TY - JOUR
T1 - Challenges and opportunities for education in irrigation engineering
AU - Porter, D. O.
AU - Irmak, S.
AU - Lamm, F.
AU - Marek, T. H.
AU - Rein, B.
N1 - Funding Information:
Integral to university degree programs, especially at graduate (MS and PhD) levels, are vital research programs. These are foundational to students’ academic development and to faculty professional development and academic career success, as well as advancing the knowledge and technology developments in the field. Research programs generally are externally funded, meaning that faculty invest significant effort toward generating funds from highly competitive grant funding sources and opportunities. Industry support for such research efforts has often been limited and sporadic. Successful programs have been able to compete well, as they effectively engage in integrated research and extension projects and collaborate effectively with multi-state, multi-agency, multi-disciplinary teams. Sometimes these efforts are viewed by industry, extension clientele, and even university students as distractions from extension and teaching responsibilities. There is opportunity to improve communication of the value and relevance of research and of integrated research, extension, and teaching programs.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 American Society of Agricultural and Biological Engineers. All rights reserved.
PY - 2020
Y1 - 2020
N2 - Irrigation continues to be economically important in the U.S. and internationally, yet there is concern about future accessibility to appropriate expertise and the engineering preparation of irrigation professionals for both public and private sectors. Recent and impending retirements of academic and industry leaders, losses of some important academic programs (curricula/degree programs, research, and extension) in irrigation engineering, and reduced numbers of students threaten to significantly limit irrigation engineering capacity, especially in agricultural irrigation. Some of the challenges can be met through opportunities afforded by development of distance education programs; expansion of multi-state, multiagency, multi-university collaborations; and increasing public-private partnerships, as well as through vigorous recruitment efforts. Recruitment can be strengthened by improving the competitiveness of salaries to be commensurate with other engineering disciplines, and by demonstrating and better explaining the abilities of the irrigation engineering profession to meet future challenges related to food, fiber, fuel, and ecosystem demands of a rapidly growing global population. While access to irrigation engineering expertise, especially domestic expertise, has declined, the need for such technical support and information for practitioners has not decreased. In fact, in many cases, technical advancements from public and industry developments have greatly outpaced the capacity for applied research and extension programs to robustly evaluate technologies and deliver objective, science-based recommendations. Growing knowledge gaps and time lags have exacerbated restlessness among some audiences, increasing the opportunities for promotion of unsubstantiated claims for some products that remain unchallenged, and further confusing appropriate selection from a growing array of available technologies.
AB - Irrigation continues to be economically important in the U.S. and internationally, yet there is concern about future accessibility to appropriate expertise and the engineering preparation of irrigation professionals for both public and private sectors. Recent and impending retirements of academic and industry leaders, losses of some important academic programs (curricula/degree programs, research, and extension) in irrigation engineering, and reduced numbers of students threaten to significantly limit irrigation engineering capacity, especially in agricultural irrigation. Some of the challenges can be met through opportunities afforded by development of distance education programs; expansion of multi-state, multiagency, multi-university collaborations; and increasing public-private partnerships, as well as through vigorous recruitment efforts. Recruitment can be strengthened by improving the competitiveness of salaries to be commensurate with other engineering disciplines, and by demonstrating and better explaining the abilities of the irrigation engineering profession to meet future challenges related to food, fiber, fuel, and ecosystem demands of a rapidly growing global population. While access to irrigation engineering expertise, especially domestic expertise, has declined, the need for such technical support and information for practitioners has not decreased. In fact, in many cases, technical advancements from public and industry developments have greatly outpaced the capacity for applied research and extension programs to robustly evaluate technologies and deliver objective, science-based recommendations. Growing knowledge gaps and time lags have exacerbated restlessness among some audiences, increasing the opportunities for promotion of unsubstantiated claims for some products that remain unchallenged, and further confusing appropriate selection from a growing array of available technologies.
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U2 - 10.13031/TRANS.13943
DO - 10.13031/TRANS.13943
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85091861069
SN - 2151-0032
VL - 65
SP - 1289
EP - 1294
JO - Transactions of the ASABE
JF - Transactions of the ASABE
IS - 3
ER -