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Encyclopedia > Electrical engineer

An engineer's degree is an academic degree which is intermediate in rank between a master's degree and a doctorate; it is occasionally to be encountered in the United States in technical fields. (Not all universities with engineering and technical departments award them, however.)


The requirements differ considerably, depending on which university awarded the degree, but they are usually awarded for completion of a postgraduate course of one or two years in duration longer than the normal master's degree. A thesis of a quality higher than that acceptable for a master's degree is also generally required, although it usually does not have to be about original research, as would be required for a doctoral dissertation; there is often no thesis defense either.


Unlike the master's degree, which is standard step for those who are on the way to a doctorate, for those who get an engineer's degree it is usually their final academic degree; it is usually used for higher qualification employment, and not as a prelude to doctoral studies.


Note: A degree with some form of "engineer" in the name is not necessarily an Engineer's degree. For instance, a "Bachelor's in Electrical Engineering" (B.S.E.E.) is not an Engineer's degree; similarly with the "Master's in Biomedical Engineering" (M.S.Bm.E.), which is also not an Engineer's degree.


Engineer's degree abbreviations

The following list gives the most common ones:

  • Civil Engineer - C.E.
  • Electrical Engineer - E.E.
  • Engineer in Aeronautics and Astronautics - E.A.A.
  • Engineer in Computer Science - E.C.S.
  • Environmental Engineer - Env.E.
  • Materials Engineer - Mat.E.
  • Mechanical Engineer - Mech.E.
  • Naval Engineer - Nav.E.
  • Nuclear Engineer - Nucl.E.
  • Ocean Engineer - Ocean E.

Engineer's degrees in Europe

In countries the higher technical education of which has been touched by German influence, universities specialized in technical studies award their students an Engineer's degree instead of a Master's degree. In addition to [Germany], these countries include states like the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Sweden, Finland and Belgium. The degree of Engineer may be the first one received (after five years of study), or more often it follows a Bachelor's degree (usually three years for Bachelor's plus two years for Engineer's). In local language, the degree is called "inžinier" (Slovak) or "inženýr" (Czech), the abbreviation is "Ing." and is written before the person's name. In German the degree is Diplomingenieur and in Finnish, diplomi-insinööri, abbr. DI. The word diplom refers to the thesis written at the end of the studies. In Belgium the degree is Burgerlijk Ingenieur (abbrev. "Ir.") and in Sweden the degree is Civilingenjör (both regardless of the actual specialty). This retains the 19th century idea that the "actual" engineers were the military ones.


German-style Engineer's degree is considered equivalent to a MSc. degree in U.S. or U.K. and in international context, the holders of the Engineer's degree are authorized to use degree MSc. However, there has been some depate over whether the Engineers should differentiate themselves from Masters of Science, this degree having become victim of inflation lately. It might be argued that the because the European high school curriculum covers the topics of the typical U.S. freshman year, the five-year-long Engineer's degree is actually complete equivalent of the U.S. degree.


External links

  • Electrical Engineer program (http://www.engineering.usu.edu/ece/academics/ee.php) at the Utah State University
  • Engineer's degrees at MIT (http://web.mit.edu/gso/gpp/degrees/masters.html#8)
  • Electrical engineering and computer science degree program (http://www.eecs.mit.edu/grad/degrees.html) at MIT (includes Engineer's degrees)
  • Electrical Engineer program (http://web.nps.navy.mil/~fargues/eceHandbook/engineer/engineerDescription.htm) at the Naval Postgraduate School

  Results from FactBites:
 
Electrical engineering - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (3493 words)
Electrical engineering (sometimes referred to as electrical and electronics engineering) is a professional engineering discipline that deals with the study and application of electricity, electronics and electromagnetism.
Electricity has been a subject of scientific interest since at least the 17th century, but it was not until the 19th century that research into the subject started to intensify.
Electrical engineers may be found in the pristine lab environment of a fabrication plant, the offices of a consulting firm or on site at a mine.
Electrical engineering - definition of Electrical engineering in Encyclopedia (1364 words)
Electrical engineering is an engineering discipline that deals with the study and application of electricity and electromagnetism.
In the subfield of electronics, electrical engineers design and test electrical networks (more commonly known as circuits) that take advantage of electromagnetic properties of electrical components or discretes/elements (such as resistors, capacitors, inductors, transistors, diodes, semiconductors) to achieve the desired functionality.
The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) and the Institute of Electrical Engineers (IEE) are prominent non-profit organizations for electrical engineers that publish standards, publications and periodicals and organise conferences and workshops.
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