Monday, February 22, 2010

Dr. Irving Engelson, IEEE Life Fellow: Candidate for IEEE Division I Director













Ph.D (EE) - Worcester Polytechnic Institute
MS - Rutgers Universtity
BS (EE), Magna Cum Laude - Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn



Links

“The opinions expressed on this website are the opinions of the author and not necessarily the opinions of the IEEE”




What they said about me - some quotes

Dr. Irving Engelson, Candidate for IEEE Division I Director
“The opinions expressed on this website are the opinions of the author and not necessarily the opinions of the IEEE”


(All quotes are available in writing if any one is challenged)

“Much of great value within the core of IEEE derives from your intellectual acumen, your visionary ideas, your capacity for getting things done, your dedication to excellence, and your love of engineering.”


Joseph Bordogna
(Past) Deputy Director, NSF
1998 IEEE President
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“You have the uncanny ability of getting the most and the best out of IEEE volunteers. You are able to recognize talent; you are able to identify critical IEEE needs;”


Jim Tien
Past SMCS President, and RPI Professor
(Now) Distinguished Professor and Dean
College of Engineering, University of Miami, FL

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“Your careful attention to detail and enthusiasm to meet milestones and attain targeted goals have proven to be qualities that led to great success within IEEE”


H. Troy Nagle
1994 IEEE President
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“You really are one of the brightest people I know with a heart to match! I am truly honored to be able to call you, ‘friend!’”


Charles K. Alexander
1997 IEEE President (NB – Irv Engelson was his formal Presidential Advisor)
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Why a Division Director?

Dr. Irving Engelson, Candidate for IEEE Division I Director
“The opinions expressed on this website are the opinions of the author and not necessarily the opinions of the IEEE”


There are 38 IEEE societies and 7 technical councils; each is headed by a President. All these Organizational Units (OUs) are grouped into ten (10) Technical Divisions (I-X), which elect a Director to represent them on the IEEE Board, and who has other responsibilities. Our Division-I has three societies:

1. Circuits and Systems
2. Electron Devices
3. Solid-State Circuits

The Division-I Director must be a member of at least one of the three societies. I am the only candidate who is a Fellow grade member of all three societies, and pledge to represent all our OUs without favor.

Division Director and Society President

By analogy, a society president is to a city mayor, as a division director is to a provincial governor. A Governor cannot promise that the city streets will be cleaned daily; this is the Mayor’s responsibility. Likewise, a Division-Director cannot promise improvements in a society's journal or conference; this is the President’s responsibility. Governors can help inter-city cooperation and to promote the cities of their provinces to the central government, for the benefit of their citizens. Likewise, as Director I will promote further cooperation of the divisional societies and be an advocate and goodwill Ambassador for all our members at corporate IEEE. Society specific promises by a Director are naïve.

Comments on the State of Division I

Dr. Irving Engelson, Candidate for IEEE Division I Director
“The opinions expressed on this website are the opinions of the author and not necessarily the opinions of the IEEE”


COMMENTS ON THE STATE OF DIVISION I

Irving Engelson, Ph.D., (Fellow of CASS, EDS, SSCS)

Membership and Finances
The loss of Division I Society members in recent years is part of a general trend, but still must be addressed. Many of our members have access to publications through their employers and no longer feel the need to join a society. This may suggests that except for publications we don’t provide sufficient services to attract new technical professionals, and particularly industry practitioners. Yet the Division I Societies and Technical Councils represent growing technical areas that should be especially attractive to young-career professionals, since society memberships may represent new employment opportunities for them. But equally important is to develop a strong community of scholarly-professionals. However, our past efforts to deal with these issues have met with mixed success.

At the same time, our societies and technical councils experience increasing IEEE infrastructure costs and other charges. Decreasing income trends and increasing costs create major pressures on our organizational units. IEEE’s income and expense distribution algorithms are increasingly complex, and often poorly understood. This inhibits sound financial and operational planning. As Division I Director I will promote operational simplifications and work with our divisional leaders on how best to ameliorate the current operational issues.

Knowing the Past – Building the Future
I believe it’s time to take a thorough look at past efforts to determine what has worked and what has not. The “lessons learned” should guide our future new initiatives and enable us to be more successful. I have some expertise in strategic planning, and have helped organizations in this area. As Division I Director, I will make myself available to our Divisional Societies and Councils to assist with strategic, tactical or operational planning.

The Society/Council specific offerings that we provide may not be well targeted at multidisciplinary professionals that can benefic from them. As Division Director I’ll try to promote collaborative activities within the Division that might synergistically benefit all our divisional S/Cs. We should try to determine what kinds of products and services the practitioner community would find attractive. I also believe that the interests of the practitioner community are often more multidisciplinary, and that better serving their multidisciplinary needs will help us to promote our collective visibility, and thus attract more members.

Providing Volunteer Opportunities for Members
Our Society/Council volunteers give greatly of their time and efforts. For many, their time on our AdComs and BoGs is a period of personal sacrifice. As Division I Director, I will try to slow the increasing time demands that our IEEE institutional policies place on our valuable volunteers, by reducing the micromanagement trends on their time that is imposed by IEEE and TAB. Furthermore, I will strive to produce a pleasant, enjoyable, and collegiate atmosphere within the Division - where issues of joint interest are addressed honestly, openly and cooperatively. We also must concentrate on developing our next generation of leaders, and provide them opportunities to acquire leadership skills that may be transferable to their places of employment. Service on an S/C AdCom or BoG can provide an opportunity to practice these skills in a non-threatening environment.

Serving Current and Future Members
Both the present and next generation of members will be living in a world vastly different from the past. The challenge going forward, if we are to remain the vibrant Division I societies and councils that we have been in the past, is to continue to be relevant by adapting to new realities, and by providing value to a membership body that communicates in new ways and looks at professional societies with a new mindset. Historically, the Societies’ role has been to facilitate technical interchange of information through its publications, conferences and meetings. This role must continue, but the means through which the interactions take place will need to continuously adapt to the rapid changes shaping our new information age. The quasi-independence of our S/Cs in this effort must be preserved, and as Division Director I will work to help preserve this condition, and also promote the value of belonging to the collegial organization.

I would like to help guide and shape our Division I so that it can remain the premier world-wide place for the promotion of our Fields of Interest. We need to be aware of and take advantage of new technologies to access information when it can add new value to our membership, and explore new ways to capture the interest of students brought up in the information era.

A Vision, Promise, and Hope
As Division I Director I will work closely with our AdCom and BoG members and leaders to learn from their experience, as well as share my own, with the goal of maintaining our relevance and vitality. I hope that you will find that my comments merit your support.

Biography and IEEE Experience

Dr. Irving Engelson, Candidate for IEEE Division I Director
“The opinions expressed on this website are the opinions of the author and not necessarily the opinions of the IEEE”


Dr. Irving Engelson is a Fellow of all three Division I societies: Circuits and Systems Society (CASS), Electron Devices Society (EDS), and Solid-States Circuits Society (SSCS). He received his BS (EE) Magna Cum Laude (Polytechnic Institute, Brooklyn), MS (Rutgers University), and Ph.D. (EE) (Worcester Polytechnic Institute). He specialized in nonlinear circuits, devices, and systems, and random signal theory. His research included statistical systems analysis and electron-device system development.

Irv has considerable management experience and is a past-president of the IEEE Engineering Management Society. He has served as a member on the IEEE Board of Directors and on all IEEE major boards, and some society AdComs, including several years as ex-officio member of the CASS BoG and the EDS AdCom. He chaired numerous IEEE Committees with distinction. His interest in the fields of these societies dates back to his research and teaching related to these subjects, and his experience with RCA – the Radio Corporation of America. He was elected as a full member of Sigma Xi – The Scientific Research Society. Irv was an NSF Faculty Research Fellow and did research at the Princeton Neuropsychiatric Institute where he studied the electrical activity of the brain, and how to utilize circuits and devices in cybernetics, and in neuro-psycho-pharmacology. He served as Chair of a society Fellows Committee, and as Distinguished Lecturer Coordinator. Irv conducted strategic planning for several IEEE societies. He was elected IEEE Parliamentarian, and is the only person to have formally served as IEEE Presidential Advisor. Irv has substantial IEEE governance experience. Previously he held senior executive leadership positions in industry (RCA) and academe, including Full Professor and Associate Dean of Engineering and Technology at the University of Nebraska at Lincoln (UNL) and concurrently as Dean and Director at the University of Nebraska at Omaha (UNO). He previously served as faculty member and Dean at Newark College of Engineering (NCE) – New Jersey Institute of Technology (NJIT), where he developed several new degree programs.

Irv has lectured on six continents; and has given testimony on international technology transfer to an US Congressional Committee, which was reported in the Congressional Record. He speaks seven languages and served as a linguist with the US Army; Affiliate to the United Nations Economic and Social Council; Member, State of New Jersey Higher Education Master Planning Committee; and Member, Omaha Nebraska Chamber of Commerce Free Enterprise Task Force. He held positions in IEEE, AAAS, ASEE, and served on the Eta Kappa Nu Board of Directors. Dr. Engelson was elected to several academic and scientific organizations and is the recipient of many recognitions, awards, and honors. His memberships include Eta Kappa Nu (HKN), Tau Beta Pi, Sigma Xi, and the New York Academy of Science. He is the second non-Russian to be named an Honorary Member of the Russia Popov Society which is the highest honor it can bestow. HKN honored him for "exemplary leadership,” IEEE-TAB for “innovative leadership,” and the IEEE Board of Directors for “management leadership.” He was awarded the IEEE Centennial and Millennium medals. The Engineering Management Society named him “Engineering Manager of the Year” and the Computer Society Board of Governors recognized him for “Grateful Service to IEEE Societies.” Engelson is also the recipient of the 2006 Systems, Man, and Cybernetics Society, Outstanding Contribution Award.

Employment History

Dr. Irving Engelson, Candidate for IEEE Division I Director
“The opinions expressed on this website are the opinions of the author and not necessarily the opinions of the IEEE”


Summary of Dr. Irving Engelson’s Major Employment History

(Does not include several junior engineering positions, and volunteer and non remunerative concurrent appointments)

8 years -- Radio Corporation of America

Various technical assignments and management positions at the Director’s level

5 Years -- Trenton Jr College, Trenton NJ

Associate Professor and EE Department Chair
• Developed the EE Curriculum and new Laboratory
• Received an NSF Grant and established a hybrid computational Laboratory
• Co-coordinator with colleague from Princeton University of a major joint College-University Grant from the National Humanities Foundation on a science-humanities project.

2 years – New Jersey Neuro-psychiatric Institute – Princeton, NJ

• Conducted research on brain electrical activity and cybernetics
• Designed and built ESAC – A solid-state Electro-encephalographic Statistical Analyzing Computer – which Engelson used to analyze the EEG under various natural, spontaneous and drug-induced states. These studies identified the differential criteria between spontaneous arousal and amphetamine arousal, and other significant findings. The Engelson findings were later taught at the NJ Medical School by the late professor Dr. Leonid Goldstein and others.

9 years – University teaching and administration

Newark College of Engineering/New Jersey Institute of Technology, also know as NCE-NJIT:

• Associate Professor of Electrical Engineering and Founding Dean of degree programs in its Division of Technology.
• Member of Institutional Name Change Committee from NCE to NJIT

University of Nebraska:

• University of Nebraska – Lincoln (UNL) Professor of Electrical Engineering and Associate Dean of the College of Engineering and Technology
• (Concurrent with above) Dean, College of Engineering and Technology University of Nebraska – Omaha (UNO). Managed all undergraduate and graduate programs and engineering faculties.

18 years – Institute of electrical and Electronics Engineers – IEEE

Staff Director for Technical Activities, and Managing Director for Corporate Activities

Engelson retired from IEEE in 1996. He was honored for his many achievements in his IEEE positions, and now continues making contributions in a volunteer capacity. He now heads Isinglee Associates, a consulting strategic planning activity for non-profit organizations. His services were used by both nonprofit and for profit clients.

International Experience

Dr. Irving Engelson, Candidate for IEEE Division I Director
“The opinions expressed on this website are the opinions of the author and not necessarily the opinions of the IEEE”


Irv Engelson has extensive international experience and cultural understanding.

• While with RCA he was involved in many international corporate activities.
• He speaks seven languages and was certified as a linguist in three by the US government.
• Served as a non-governmental Affiliate to the Economic and Social Council of the United Nations
• Testified to a US Congressional Committee on international technology transfer
• Lectured on all continents (except for Antarctica)
• Recent invited presentations at universities in: China, France, Korea, Russia and November 2010 in Australia.
• Visited many countries and is sensitive to the local and cultural needs of IEEE members. Following is a list of countries Irv visited over the years – some multiple times :

Argentina, Australia, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, Chile, China, Denmark, Egypt, France, Germany, Iceland, India, Israel, Italy, Jamaica, Japan, Jordan, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Mexico, Monaco, Netherlands, New Zealand, Paraguay, Poland, Portugal, Republic of Korea, Russian Federation, Singapore, Spain, Switzerland, Turkey (in Oct ’10), United Arab Emirates, United States of America, Uruguay