Progression Requirements Engineering students must demonstrate proficiency in certain lower-level courses to advance into upper-level 3000- and 4000-level courses. Therefore, all students must earn an overall GPA of at least 2.0 by the end of their sophomore year. In addition, each engineering and computer science program has its own progression requirements as follows. Civil Engineering (CE) To advance into the junior year, CE majors must earn a combined GPA of at least 2.0 in the following engineering courses: EGCE-1920, 2410, EGGN-1110, and EGME-2530, 2630. In addition, CE majors must earn a combined GPA of at least 2.0 in the following cognate courses: CHEM-1050, MATH-1710, 1720, 2710, 2740, and PHYS-2110. Computer Science (CS) Computer Science majors must achieve a grade of at least C- in the following courses prior to taking any course that requires one of them as a prerequisite: CS-1210, 1220, 2210, 3410, 4810, CY1000, and CY-3420. Computer Engineering (CpE) To advance into the junior year, CpE majors must earn a combined GPA of at least 2.0 in the following engineering and computer science courses: CS-1210, 1220, 2210, 3310, EGCP1010, EGGN-1110, EGEE-2010, and EGME-1810 and 2570. In addition, CpE majors must earn a combined GPA of at least 2.0 in the following cognate courses: MATH-1710, 1720, 2520, 2740 and PHYS-2110 and 2120. Cyber Operations (CY) Cyber Operations majors must achieve a grade of at least C- in the following courses prior to taking any course that requires one of them as a prerequisite: CS-1210, 1220, 2210, 3410, CY-1000, CY-3420, and CY-4810. Electrical Engineering (EE) To advance into the junior year, EE majors must earn a combined GPA of at least 2.0 in the following engineering courses: CS-1210, 1220, EGCP-1010, EGGN-1110, EGEE-2010, 2110, and EGME-1810, 2570. In addition, EE majors must earn a combined GPA of at least 2.0 in the following cognate courses: MATH-1710, 1720, 2710, 2740, and PHYS-2110 and 2120. Mechanical Engineering (ME) To advance into the junior year, ME majors must earn a combined GPA of at least 2.0 in the following engineering courses: EGCP-1010, EGGN-1110, EGEE-2050, and EGME-1810, 2050, 2530, and 2630. In addition, ME majors must earn a combined GPA of at least 2.0 in the following cognate courses: MATH-1710, 1720, 2710, and 2740, and PHYS-2110 and 2120. Graduation Requirements 1. Earn a cumulative GPA of at least 2.0 in all major and cognate courses. 2. All computer, electrical, and mechanical engineering majors must take an assessment exam similar to the NCEES FE exam. Technical Resources Our modern laboratories include the following: fluids lab with an 18-inch cross-section wind tunnel, heat transfer, refrigeration, mechanics, materials testing, internal combustion engines, and dynamometers, CNC manufacturing, vibrations, dynamics of machines, electrical machines, feedback controls, circuits, electronics, communications, digital logic design, microprocessors, surface-mount soldering, water resources, concrete fabrication and testing, environmental, and transportation. We also have extensive PC-based laboratories in which students use computerbased circuit design, 3-D solid modeling, FEA, CFD, CNC, and industry-standard IDE software. Cocurricular Opportunities Engineering freshmen participate in an annual Cardboard Canoe Challenge. Other course-based competitions include statics and dynamics design competitions for sophomores, a full-scale truss design competition for civil engineering majors, an Advanced Digital Logic Design competition, and an annual programming contest. The school provides students with opportunities to participate in national and international design competitions organized by professional engineering societies such as ACM, ASCE, ASME, IEEE, SAE, ASEE, and SWE. Our students participate in Aero Design®, RoboBoat, international programming, robotics, Solar Splash®, and Supermileage® competitions. Career Opportunities Engineering and computer science both involve the application of scientific and mathematical principles, experience, judgment, and common sense to develop devices which help people. Engineers redesign products to work more efficiently, more quickly, and less expensively. They design buildings, bridges, and urban infrastructure, EKG and ultrasound machines that help doctors diagnose medical problems, electrical generation plants to power our cities, and more fuel-efficient cars and airplanes. Computer programmers develop the software solutions that are used to pilot spacecraft, combat terrorism, prevent collisions at airports, and keep our cars running. Computer scientists and engineers spend a great deal of time interacting and communicating with others, often working on a team. Because of their strong background in science, mathematics, and technology, they often rise to leadership positions in organizations, managing programs in research, development, design, construction, production, operations, marketing, and sales. In this era of rapid technological change, an engineering or computer science education serves our society well. In the decades ahead, society’s needs and problems will call for technical contributions on a scale not previously experienced. Page 160 2023–24 Undergraduate Academic Catalog School of Engineering and Computer Science
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