July/August
2001
THE
DWIGHT DAVID EISENHOWER TRANSPORTATION FELLOWSHIP PROGRAM: Preparing
for the Future of Transportation
by Ilene D. Payne, Leslie C. Porter, and
Lisa Crye
In the
last 50 years, the transportation field has been transformed by rapidly
advancing technology, broad organizational changes, and globalization.
Each of these developments has presented challenges that only a well-educated,
multidisciplinary work force can meet.
Continuing
education and training are crucial for current and future transportation
professionals, who will need to respond to an even more complex, dynamic
environment. The Dwight David Eisenhower Transportation Fellowship
Program (DDETFP) serves as a catalyst for research, training, technology
transfer, and enhancing the capabilities of professionals in industry
and academia.
 |
| Dr.
Oey of the University of Texas in Austin discusses a technical
issue with two DDETFP recipients at the annual meeting of
the Transportation Research Board (TRB) in January 2001. |
|
Initiated
in December 1991 by the Intermodal Surface Transportation Efficiency
Act (ISTEA), DDETFP became operational during the summer of 1992.
The Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century (TEA-21) reauthorized
the program through September 2003. DDETFP is administered by the
National Highway Institute, which is a part of the Federal Highway
Administration, for the U.S. Department of Transportation.
 |
| Dr.
Melissa S. Tooley, P.E., director of the Mack-Blackwell
Rural Transportation Center at the University of Arkansas,
talks with Dr. Ilene D. Payne, director of the Universities
and Grants Programs, at the TRB annual meeting in January
2001. When Dr. Tooley was a doctoral candidate, she was
also an Eisenhower Graduate Fellowship recipient. |
|
DDETFP
awards $2 million annually in six fellowship award categories to undergraduates,
graduate students, and selected faculty. In the last decade, about
2,000 fellowships, worth $20 million, have been awarded.
The six
award categories can be divided into two groups: "nationally competed
awards" and "campus-based awards." The nationally competed awards
include the Eisenhower Graduate Fellowships, the Eisenhower Grants
for Research Fellowships, and the Eisenhower Faculty Fellowships.
The campus-based awards provide students at minority institutions
of higher education (MIHE) - historically black colleges and universities
(HBCU), Hispanic-serving institutions (HSI), and tribal colleges (TC)
- with opportunities to enter careers in transportation, and these
awards can channel students into the nationally competed graduate,
research, and faculty fellowships.
Each
of these awards addresses the requirements of a rapidly changing transportation
field, emphasizing the interdisciplinary nature of modern transportation
and extending professional expertise beyond the traditional areas
of engineering and science.
Modern
professionals understand how their work affects communities and the
environment. They seek an interdisciplinary approach to transportation
research, and they develop the skills to communicate with all parties
in a project.
At the
same time, because of the emphasis on intermodalism - a comprehensive
transportation system that includes all modes of transportation in
efforts to meet increasingly complex social needs - the disciplines
related to transportation have greatly expanded. DDETFP makes awards
in nearly 70 areas of study - from airway science and logistics to
public policy analysis and urban technological planning. Consequently,
all of the "modal" administrations within the U.S. Department of Transportation
(DOT) - including the Federal Highway Administration, the Federal
Motor Carrier Safety Administration, the Federal Transit Administration,
the Maritime Administration, the Federal Railroad Administration,
and the Federal Aviation Administration - and the Bureau of Transportation
Statistics have participated in DDETFP.
| Eisenhower
Transportation Fellowship Program Award Categories |
|
The
Eisenhower Transportation Fellowship Program has six award categories
to enable the program to attract the nation's brightest minds
to the transportation field by providing both students and college
faculty with opportunities to expand and deepen their understanding
of transportation-related fields of study and to retain top
talent in the U.S. transportation industry:
Graduate
Fellowships enable students to pursue masters and doctoral
degrees in transportation-related fields at universities of
their choice.
Grants
for Research Fellowships acquaint undergraduate and graduate
students with transportation research, development, and technology
transfer at U.S. Department of Transportation facilities.
Historically
Black Colleges and Universities Fellowships provide students
with additional opportunities to enter careers in transportation
and serve as a feeder for other Eisenhower fellowships.
Hispanic-Serving
Institutions Fellowships provide students with additional
opportunities to enter careers in transportation. They also
serve as a feeder for other Eisenhower fellowships.
Tribal
Colleges Fellowships identify transportation-related activities
and provide student and faculty fellowship opportunities. In
addition, they serve as a feeder for other Eisenhower fellowships.
Faculty
Fellowships give faculty in transportation fields the opportunity
to enhance and update their transportation knowledge, including
attendance at conferences, courses, seminars, and workshops.
|
Keeping
Pace With Advancing Technology
Each year, the modal administrations within DOT generate current research
topics. The topics are announced by the Universities and Grants Programs,
and students - from college juniors to doctoral candidates and faculty
- complete transportation research projects.
Eisenhower
Fellowship recipients apply cutting-edge technology skills to current
research across the full range of needs in the transportation industry.
By linking education, research, and technology, it's a win-win-win
situation; the recipients, the universities, and the transportation
industry all benefit substantially. Recipients have the opportunity
to work on current research and receive academic credit, tuition,
fees, and a monthly stipend based on their educational level. A larger
number of universities are able to compete for research projects based
on current transportation industry needs. And the transportation industry,
including DOT, receives current research from potential researchers
whose technical skills are up-to-the-minute.
Life-Long
Learning
Changes in technology and the organizational environment demand that
transportation professionals be responsive to a complex, dynamic environment.
While newly developed transportation technologies that employ the
latest in telecommunications, information systems, and electronics
are being developed, the organizational environment is also undergoing
change. In addition, state transportation agencies have moved toward
intermodal and seamless-transportation planning to address regional
public transportation needs, freight movement, and environmental and
societal concerns. Future transportation professionals must understand
innovative management techniques and communicate with a broad range
of constituencies - from fellow workers to community leaders. Current
professionals are faced with maintaining their knowledge and skills
in the face of rapid technological and policy changes.
Because
DDETFP provides opportunities not only for current students but also
for professionals in the industry and academia to upgrade and enhance
their skills, it is a critical link in addressing transportation work
force issues. The graduate fellowships provide tuition and a monthly
stipend to master's degree and doctoral candidates conducting transportation-related
research at the university of their choice. Fellowships range from
$50,000 to $140,000 depending on educational level and university.
The Eisenhower
Faculty Fellowships enable professionals to enhance their skills and
rehone their technical edge by pursuing cross-disciplinary education
and by attending conferences, symposia, and other technical meetings.
These fellowships have an inherent value to the students of these
faculty, as well as to the recipients themselves.
Because
faculty advisors are instrumental to the entire program and can have
a tremendous effect on students, a consideration in the evaluation
of candidates for the Faculty Fellowships is the candidate's documentation
of the fellowship's projected benefits to his/her students, the university,
and himself.
Interfacing
With the Research Community
Each January, DDETFP is showcased in a daylong special session and
reception at the annual meeting of the Transportation Research Board
(TRB). The five-day TRB meeting, which is attended by 8,000 to 10,000
professionals from all over the world, features about 550 presentations
and panel discussions. Most transportation professionals consider
the meeting to be "the place to be if you're involved in transportation."
Participation in the information-sharing sessions keeps Eisenhower
Faculty Fellowship recipients abreast of the latest developments and
provides new information that they can share with their students and
other faculty.
Fellowship
recipients present their research results at the TRB meeting. The
interdisciplinary nature of student presentations broadens each year
- from intelligent transportation systems and traffic volume to the
use of church buses to move people to and from employment.
Networking
and Partnering for the Future Since the inception of DDETFP, additional
transportation education programs have been developed. FHWA encourages
the recipients and applicants in all of the academic programs to consider
a career in transportation or transportation studies.
The Universities
and Grants Programs (UGP) staff are partners with the staff of other
academic programs in DOT, such as the University Transportation Centers
Program, Garrett A. Morgan Transportation and Technology Futures Program,
Summer Transportation Intern Program for Diverse Groups, and the National
Summer Transportation Institutes for Secondary Students. UGP is also
pursuing partnerships with other government programs and with representatives
of the private sector and academia to help students to acquire the
requisite education to enter careers in the transportation field.
Both
the government and the private sector are seeking workers with appropriate
skills, and an increasing number of businesses are requesting the
assistance of the UGP staff to locate prospective employees who have
cutting-edge transportation-technology skills.
The Eisenhower
Fellowships are continuing to provide a prime opportunity to enter
the transportation education pipeline. More than 2,000 former DDETFP
recipients are now working in the public and private sectors and in
academia, and they are catalysts for creative public-private partnerships
as they take their place in the new generation of transportation professionals.
References:
Peter
A. Manning. "Transportation Workforce for the 21st Century - A Challenge
to Education," ,
Transportation Strategic Planning and Analysis Office, John A. Volpe
National Transportation Systems Center, Cambridge, Mass.
Committee
on Transportation Research and Development Intermodal Transportation
Science and Technology Strategy Team. "Elements of the Transportation
Science and Technology Strategy," Chapter 4 of Transportation
Science and Technology Strategy, National Science and Technology
Council, Washington, D.C., September 1997.
Joseph
M. Sussman. "Educating the New Transportation Professional," ITS
Quarterly, Summer 1995.
Joseph
M. Sussman. "The New Transportation Faculty, The Evolution to Engineering
Systems," Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Mass.,
Jan. 10, 1999.
Fred
Hempel. "Draft Review of the Dwight David Eisenhower Transportation
Fellowship Program," unpublished paper, Federal Highway Administration,
Washington, D.C., Feb. 5, 1999.
Ilene
D. Payne, Ph.D., is the director of the Universities and Grants
Programs. The program is part of the National Highway Institute, Office
of Professional Development, Federal Highway Administration. Dr. Payne's
primary responsibility is the administration and management of the
Dwight David Eisenhower Transportation Fellowship Program. She maintains
contact with more than 700 colleges and universities nationally. In
addition, she serves as FHWA's liaison to the University Transportation
Centers Program and serves as FHWA's advisor on academic issues. Dr.
Payne has a bachelor's degree from Howard University in East Asian
studies, a master's degree in human resource development from Bowie
State University, and a doctorate in organizational development from
the Union Institute in Cincinnati, Ohio.
Leslie
C. Porter is the program manager of the Universities and Grants
Programs. She is employed by Basic Technologies International Corp.,
and she supervises the Universities and Grants Programs contract staff.
Her primary responsibility is the implementation of the Dwight David
Eisenhower Transportation Fellowship Program. She maintains communication
with thousands of students, faculty, and staff at more than 700 colleges
and universities. She is also responsible for program research, reports,
and the development of private, public, and institutional partnerships
to maintain and promote FHWA recruitment, retention, and diversification.
She has been involved in the transportation industry for more than
18 years and came to the University and Grants Programs in November
2000 from a position at the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority.
Her career includes urban and transportation planning, environmental
impact analysis (socioeconomic impacts), bus and rail planning, academic
outreach, special events planning, and marketing. Porter has a bachelor's
degree in urban studies from Boston University.
Lisa
Crye is a freelance writer and editor. She has written for publications
as varied as Science and The Arlington Historical Journal,
and she edits newsletters and a research journal. Her work has focused
on business, environmental, medical, and government contract issues.
For
more information about the Universities and Grants Programs, check
www.nhi.fhwa.dot.gov (and
click on Universities and Grants Programs) or contact the director,
Dr. Ilene Payne, by mail at 4600 North Fairfax Drive, Suite 800, Arlington,
VA 22203; by e-mail at Ilene.Payne@fhwa.dot.gov;
or by telephone at (703) 235-0538.
Other
Articles in this Issue:
HELP
WANTED - Meeting the Need for Tomorrow's Transportation Work Force
The Dwight
David Eisenhower Transportation Fellowship Program: Preparing for
the Future of Transportation
The
Millennium Manual Matters
QuickZone
Iowa's
Approach to Environmental Stewardship
Moveable
Barrier Solves Work-Zone Dilemma
Learning
From the Big Dig
A
Light at the End of the Tunnel
International
Cooperation to Prevent Collisions at Intersections
Pay
Attention - Buckle Up: Safe Driving Is a Full-Time Job