School of Engineering
Admission and Transfer Policies
Freshman Applicants
To be admitted to the School of Engineering, a student must be admitted to the University of Mississippi and meet certain academic requirements. To be admitted into the Chemical Engineering, Civil Engineering, Computer and Information Science, Electrical Engineering, Geological Engineering, Geology, or Mechanical Engineering degree program as a freshman, a student must have earned a 25 or higher on the Math portion of the ACT (or SAT equivalent or a C or higher on the Cambridge O-Level Examination) AND have a core high school GPA of 3.0 or higher. To be admitted into the General Engineering degree program as a freshman, a student must have earned a 20 or higher on the Math portion of the ACT (or SAT equivalent or a C or higher on the Cambridge O-Level Examination) AND have a core high school GPA of 2.8 or higher. Students with a score below 25 on the Math portion of the ACT must enroll in MATH 125 (or MATH 121 and 123) and earn a grade of B or higher. Students with less than a 3.0 core high school GPA must enroll in EDHE 105 Freshman Year Experience course.
Transfer Applicants
For a university student to declare a change of major and for a transfer student from another institution to enter into any of the Engineering degree programs, a student must have earned a B or higher in MATH 125 (or MATH 121 and 123), or a higher mathematics course, and have a cumulative undergraduate GPA of 2.25 or higher.
General
Any student who is admitted to the university and does not meet these standards upon admission can choose from the other degree programs for which they qualify at the university.
Academic Regulations
General Education Core Curriculum
The general education requirements of the undergraduate degree programs of the School of Engineering are consistent with The University of Mississippi's tradition of educating engineering leaders through the school's strong interaction with the university's liberal arts programs. Further, these requirements are established to fulfill the school's published mission of preparing "students with a broad-based education" intended to develop "leadership skills" and "communication skills."
The core/general education requirements for the School of Engineering include Writ 101, Writ 102; Math 261-262, Engr 390 Professional Communication for Engineers; and a minimum of 8 credit hours of laboratory science courses as specified by each department.
In addition, 18 credit hours as described below must be taken, but students should check with their department to learn the specific course requirements for an individual program.
Fifteen Credits of Liberal Arts
Students must complete at least 15 semester hours consisting of social/behavioral sciences, humanities, and fine arts course work. At least 6 credit hours must be in the social/behavioral sciences, and at least 9 credit hours must be in combined humanities and fine arts courses with at least 3 semester hours from each of these areas. For the purpose of these requirements, social/behavioral sciences will include anthropology, economics, political science, psychology, and sociology; humanities will include classics, literature, history, modern languages, philosophy, religion, African American Studies, Gender Studies, and Southern Studies; and fine arts will include courses in the history, appreciation, and criticism of art, dance, music, and theatre arts. (Courses emphasizing the enhancement of skills and performance are not acceptable.) Honors courses may be used to meet these requirements as appropriate.
Three credits of additional general education course work
Students must complete an additional 3 semester hours of course work beyond the 15 hours required above. These additional 3 hours are to be composed of any additional fine arts, humanities, or social science course work (as defined above) or any combination of credits from the courses listed below:
Course | Course Title | Credits |
---|---|---|
AS 301 | Air Force Leadership Studies I | 3 |
AS 302 | Air Force Leadership Studies II | 3 |
Bus 250 | Legal Environment of Business | 3 |
Bus 271 | Business Communication | 3 |
Edld 110 | Chancellor's Leadership Class I | 1 |
Edld 111 | Chancellor's Leadership Class II | 1 |
Edld 120 | Introduction to Leadership Studies | 3 |
Edld 220 | Foundations of Leadership Studies | 3 |
Engr 390 | Professional Communication for Engineers | 3 |
Engr 400 | Leadership and Professionalism in Engineering | 1 |
Mgmt 371 | Principles of Management | 3 |
GB 370 | Entrepreneurship and Management | 3 |
Msl 102 | Military Science I: Basic Leadership & Management | 3 |
Nsc 211 | Naval Leadership and Management I | 3 |
Spch 102 | Fundamentals of Public Speaking | 3 |
Spch 105 | Business/Professional Speech | 3 |
Cooperative Education Program
A student desiring to participate in the new School of Engineering Professional Practice Program (Cooperative Education) must obtain approval from his or her department chair. The three defined co-op work terms are fall, spring, and full summer as defined by the UM Academic Calendar. Students desiring to enroll in the program will be registered for C OP 300 and have an approved internship offer for a minimum of 37.5 hours per week for the full duration of the academic term (or a minimum of 12 weeks during the summer). Enrollment status during a co-op work term is equivalent to a full academic load at the University of Mississippi. The Engineering Dean's Office will administratively enroll co-op students. The enrolled co-op student is considered full-time for insurance purposes and the deferment of loan re-payment. C OP 300 may serve as a prerequisite for departmental technical elective credit-bearing courses.
Students participating in a co-op work term must submit required documentation to the School of Engineering Dean's Office to remain in good standing.
School of Engineering Overall Degree Requirements
Basic Degree Requirements
All of the curricula of the School of Engineering leading to a Bachelor of Science or Bachelor of Engineering degree are four-year curricula. The curricula requirements for the degrees of Bachelor of Science in Chemical Engineering, Bachelor of Science in Civil Engineering, Bachelor of Science in Computer Science, Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering, Bachelor of Science in Geological Engineering, Bachelor of Science in Geology, Bachelor of Science in Mechanical Engineering, and Bachelor of Engineering are listed in their respective sections of the catalog.
Technical Electives
In some programs, students are allowed to choose a coherent group of courses from appropriate areas to permit the student to pursue particular topics in more depth than provided by required courses or to complement the student's major area of study. Selection of these courses should be made in consultation with and approved by the student's department chair/adviser.
Minors
Students pursuing any of the nine degree programs within the School of Engineering may choose to declare a minor. A minor field may be any discipline that offers a minor at the University of Mississippi with the exception of chemistry for chemical engineering students, geology for geological engineering students, and computer science for electrical engineering students pursuing the computer engineering option. The required courses and number of hours for each minor field can be found in the university undergraduate catalog. However, no more than 8 credit hours from courses required by the engineering degree and cited specifically by course number and title as a requirement for that degree may be used toward fulfillment of the minor requirements. A minor is available for students pursuing the Bachelor of Engineering (B.E.) degree if different from the emphasis area within the B.E. program. The engineering math minor is available for all students of the School of Engineering and requirements are specified. The engineering math minor is exempt from this minor policy.
Advising
Each entering freshman and transfer student is assigned to a member of the School of Engineering faculty in their department who acts as the student’s adviser. Students are required to schedule regular conferences with their adviser. In addition, students are encouraged to confer with their advisers or other faculty members as the need arises at times other than the regularly scheduled conferences. A record of advising meetings and degree progress is maintained by the department in which the student is majoring. The purpose for the faculty advising is to ensure that students are completing the appropriate required courses in the proper prerequisite order to meet graduation requirements that have been previously specified to meet ABET, the Institutions of Higher Learning (IHL), university, and other criteria.
Honor Code Policy
Honor System
The purpose of the School of Engineering honor system is to inculcate in each student the highest standard of personal integrity and professional responsibility. The honor pledge below stresses student honesty both in and out of the classroom. For dealing with infractions, the School of Engineering adopted the University policy "Student Academic Conduct and Discipline".
"I PLEDGE MYSELF TO UPHOLD THE HIGHEST STANDARDS OF HONESTY IN MY UNIVERSITY LIFE AND I WILL NOT TOLERATE DISHONESTY ON THE PART OF OTHERS."
Application for Degree
During the semester prior to completing degree requirements for a particular degree, each student is required to make formal application for that degree. The process includes the student completing the Degree Application found on the School of Engineering website under Current Students. This application must be submitted to the student's department for review. With departmental approval, the Engineering Dean's Office will then authorize the student's Diploma Application in MyOleMiss. When the student completes the Diploma Application, the student is considered an official candidate for graduation for the specified term. The Dean's office will verify whether all degree requirements have been fulfilled using the Degree Audit system. In addition to University GPA requirements, all undergraduate degree programs in the School of Engineering require that students earn a GPA of at least 2.00 in all courses taken from the School of Engineering applicable to their degree. The Dean's office then certifies degrees that have been fulfilled in a Degree Confirmation report to the Office of the Registrar for the granting of the diploma.