Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Allen B Rosenstein

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Allen Rosenstein

Education
  
University of Arizona

American systems engineer Allen B Rosenstein Died on 97


Allen Bertram Rosenstein (born August 25, 1920) is an American systems engineers, Professor Emeritus of Systems Engineering at the University of California at Los Angeles, and IEEE Fellow awarded for his contributions to the "theory, design, and manufacture of power converters and for leadership and research in engineering education".

Contents

Biography

Born and raised in Baltimore, MD, Rosenstein received his BA in Electrical Engineering in 1940 from the University of Arizona. After his military service in the U.S. Navy, he received his MA in 1950 and his PhD in 1958, both in Engineering from the University of California at Los Angeles. He was Professor of Systems Engineering at the University of California at Los Angeles for almost four decades.

In industry Rosenstein started eventually five companies for design and manufacturing of specific automatic controls and electro-magnetic system devices, starting with Pioneer Magnetics, Inc. in 1957. He received five different patents on Electro-Magnetic systems, consulted multiple professional organizations on electric power system, and participated in Presidential Committees and Conferences under Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan.

Rosenstein's research in engineering education started with his participation in an ongoing UCLA Ford Foundation funded study from 1955 to 1968 in the interrelation of professions, technology and national policy, where he became principal investigator. This research defined the "indispensable societal role and responsibility of the collective professions", and predicted an "ever-eroding U.S. industrial base and recognized the legislative, structural and institutional deficiencies that have ensured the over 50-year continuing decline of America’s economic, financial, trade, technological and manufacturing leadership". This eventually lead to Rosenstein's involvement in the proposal of the "National Technology Foundation Act", which was discussed in US Congress and subcommittee on Science, Research and Technology in the 1970s and 1980s. In the 1970s Rosenstein had also been consultant in educational planning in Venezuela for UNESCO.

Rosenstein is awarded for his Lifetime Achievement by the University of Arizona, College of Engineering, and received the Fellow Award by the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers.

Publications

Books, a selection:

  • 1950. Analysis and Synthesis of Magnetic Amplifiers with Self Feedback
  • 1958. The Transactora Self-saturated Transformer
  • 1963. Information Theory and Curricular Synthesis. With Daniel M. Rosenthal and G. Wiseman
  • 1964. Engineering communications with Robert R. Rathbone, William F. Schneerer
  • 1967. The Concept of Engineering Design as a Formal Discipline, Proc. ASME 8 th Annual Technical Symposium Albuquerque, New Mexico, November, 1967. ed.
  • 1968. A Study of a Profession and Professional Education,” Allen B. Rosenstein, UCLA EDP 7-68, December, 1968
  • 1968. Modeling, Analysis, Synthesis, Optimization, and Decision Making in Engineering Curricula. Department of Engineering, University of California.
  • 1979. The National Professions Foundation and the Future Quality of National Life, American Association for the Advancement of Science, January, 1979
  • 1983. A National Policy Facilitating Foundation, Business Week & National Foreign Trade Council Foundation
  • 1986. The National Policy and Technology Foundation Act Congressional Record, Hon. George E. Brown, Jr., April, 1986
  • 1990. Competitiveness and National Policy. National Conference on the Advancement of Research, October, 1990
  • References

    Allen B. Rosenstein Wikipedia