Bachelor of Science in Multidisciplinary Engineering with Emphasis in Energy Engineering

Northern Arizona University - Flagstaff Campus

USA,Arizona

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48 Months

Duration

CAD 29,900/year

Tuition Fee

CAD 50 FREE

Application Fee

Apply Date

USA, Arizona

Type: University

Location Type: Urban

Founded: 1899

Total Students: 29,569 +

Campus Detail

Main Campus Address

S San Francisco St, Flagstaff, AZ 86011, United States

Bachelor of Science in Multidisciplinary Engineering with Emphasis in Energy Engineering

Program Overview

The Bachelor of Science in Multidisciplinary Engineering provides students learning opportunities in multiple engineering disciplines and complemented by other disciplines across campus. The program supports a customizable curriculum that includes a capstone experience focused on multi- and inter-disciplinary teamwork. Specific combinations of coursework are formulated in several named emphases that provide unique opportunities and inspires students to build their own unique engineering pathways.

The core of the program is a design sequence with loose commonality across most of NAU’s engineering programs.  All students, regardless of emphasis, engage in contextualized engineering design and project management courses. This core is supported by foundational math, computer science, and physics coursework.  The design sequence also becomes the scaffolding for integrating and synthesizing coursework across several disciplines and content areas.

Students who do not select an emphasis area may work with either an advisor or a faculty mentor to select course work in the plan that supports their own personal engineering aspirations and interests. Students who get an MDE degree have many general engineering career opportunities.  This includes areas such as engineering sales, engineering management, engineering communication, or an engineering technician.

Students who select the Energy Engineering emphasis take specialized coursework in EE, ME, and ECO, which allows them to engage in engineering design problems related to energy capture and storage as well as energy policy and critical thinking.  This emphasis is intended to support students who are interested in working in the energy sector and especially at the intersection of mechanical and electrical engineering practice in this area.