to maximize the program’s appeal to international students.

Still, students in the program are encouraged to make the most of the fact that they’ll be spending their time in two French-speaking cities – especially since they are expected to be able to speak at least two languages once they graduate (language courses are also a required part of the program). The hope is that the students who emerge from the program will be equipped to work in a wide variety of milieus.

Mydlarski estimates that about a third of the program’s students will come from Canada, a third from France, and the remainder will arrive from other countries.

He says the name of the Global Engineering Program has a double meaning. “Obviously there’s the international aspect, which makes it global,” says Mydlarski. “But another definition of ‘global’ is all-encompassing.”

Students in the program will participate in three internships in addition to their studies. The initial one, between their first and second year courses, focuses on understanding the impacts that engineers can have on society, beyond strictly technological matters.

The second and third internships form a pair, both being spent with the same company; the “professional discovery” internship follows the second year and enables students to get to know a company, while the third – the “global project” internship – takes place the following summer and sees students working on a defined project with expected deliverables.

As befits a global engineering program, the companies participating in the internships can be located anywhere in the world.


This article was originally posted in .

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