Apr 19, 2024  
2006-2007 Graduate Catalog 
    
2006-2007 Graduate Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Industrial and Engineering Technology


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Ellensburg
Hogue 107

(509) 963-1756
Fax: (509) 963-1795
http://www.cwu.edu/~iet
See Web site for how these programs could be used for educational and career purposes.

Faculty and Staff
Chair

William Bender

Professors
William Bender, Ph.D., construction management
David Carns, M.S., construction management
T.Q. Yang, Ph.D.,,electronics (Pierce)
Tim Yoxtheimer, MSEE, electronics

Associate Professors
Craig Johnson, Ph.D., mechanical engineering technology
Lad Holden, M.S., electronics
Assistant Professors
Brantley Bain, M.S., construction management
Scott Calahan, M.A., industrial education
Mitch Leary, M.S., safety and health management
David Leo Lickteig, Ph.D., construction management

New positions to be filled by fall quarter, 2006:
CMGT Professor  (TBA)
CMGT Professor (TBA)
MET Professor (TBA)
SHM Professor (TBA)

Emeritus Professors
G.W. Beed
D. Ken Calhoun
Ronald Hales
Robert Wieking
Lecturers:
Dave Borkowski, B.S., safety and health management
William Cattin, M.S., industrial technology
Juan Robertson, Ph.D., MSET (Des Moines)

Staff
Susan Van de Venter, secretary

 

Program Objectives and Description
 

The industrial and engineering technology (IET) department offers a Master of Science degree in engineering technology (MSET) having the specific purpose of broadening the technological background of persons holding Bachelor of Science degrees in the engineering technologies (ET), industrial technologies (IT) and similar or related degrees. The B.S. degree programs provide the graduate with hands-on, practical knowledge which can be immediately utilized in industry. However, technology is advancing so rapidly that it is necessary to expose the engineering technologist to some of the latest advances, that is, to update their knowledge base. Corporate downsizing, global market pressures and rapidly expanding technology require a new type of engineering technologist, one that can function comfortably on a changing career path. This requirement produces the need of the technologist to be a lifelong learner. The tools for life long learning and research are the crux of the MSET program. The MSET program is multidisciplinary, giving the graduate student sufficient choices to fit diverse needs.

Admission Requirements


Incoming students are expected to meet all of the requirements of the graduate school, have a solid background in science and mathematics, and show evidence of scholarship. All students entering the MSET program are expected to have a background equivalent to that required for the Bachelor of Science degree in the engineering technologies at CWU. This requires that the candidate have a bachelor’s degree from a recognized institution and have at least two quarters of calculus and three quarters of a combination of general physics and chemistry. If English is a secondary language, students must score 550 or more on the TOEFL examination. Deficiencies in the student’s undergraduate training as determined by the IET department at the time of matriculation must be removed without graduate credit during the first year of graduate study. Transfer students will be considered using the same criteria, with consideration for equivalent graduate course work completed elsewhere.

Application Deadlines and Supporting Materials


Applications and all supporting materials are due by April 1 for fall quarter entrance. Applications will include a statement of background and reason for wishing enrollment into the MSET program, official transcripts, and three letters of recommendation. The applicant must have maintained at least a 3.0 GPA in all course work attempted during the last 90 quarter hours (60 semester hours) of study. Students having a GPA of less than 3.0 may be admitted conditionally at the discretion of the associate vice president of graduate studies, research and continuing education.

Program Requirements


The IET department offers a master’s degree that requires a minimum of 45 credit hours of graduate study and a thesis. A total of 30 credit hours of required coursework is required of all students. The student is then required to select at least 15 credit hours from a list of technical electives which will then total 45 credit hours. The student must take at least 25 credit hours of course work at the 500 level. Only nine quarter credit hours may be transferred before being admitted into the master’s program. Candidates must pass a final oral examination on their thesis project and supporting coursework, given by a thesis committee consisting of the thesis advisor and two other faculty. Normal completion of the MSET will require two academic years of full-time study. The student that is enrolled on a part-time basis will require more than two academic years, the total time required will be a function of course load.

Graduate Committee


The student must have a three member graduate committee, selected in consultation with the advisor. Two members must be from the IET department.

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