Nov 23, 2024  
2018-2019 Graduate Catalog 
    
2018-2019 Graduate Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

School of Engineering, Computer Science and Mathematics


Dr. Emily Hunt, dean
Engineering Building, Room 120 • WTAMU Box 60767
806-651-5257 • Fax 806-651-5259
ehunt@wtamu.edu
wtamu.edu/academics/engineering-computer-science-mathematics.aspx
 
Dr. Matt Jackson, associate dean for engineering, computer science, and mathematics; mjackson@wtamu.edu
 

Dr. Pam Lockwood, associate dean for engineering, computer science, and mathematics; plockwood@wtamu.edu


For a listing of Graduate Faculty Membership go to Graduate Faculty Membership.

 

Engineering

Increasingly, today’s engineers are expected to have interdisciplinary knowledge of all facets of engineering. The Master’s of Science in Engineering program is designed to prepare engineers for anything they’ll see in their career - even if it’s not the specialty they studied in undergraduate courses. In this program, students gain working knowledge of many engineering disciplines, from mechanical to civil, environmental to electrical, while also having the flexibility to concentrate in a specific area. This degree provides a rare opportunity to expand skills into all facets of engineering while augmenting skills in a chosen specialization.

Engineering Technology

At the graduate level, the School of Engineering, Computer Science and Mathematics offers a master’s degree in engineering technology. The program prepares students for a wide range of career opportunities from production, quality assurance, industrial safety, research and development to supervisory and managerial positions in industry.

 

Mathematics

Primary teaching and research interests of the mathematics faculty are pure and applied mathematics, including algebra, analysis, differential equations and statistics. Accordingly, the master’s degree in mathematics is uniquely broad based and strongly oriented toward applications. The Master of Science degree in mathematics is designed to ensure basic knowledge and the capacity for sustained scholarly study. Both a 30-hour thesis option and a 36-hour non-thesis option are available. Six semester hours of real analysis or algebraic systems are required for the mathematics degree. The remainder of course work is selected from differential equations, complex analysis, mathematical statistics, numerical analysis and algebraic systems.

 

 

Discipline - Course Prefix

Civil Engineering - CENG

Engineering Technology - ET

Environmental Engineering - EVEG

Mathematics - MATH

Mechanical Engineering - MENG

 

NOTE: See the “Course Descriptions” section of this catalog for a complete list of courses offered by the University.

 

Programs