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A Brief History of the Department
UCLA  
Two
of the Department's past Chairmen, Professor Emeritus Chand Viswanathan
and Professor Emeritus Robert S. Elliott, collaborated
on the following article which briefly describes the
phenomenal growth of the University, the School, and
the Department.
Educational offerings were enlarged to include the freshman
and sophomore years in Letters and Science. The third
and fourth years were in place by 1924, and the first
Bachelor of Arts degrees were conferred in June of 1925.
On February 1, 1927 the name of the institution was
changed to the University of California at Los Angeles
or, in common usage, UCLA.
By action of the Regents, work in the College of Agriculture
was established at Los Angeles in November 1930, in
the College of Business Administration in June 1935,
and in the College of Applied Arts and in the School
of Education in 1939. On August 8,1933, graduate study
programs leading to the degrees of Master of Arts and
Master of Science, and to the Certificate of Completion
for general secondary and junior college teaching credentials,
were authorized by the Regents. Accordingly, in September
of 1933, one hundred and fifty candidates were admitted
to work in the fields of botany, economics, education,
English, geography, geology, history, mathematics, philosophy,
physics, political science, psychology, and zoology.
The
first Master's degrees were conferred in June of 1934.
Beginning in September of 1936 candidates for the Ph.D.
degree were accepted in the fields of English, history,
mathematics, and political science. In short order the
list was expanded to include all the fields in which
the Master's degree was already authorized.
Under
the terms of a special appropriation made by the State
Legislature in the Spring of 1943, a College of Engineering
was established at UCLA in November of 1944. L.M.K.
Boelter, the Associate Dean of Engineering at UC Berkeley,
was invited to come to Los Angeles and be the founding
Dean of the new College. His immediate tasks were to
form a faculty and oversee the design and construction
of an Engineering building. By 1947 a faculty of 18
professors and 37 lecturers had been assembled. In 1951
faculty and students were able to move out of temporary
quarters into the newly completed Engineering I building
located on the west side of campus.
For the first few years, UCLA students enrolling in
Engineering took their first two years at Los Angeles
and the last two in Berkeley. By 1953 all four years
leading to a Bachelor's degree in Engineering could
be taken at UCLA and the beginnings of a graduate program
had been introduced. The faculty had doubled in size
and the student population also increased significantly.
By 1958 it was possible to enroll in a program of study
at Los Angeles leading to the M.S. and Ph.D degrees
in Engineering.
Dean
Boelter was an innovator with highly original ideas
about undergraduate engineering education. He felt that
the conventional departmentalization of a College of
Engineering leads to walls being created between departments
that prevent interdisciplinary activities. Since he
also felt that the future of engineering was interdisciplinary,
he decided that the College of Engineering at UCLA would
have a single department and that UCLA would offer undesignated
B.S., M.S., and Ph.D. degrees. Further, the first three
years leading to the B.S. would be completely unified,
with the junior year consisting of seven core courses
that covered dynamics, fluid mechanics, thermodynamics,
strength of materials, electric circuits and machines,
applied mathematics, and professional ethics. A two-year
sequence of interdisciplinary laboratories would span
the junior and senior years.
The postwar explosion of technologies in all the disciplines
made this curriculum increasingly out of date and the
faculty began urging more specialization plus modernization.
Coupled with this, the sizes of the faculty and the
student body were growing dramatically and two more
buildings had to be constructed to house them (Engineering
II in 1959 and Engineering III in 1961, jointly known
as Boelter Hall). Administration through a single department
was becoming unwieldy and inefficient.
In 1964 Dean Boelter softened his position and permitted
divisions to be established in the fields of structures,
applied mechanics, chemical/nuclear/thermal studies,
materials, electronics and circuits, information systems,
electromagnetics, aeronautics, environmental systems,
and design/management/planning, but still under the
aegis of a single department. The divisions were given
increased autonomy in the design of curricula and course
content and were given localized administrative responsibility.
De facto, a departmental structure was beginning to
take shape.
The
Electrical Engineering Department
Almost
immediately, the fields of electromagnetics and electronics
and circuits chose to unite and become "the Electrical
Engineering Division". The faculty consisted of
three full professors, three associate professors, four
assistant professors, and three lecturers. Courses were offered in modern circuit theory, solid
state theory, semi-conductor devices, magnetic devices,
electromagnetic theory, antenna design, microwave devices,
plasmas, and propagation, all leading to the B.S., M.S.,
and Ph.D. degrees.
In 1966 Dean Boelter retired and was succeeded by Chauncey
Starr, who had been President of the Rocketdyne Division
of North American Corporation. One of his early acts
was to persuade the faculty of the College to change
its name to "School of Engineering and Applied
Science". Dean Starr had been given the mandate
to continue the modernization of curricula, and had
been given the resources by the Regents to expand the
faculty to accommodate the greatly increased demand
for graduate education in all the disciplines, due to
the continued growth of high technology corporations
in the Los Angeles basin. Dean Starr's next act, supported
by the faculty, was to petition the campus administration
for permission to convert the divisions into departments.
Authority was granted in 1969.
The Electrical Engineering Division formally became
a department with Professor Robert S. Elliott, a distinguished
scholar and teacher with world-wide acclaim and recognition,
as the first chair of the department, and was named
the Electrical Sciences and Engineering Department.
The School, although departmentalized, still remained
centralized and retained many of the administrative
and academic functions and oversight. Thus the departments
were not autonomous, unlike academic departments elsewhere
on the campus. It took almost a decade and a half for
the Department to become autonomous.
The electrical engineering faculty recognized that the
department had to be renamed to promote a ready and
wide recognition of the activities of the department
in the electrical engineering discipline. In 1981, the
name was changed to Electrical Engineering Department.
Several innovative steps were taken to publicize the
strengths and contributions of the department and its
faculty. The departmental Industrial Affiliate Program
(EE Affiliates) was initiated with a few leading industries
as the first affiliates of the department. The EE Affiliates
was the first departmental affiliate program in the
School of Engineering and Applied Sciences. The department
set up an Industrial Advisory Board comprised of nationwide
industrial leaders, to advise the department on its
priorities, goals and mission. Another innovation that
the department made was the inauguration of the Annual
Research Review in 1982, a yearly event to which engineers
and scientists from industries, research laboratories,
government agencies and academic institutions were invited
to hear the presentations of the faculty and their graduate
students on their research accomplishments. Starting in 1984, the electrical engineering students
received their degree diplomas (graduation certificates)
with specific electrical engineering degree designations
such as B.S., M. S., and Ph. D., in Electrical Engineering
(instead of B.S., M. S., and Ph. D., in Engineering).
The fields of Communication, Controls and Operations
Research were also transferred to the department, thus
providing full coverage of all the fields of studies
in electrical engineering. By 1984, the decentralization of the School was completed
and the Electrical Engineering Department became autonomous
and quickly achieved campus and national visibility.
In the National Conference Board ranking conducted under
the auspices of the National Research Council, the department
was ranked fifth below MIT, Stanford, UC Berkeley and
University of Illinois. This high ranking was a fitting
recognition of the excellence of its faculty, students
and academic programs. It was all the more significant
that the UCLA Electrical Engineering Department, comparatively
a very young department, received such a high ranking
ahead of older and more established electrical engineering
departments that had been in existence for several decades.
In the last twenty years, the Electrical Engineering
Department has grown in strength and has attracted outstanding
faculty and students. The department continues to receive
a substantial amount of extramural support from the
national agencies and industrial sponsors. Its faculty
have received numerous campus and world-wide awards
and recognitions for excellence in teaching and research.
Current and Past
Department Chairs
Professor Ali H. Sayed (2005-present)
Professor Yahya Rahmat-Samii (2000-2005)
Professor William Kaiser (1996-2000)
Professor Kang Wang (1993-1996)
Professor Nicholaos G. Alexopoulos (1987-1992)
Professor Frederick G. Allen (1985-1987)
Professor Chand R. Viswanathan (1979-1985)
Professor Gabor C. Temes (1974-1979)
Professor Frederick G. Allen (1969-1974)
Professor Robert S. Elliot (1968-1969)
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