Associate in Civil & Mechanical Engineering, AS-T Track 2/MRP
Washington , United States
Tuition Fee
Start Date
Medium of studying
Duration
Details
Program Details
Degree
Bachelors
Major
Aeronautical Engineering | Civil Engineering | Mechanical Engineering
Area of study
Engineering
Course Language
English
About Program
Program Overview
Associate in Civil & Mechanical Engineering, AS-T Track 2/MRP
The Associate in Science Transfer (AS-T) degree is designed to prepare civil and mechanical engineering majors for transfer to a four-year institution with junior standing.
Program Description
Civil and Mechanical Engineering graduates will:
- apply the skills and knowledge acquired through coursework to analyze issues, solve problems, and critically evaluate an issue or theory as applied to mechanical, civil, aeronautical, industrial, and materials science engineering
- use appropriate quantitative tools to solve scientific questions, represent data, and document scientific findings as applied to mechanical, civil, aeronautical, industrial, and materials science engineering
- demonstrate the knowledge acquired through coursework by effectively communicating to team members, the public, and members of the scientific community, using written, oral, and visual communication methods as applied to mechanical, civil, aeronautical, industrial, and materials science engineering
- safely and appropriately use standard laboratory or field equipment to make precise and reliable measurements as applied to mechanical, civil, aeronautical, industrial, and materials science engineering
- demonstrate understanding that science relies on evidence, and that scientific knowledge is tentative, open to revision, falsifiable and subject to constraints as applied to mechanical, civil, aeronautical, industrial, and materials science engineering
- demonstrate communication, critical thinking, cultural humility, information literacy, and teamwork skills
- meet Humanities, Natural Science, Quantitative Reasoning, Social Science, and Written Communication general education distribution area outcomes
Program Requirements
Required Course Sequence
- Quarter One
- ENGR 100 College Success in Engineering 3 credits (not required for degree, but may be needed as prerequisite for ENGR 110)
- MATH& 151 Calculus I 5 credits
- CHEM& 161 General Chemistry with Lab I 5 credits
- Quarter Two
- ENGR 110 Introduction to Engineering I: Modeling and Analysis 5 credits
- MATH& 152 Calculus II 5 credits
- CHEM& 162 General Chemistry with Lab II 5 credits
- PHYS& 221 Engineering Physics I with Lab 5 credits
- Quarter Three
- ENGR& 114 Engineering Graphics 5 credits
- MATH& 163 Calculus III 5 credits
- PHYS& 222 Engineering Physics II with Lab 5 credits
- ENGL& 101 English Composition I 5 credits
- Quarter Four
- ENGL& 235 Technical Writing 5 credits
- Social Science course 5 credits
- Quarter Five
- ENGR& 214 Statics 5 credits
- MATH& 264 Calculus IV 5 credits
- PHYS& 223 Engineering Physics III with Lab 5 credits
- ENGR& 224 Thermodynamics 5 credits
- Quarter Six
- ENGR& 225 Mechanics of Materials 5 credits
- MATH 238 Differential Equations 5 credits
- ENGR 240 Applied Numerical Methods 5 credits
- ECON& 201 Micro Economics 5 credits
- OR
- ECON& 202 Macro Economics 5 credits
- Quarter Seven
- ENGR& 215 Dynamics 5 credits
- Humanities course 5 credits
- MATH 230 Matrix Algebra with Applications 5 credits
Diversity and Social Justice Requirement
Within the degree requirements, students must complete a 3-5 credit course that meets the college’s Diversity and Social Justice (DSJ) requirement. DSJ courses are designed to meet other general education or technical requirements simultaneous to meeting the DSJ requirement.
Total Program Credits
Total Program Credits: 110
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