UCSC CE and EE Departments' fulfillment of ABET Outcome H
Engineering programs must demonstrate that their graduates have the broad education necessary to understand the impact of engineering solutions in a global, economic, environmental, and societal context
These courses help fullfill this ABET outcome:
- CE80e via Core Topics 2, 6, and 7
- CE118 via Core Topics 5, 8, and 9, and Core Lab 1 and 5.
- EE80t via Skills 7 through 9 and Core topics 1 through 8
In the following section, representatives from each department talk about how their students fulfill this component, how it is monitored, and what the feedback loops are.
- The CE department on monitoring and feedback
- The initial take (as written by Richard Hughey)
This outcome is fulfilled largely by the graduation requirements including the general education requirements at UCSC, a school with a tradition of politically-aware liberal arts education.Each student is required to fulfill American History and Institutions requirements, take topical courses from three different majors that explain how the major impacts society, take two different introduction to social sciences courses, two different introductions to the natural sciences courses, and two different introductions to the humanities coruses. They must also take a course that centers on Ethnic studies or Third-World relations and an Art course.
The CE department doesn't measure this outcome directly. In addition to campus general education requirements, the CE program requires an ethics course (either CE80e or another approved ethics course). Students must earn grades of C or better to receive credit for campus general education requirements. We depend on UCSC as a whole to evaluate this outcome. For long-term feedback, there are several questions on the alumni survey that address students' views of this issue at a distance.
- Final metric and feedback as determined by the Oversight committee
Our three metrics are:
- Subjective:WASC Accreditation: UCSC maintains WASC accreditation
- Quantitative:123B: 100% of the students consider the impact of their projects on society and the environment.
- Subjective:The exit survey results on Question 10: An average of 4 out of 5 must be maintained.
- The initial take (as written by Richard Hughey)
- The EE department's monitoring and feedback (as written by Holger Schmidt)
The EE department measures this outcome using questions both on the exit and alumni surveys that address this issue. In this way, we record students' reflections on their UCSC education at different stages of their careers and lives.



