University of Michigan College of Engineering
The University of Michigan College of Engineering is the engineering school of the University of Michigan, a public research university in Ann Arbor, Michigan. It was founded in 1854.
History
The college was founded in 1854 with courses in civil engineering. Since its founding, the College of Engineering established some of the earliest programs in various fields such as data science, computer science, electrical engineering, and nuclear engineering. The college's aerospace engineering program celebrated its 100th anniversary in 2014. The Materials Science and Engineering program is the oldest continuing metallurgy and materials program in the United States. In 2021, it founded the first Robotics Department among the top 10 engineering schools in the United States.The college was first located on the University's Central Campus before moving to the University's North Campus — which occupies approximately 800 acres — starting in the late 1940s. Today, the College of Engineering is prominently located in the center of the University's North Campus, which is shared with the School of Music, Theatre and Dance, the School of Art and Design, and the Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning. The North Campus also houses Lurie Tower, one of 2 grand carillons on the Ann Arbor campus, and one of only 23 in the world.
Departments
The University of Michigan College of Engineering has the following academic departments:- Department of Aerospace Engineering
- Department of Biomedical Engineering
- Department of Chemical Engineering
- Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering
- Department of Climate and Space Sciences and Engineering
- Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
- * Computer Science and Engineering Division
- * Electrical and Computer Engineering Division
- Department of Industrial and Operations Engineering
- Department of Materials Science and Engineering
- Department of Mechanical Engineering
- Department of Naval Architecture and Marine Engineering
- Department of Nuclear Engineering and Radiological Sciences
- Department of Robotics
Academic programs
The college grants degrees at bachelor's, master's, and PhD levels. The undergraduate degree programs offered by the College of Engineering are:- Aerospace Engineering
- Biomedical Engineering
- Chemical Engineering
- Civil Engineering
- Climate and Meteorology
- Computer Engineering
- Computer Science
- Data Science
- Electrical Engineering
- Engineering Physics
- Environmental Engineering
- Industrial and Operations Engineering
- Materials Science and Engineering
- Mechanical Engineering
- Naval Architecture and Marine Engineering
- Nuclear Engineering and Radiological Sciences
- Robotics
- Space Science and Engineering
- Applied Physics
- Engineering Education Research
- Macromolecular Science & Engineering
- Tauber Institute for Global Operations
- Transportation Research Institute
Laboratories and facilities
Various laboratories are located at the college of engineering, including the Center for Wireless Integrated MicroSystems (WIMS) and the Center for Reconfigurable Manufacturing Systems, both of which are NSF laboratories. Another major laboratory is the Center for Ultra-Fast Optical Sciences. The Phoenix Memorial Laboratory is a laboratory dedicated to research into the peaceful use of nuclear technology. It once housed the Ford Nuclear Reactor, which was decommissioned in 2003.The College of Engineering also has 11 wind tunnels, electron microscope and ion beam laboratories, a civil engineering test facility, and solid state manufacturing facilities. Various laboratories dedicated to automotive engineering, neutron science, optical sciences, and robotics are scattered throughout the college. A hydrodynamics laboratory is located on the University's Central Campus. An office of the Weather Underground is located at the College of Engineering.
The Duderstadt Center, formerly the Media Union and affectionately known as "The Dude" by engineering students, is named after former University president and nuclear engineering professor James Duderstadt. It houses the Art, Architecture & Engineering Library and also contains computer clusters, audio and video editing laboratories, galleries, and studios, as well as usability and various digital media laboratories, including virtual reality. The Millennium Project, which focuses on the future of the university learning environment, is also housed in the Duderstadt Center.
Computer services and networking is provided by the Computer-Aided Engineering Network, more commonly known as CAEN. CAEN operates various computer laboratories throughout the College of Engineering facilities and the university campus.
The University of Michigan, partnering with the Michigan Department of Transportation, opened a 32-acre proving ground test course for autonomous cars in 2015. The course, called Mcity, was built on the site of a former Pfizer facility, which the University purchased in 2009. Mcity contains five miles of roads and includes a mock town square, tunnel, highway exit ramps, a railroad crossing, gravel roadway, traffic circle, roundabout, and other obstacles. Faculty and engineering students utilize Mcity to work on projects and collaborate with automakers and suppliers who test vehicle technology at the course.
In 2019 professors Elliot Soloway and Cathie Norris founded the University of Michigan Center for Digital Curricula under the auspices of the University of Michigan College of Engineering for the purposes of building fully digital open curricula. This curricula is primarily designed to be delivered using the Collabrify Roadmaps software platform developed by the Norris and Soloway in the mid 2010s.
Rankings
The College of Engineering is ranked No. 7 in the United States by U.S. News & World Report in its 2021 publication.Honor Code
College of Engineering's student Honor Code differs from other University of Michigan academic units in that it allows unproctored exams.Student organizations
There are student branches of various professional organizations such as AIAA, IEEE and ASME, minority groups such as SWE, NSBE and oStem as well as honor societies such as Tau Beta Pi and Epeians, the Engineering Leadership Honor Society at Michigan. Most are housed in Pierpont Commons or in "The Bullpen" in the Electrical Engineering and Computer Science building. Engineering Student Government, represents the student body of the College of Engineering, also has an office in the EECS building.Many multidisciplinary engineering project teams are primarily housed in the Wilson Student Project Center. Several major project teams include:
- University of Michigan Electric Boat
- Michigan Health Engineered for All Lives
- BLUELab
- Baja SAE Team
- Concrete Canoe
- MRacing Team - Formula SAE
- Michigan Electric Racing Team
- Michigan Mars Rover Team
- Michigan Robotic Submarine
- Steel Bridge
- Engineering Global Leadership Honors Program
- University of Michigan Solar Car Team
- Michigan Aeronautical Science Association
- University of Michigan Supermileage Team - Shell Eco-Marathon
- MFly
- UM::Autonomy
- Human Powered Submarine
- Human Powered Helicopter
Recurring events
Tech Day is an event held by the college each fall inviting prospective high school students and their parents, as well as prospective college transfer students, to explore Michigan Engineering.The SWE/TBP Career Fair is an engineering career fair held each fall as a collaboration between the University of Michigan Student Section of the Society of Women Engineers and the Michigan Gamma chapter of Tau Beta Pi. The event began in 1986 and has grown to be one of the largest student-run career fairs in the country, hosting nearly 300 companies each year.
The Engineering Research Symposium is a one-day event that began in 2006 and features student research from the undergraduate through PhD levels, including poster presentations, scientific visualizations, and dissertation work in department-nominated oral and poster presentations.