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IEEE Malaysia Section SB Leadership Camp 11th March 2017 Universiti Putra Malaysia
Mohammad Faizal Ahmad Fauzi Chair 2017
IEEE Malaysia Section [email protected]
http://ieeemy.org/mysection www.facebook.com/IEEE.my
OVERVIEW OF IEEE
Vision and Mission
IEEE VISION IEEE will be essential to the global technical community and to technical professionals everywhere, and be universally recognized for the contributions of technology and of technical professionals in improving global conditions.
IEEE MISSION IEEE's core purpose is to foster technological innovation and excellence for the benefit of humanity.
The History of IEEE and Electrotechnologies
Prepared by the IEEE History Center
IEEE History Center 39 Union St., New Brunswick NJ 08901 [email protected]
1884: The American Institute of Electrical Engineers is founded A small group of individuals met in New York and founded the AIEE to advance the new field and represent the US at the 1884 International Electrical Exhibition in Philadelphia. Norvin Green of Western Union became the first president.
Invitation to the AIEE organizational meeting, Electrical World, 5 April 1884
Norvin Green, President of Western Union Telegraph and first president of the AIEE
Program of the 1884 International Electrical Exhibition, Franklin Institute, Philadelphia
Formation of the IRE, 1912 With the new industry came a new society in 1912, the Institute of Radio Engineers or IRE, modeled on the AIEE, but devoted to radio, and later increasingly to electronics.
IRE logo
IRE annual banquet, NY, 1915. Among those attending were Tesla, Sarnoff, de Forest, and Alexanderson
Alfred Goldsmith IRE Co-founder and first journal editor
AIEE and IRE serve their members and their professions Both societies ran technical conferences, published journals, promulgated standards, and encouraged the training of student engineers.
Proceedings of the AIEE, September 1916
Proceedings of the IRE September 1926 NBC engineers at an IRE banquet
AIEE + IRE = IEEE The idea that there should be one organization for all electrical engineers was an old one, and became more powerful as the profession expanded beyond its separate roots in power and radio. In 1962, the boards and memberships of the two institutes agreed to merge. On January 1, 1963, the IEEE, or Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers was born with 150,000 members, 140,000 of whom were in the United States.
1962 Symposium on the proposed merger, IRE National Convention
Special merger issue of the Proceedings of the IRE
The badge of the new IEEE combined the right hand rule from the IRE with the kite from the AIEE
IEEE Centennial 1884-1984
Centennial Logo
IEEE celebrated its centennial with celebrations of its members’ accomplishments for the betterment of society. By 1984, it was well on its way in its transformation from a United States centered to a global institution.
Some of the material IEEE
produced for its centennial
1984 Membership distribution
The Globalization of IEEE
2003 IEEE Standards regional web portal
IEEE responded to the emerging global village by becoming more global itself. By 2009, 45.5% of its 375,000 members resided in 159 countries besides the United States.
1994 Staff at the IEEE Beijing Section office
2003 Students at Nigeria’s Federal University of Technology Werra (FUTO) greet IEEE Spectrum Senior Editor Harry Goldstein
Regions
Reflecting the global nature of IEEE, R8 and R10 are now the two largest IEEE Regions
IEEE Asia Pacific Presence
3/12/17 12
= IEEE Offices Bangalore,Beijing,Singapore,Tokyo
Geographic & Technical Unit Relationship
Technical Activities Board
Parents - WIE, Consultants, GOLD
IEEE Societies
Member & Geographic Activities Board (MGAB)
Region 10
Sections (57)
Chapters (550) Affinity Groups(60)
Sub-Sections (18)
Student Branches (1,061)
Council (6)
SB Chapters (259) SB Affinity Groups (182)
OVERVIEW OF IEEE MALAYSIA SECTION
17 3/12/17
IEEE MALAYSIA SECTION’S PAST CHAIRS
1985-1987 1988-96 1997 1998-2000
2003-2004 2005-2006
2001
2002
2007-2008 2009-2010 2011-2012 2013-2014
2015-2016
Executive Committee 2017 No. Portfolio Committee
1. Chair Mohammad Faizal Ahmad Fauzi 2. Vice-Chair (Conferences /
Membership Development) Fawnizu Azmadi Hussin
3. Past Chair (Award and Recognition) Zuhaina Zakaria 4. Hon. Secretary Haidawati Mohamad Nasir 5. Hon. Treasurer Zuriati Janin 6. Professional Activities /
Industrial Relation Nordin Ramli
7. Communication/Newsletter Rosmiwati Mohd Mokhtar 8. Educational Activities Lee Yoot Khuan 9. Student Activities Noor Ain Kamsani 10. Auditor Christopher Chew 11. Auditor Chong Yu Zheng
International Appointment • Prof Borhanudin Mohd Ali
o 2017-2018 Region 10 Vice Chair of Professional Activities
• Dr Norliza Mohd Noor o MGA Member Benefits Portfolio Advisory
Committee o EAB Member Student Educational Resources
Committee (SERC)
• Dr Zuhaina Zakaria o 2017-2018 Region 10 Educational Activities
Coordinator o EAB Member Section Educational Outreach
Committee (SEOC).
1 Subsection 24 Technical Chapters 3 Affinity Groups 23 Student Branches 12 Student Branch Chapters 3 Student Branch WIE AG
No Chapters/AG
1 Antennas & Propagation / Microwave Theory & Technique / Electromagnetic Compatibility Joint Chapter (AP/MTT/EMC)
2 Communication Society and Vehicular Technology Society Joint Chapter (COMSOC/VTS)
3 Industrial Electronics / Industry Applications Joint Chapter (IE/IA)
4 Circuits and Systems Society (CAS)
5 Computational Intelligence Society (CIS)
6 Computer Society (CS)
7 Consumer Electronics Society (CES)
8 Control Systems Society (CSS)
9 Dielectrics and Electrical Insulation Society (DEI)
10 Education Society (EDUSOC)
11 Electron Devices Society (EDS)
12 Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society (EMBS)
13 Geoscience & Remote Sensing Society (GRS)
No Chapters/AG
14 Electron Devices / Microwave Theory and Techniques / Solid State Circuits Joint Chapter, Penang (EDS/MTT/SSCS)
15 Components, Packaging & Manufacturing Technologies Society (CPMT)
16 Instrumentation and Measurement Society (IMS)
17 Technology and Engineering Management Society (TEMS)
18 Oceanic Engineering Society (OE)
19 Photonics Society (PS)
20 Power and Energy Society (PES)
21 Power Electronics Society (PELS)
22 Robotics and Automation Society (RAS)
23 Signal Processing Society (SP)
24 Systems, Man, and Cybernetics Society (SMC)
25 Women in Engineering (WIE)26 Young Professionals (YP – formerly GOLD)
27 Consultant Network Affinity Group (CNAG)
CHAPTERS/AFFINITY GROUPS
No University/Institution Name Year Formed Counsellor
1 Universiti Teknologi Malaysia (UTM) 1999 Mohamad Kamal A Rahim
2 Universiti Teknologi Mara (UiTM) 2000 Rozita Jailani3 Universiti Putra Malaysia (UPM) 2001 Noor Ain Kamsani4 Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia (UKM) 2001 Mahamod Ismail
5 Universiti Teknologi Petronas (UTP) 2005 M Zuki B Yusoff
6 Universiti Islam Antarabangsa Malaysia (UIAM) 2006 Musse Mohamud Ahmed
7 Universiti Malaysia Sabah (UMS) 2007 Lim Pei Yi8 Universiti Multimedia (MMU) 2007 Mohamad Yusoff Alias9 Monash University- Sunway Campus 2007 Alpha Agape Gopalai
10 Universiti Tunku Abdul Rahman (UTAR) 2009 Chong Yu Zheng
11 Universiti Malaya (UM) 2009 Fatimah Ibrahim12 Universiti Sains Malaysia (USM) 2009 Rosmiwati Mohd Mokhtar
13 Universiti Tenaga Nasional (Uniten) 2010 Zaipatimah Ali
14 Curtin University Sarawak 2011 Hendra Gunawan Harno
15 University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus 2013 Khor Jeen Ghee
16 Universiti Selangor (UniSel) 2013 Mohamed Khan Aftab Ahamed Khan
17 Universiti Utara Malaysia 2013 Adib Habbal18 Asia Pacific Univ of Tech and Innovation 2014 Manoj Jayabalan
19 INTI International University 2014 Ayyoub Akbari-Moghanjoughi
20 Nilai University 2015 Abbas Mehdizadeh21 Universiti Malaysia Perlis (UNIMAP) 2016 Azremi Abdullah Al-Hadi
22 Universiti Teknikal Malaysia Melaka (UTeM) 2016 Shin Horng Chong
23 Universiti Tun Hussein Onn Malayisa (UTHM) 2016 Nafarizal Nayan
STUDENT BRANCH
No Technical SB/SB AGYear
FormedAdvisor
1 APU COMSOC Student Chapter 2014 Reza Adinehnia2 APU CIS Student Chapter 2014 Amirhossein Mousavi3 APU Computer Society Student Chapter 2014 Muhammad Rana
4 INTI Computer Society Student Chapter 2014 Yamen Batch
5 INTI COMSOC Student Chapter 2014 Ayyoub Akbari-Moghanjoughi
6 UiTM PES Student Chapter 2014 Nur Ashida Salim
7 UTM PES Student Chapter 2015 Md Pauzi Abdullah8 UNITEN PES Student Chapter 2016 Zaipatimah Ali
9 UKM PES Student Chapter 2016 Azah Mohamed
10 Curtin Sarawak IAS Student 2016 King Hann Lim
11 UKM IAS Student Chapter 2016 Hussain Mahdi
12 UKM EDS Student Chapter 2016 Badariah Bais13 UPM WIE AG 2016 Noor Ain Kamsani14 USM WIE AG 2016 Rosmiwati Mohd Mokhtar15 Curtin Sarawak WIE AG 2016 King Hann Lim
STUDENT BRANCH CHAPTER
MEMBERSHIP DEVELOPMENT
IEEE Malaysia Section: Total Active Members (2012 - 2016)
3.45%
Members by Grade – Malaysia (2016)
Members in Malaysia (2012 – 2016)
Growth % SM
2012: 26%
2013: 37%
2014: 17.8%
2015: 18.6%
2016: 18.8%
SM % wrt Total Members
2012: 6%
2013: 7%
2014: 8%
2015: 10%
2016: 12%
ACTIVITIES
Educational Activities
Leadership Camp – 25th Feb EAC Support Fund application EA Grant awareness sessions TISP Workshop to Schools TISP at TENCON 2017?
Student Activities
SB Leadership Camp – 11th March Student Congress – to apply R10 funding FYP Competition FYP Exhibition Visibility at R10
– IEEEXtreme/Programming Workshop – IEEE Day/School Program
SCORED 2017
Professional Activities
IEM – Joint awards – Joint events
Reaching out to industry – CREST etc
Talks by industry players
Conferences 2016 24 Financial Sponsored Conferences 2 Overseas Conferences Sponsored by Local Chapters 16 Technical Co Sponsored Conference
2017 TENCON SCORED Etc.
TENCON 2017 5-8 Nov, Penang
COMMUNICATION AND NEWSLETTERS
Website competition Newsletters (Apr, Jul, Oct, Jan)
– To add articles in the newsletter – to highlight projects and to include in-person stories, like IEM magazine.
– To apply for e-ISSN
Thank You For Your Support