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ASME will be hosting a four-part conversation series from March 22-25, that will educate and equip mechanical engineers with workforce strategies. The series will bring together leaders and industry experts in education to explore which new skills will be taught to young engineers, what training mid-career engineers need in order to return to work as the pandemic subsides, and how much more can be done to confront the labor and skills gap in 2021 and beyond.
I was honored to be asked to participate in the first panel discussion along with distinguished faculty from MIT and the University of Colorado Boulder. I would encourage all of our customers involved in online teaching and learning to attend. More details on the panel discussion that features MathWorks response to COVID-19 are below:
The Evolution of Engineering Education Post-COVID-19 (March 22): The transition to remote learning was a shock for many universities and colleges across the country. Professors had to transform their in-person lecture into an engaging online class, and students had to take on more self-learning responsibilities. What impact will this change in teaching have on the future of education? This conversation will focus on the shift to online education at universities, the digital engineering skills students will need to learn, and how academia and industry can work together to prepare the young engineers entering the workforce.
The Evolution of Engineering Education Post-COVID-19 : https://app.webinar.net/vlOW9kK90wm?mcc=EDIT
Professor Martin Trauth has shared lots of teaching resources on his MATLAB Recipes for Earth Sciences site. Now with the changes created by COVID, he's shifting his courses to online, including at-home phone-based data collection. Read how he's doing this and find additional resources: Teaching Data Analysis with MATLAB in COVID-19 Times (Trauth, Potsdam)
I want to use the Image fusions and deep neural network to detect the Corona-virus (COVID-19)