History
Conceived in the summer of 1978, MECOP was to be a collaboration between OSU and Oregon-based manufacturing companies that hired engineering graduates.
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Student Internships vs. Participating Companies
Students
Companies
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Faced with a growing gap between the skills and knowledge needed to succeed
in the work place and those being taught in universities, three major
Oregon companiesFreightliner, builder of heavy trucks; Tektronix,
a maker of electronic test instruments; and pump manufacturer Bingham-Willamette
(now Sulzer-Bingham)entered into an agreement with OSUs Department
of Industrial Engineering to start the Manufacturing Engineering
Cooperative Program. According to Mike Smith, a former Freightliner engineering
manager and one of MECOP's founders, the first MECOP companies recognized
that universities had some limitations. We were willing to help OSU overcome
those limitations and, at the same time, help ourselves. We needed young
engineers who would graduate with more hands-on education than they were
getting. By combining forces, the new program would provide students
with a working laboratory in which to apply the theories they learn in
their classrooms.
By the end of 1978, the program had grown to include five companies but
was still not ready for students. Because of the time required to organize
the program and gain consensus among the University and industry sponsors,
the first class wasnt admitted until 1980, when seven students were
selected. From then on the program rocketed.
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Students Placed in Internships
Manufacturing Engineering Tech
Construction Eng Mgmt
Surveying
Bio Engineering
Mechanical Engineering Tech
Management Info Systems
Civil Engineering
Environmental Engineering
Engineering Physics
Computer Engineering
Mechanical Engineering
Computer Science
Chemical Engineering
Electical Engineering
Industrial Engineering
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The success of the program attracted the interest of other departments in the OSU College of Engineering. In the fall of 1992, the mechanical, electrical, and chemical engineering departments began participating in MECOP. Other changes included moving the program from the industrial and manufacturing engineering department to the Deans Office in the College of Engineering, and changing the MECOP name to the Multiple Engineering Cooperative Program to reflect its expanded focus.
The expansion of the program continues. In 1998 and 1999, the first group of
students from the management information systems program in the College
of Business participated in MECOP internships. And in 2000, mechanical
engineering and computer science students from Portland
State University had the opportunity to participate in this innovative
program. Oregon Institute of Technology joined MECOP as a university partner in 2002, enhancing the
program by adding the Manufacturing Technical and Mechanical Technical
disciplines.
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