PDEng degree programme
A Professional Doctorate in Engineering programme is a
programme of advanced training which, whilst adhering to the university criteria
for the award of a doctorate, is designed to meet specific needs of a
professional group external to the university, and which develops the capability
of individuals to work within a professional context. It advocates a scientific
research based approach to solving problems, a systematic way of collecting
evidence and a critical, reflective and independent mind for the analysis and
interpretation of evidence.
A PDEng laureate (design engineer) has the competencies to create
technical solutions for products, processes, and systems based on functional
requirements as well as on business/market requirements, within the context of a
general societal character (attention for environment, safety, reuse, et
cetera). This is to be achieved by means of a methodological approach with the
following characteristics: (1) the goals formulated by industry should be
concretized in a measurable and verifiable specification, the so-called program
of demands or requirements, (2) a concept for the product, process, or system is
designed using and integrating, in principle, existing knowledge and techniques
from engineering sciences as well as from the disciplines associated with the
problem domain, (3) this concept is validated with respect to the requirements
and then concretized within a specific amount of time after negotiation with the
customer.
The goal of a PDEng programme is to add an additional dimension to a full M.Sc.
program by extending it and integrating it with new elements. A PDEng trainee
develops the competencies for synthesis and interdisciplinary work: that is, the
“can do” of technological design. The emphasis in these programs is on
developing and strengthening (exercising) the competencies necessary for finding
technological solutions in (1) designing products and constructions, (2)
designing processes for realizing these products, (3) designing systems for
transport of people, information, or goods; (4) designing (management) control
systems, as well for productions as for transport. For finding such solutions an
effective collaboration with representatives of different domains is inevitable
and this needs to be practiced during the training.
Aspects that need to be addressed in the training are (1) extending the scope of
the original studies by introducing elements from related technical disciplines,
(2) extending the scope by emphasizing technological design in a
multidisciplinary setting, (3) extending the scope by introducing elements from
management sciences, (4) extending the scope by integration of knowledge and
skills (competencies) from disciplines, different from the engineering sciences
and/or exact sciences. Next to broadening, in some complicated technical areas,
a deepening of knowledge will be necessary. In a training program it can be
necessary that applied scientific research is done to be able to acquire new
knowledge and to be able to integrate that knowledge in a design.
The Dutch Certification Committee for
Technological Design Programmes (CCTO)
is the official Dutch accreditation/certification authority for this kind of
programmes and it represents the Dutch employer's collective (Raad Centrale
Ondernemingsorganisaties, uniting
VNO-NCW,
MKB Nederland, and
LTO Nederland), the
Royal Institution of Engineers in the Netherlands (KIVI
NIRIA, which is a member of CLAIU and FEANI), and the three technical universities.
The main goal of the CCTO is to certify the technological design programs according to the
standing criteria. To do so, every five years, the CCTO empanels a review committee for
every program to advice the CCTO whether or not to renew its certification.
