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Master
of Engineering
Admission
Requirements
Completion
of an undergraduate degree in Nuclear Engineering or
in another related
engineering or science discipline is required for admission
to the M.Eng. degree program in
Nuclear Engineering. Students should have at least a 3.00
(4.00 base) junior-senior average
to be considered for admission.
Provisional
Admission
Provisional
admission is a temporary classification in which an applicant
may remain
for a period of no longer than 2 semesters following admission
or the time it takes to accrue
15 credits, whichever comes first. If the deficiencies
that caused the provisional admission
are not corrected by this time, the student may be dropped
from the program.
Examinations
for Admission
Test
of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). To qualify for
admission, an
international student must achieve a minimum TOEFL score
of 550 on the paper-based test,
and a minimum score of 213 on the computer-based test.
This requirement is waived if the
student's native tongue is English or if the student received
baccalaureate or master's degrees
from an institution in which the language of instruction
was English.
Graduate Record Examination (GRE). All students must submit
scores on the general
aptitude tests of the GRE prior to admission consideration.
Program
Requirements
Each
of the following requirements must be met in order for
a student to be approved
for graduation:
1)
A minimum of 30 graduate credits must be earned. Only grades
of A, B, and
C are accepted for graduate credit.
2)
A minimum grade point average (GPA) of 3.00 is required,
not counting
grades obtained in NucE 597C, Professional Topics in
Engineering.
3)
At least twelve (12) 400- or 500-level course credits must
be taken as NucE
courses.
4)
At least twelve (12) of the 30 required credits must be
in 500-level courses. This includes NucE 597C as well as
any 500-level NucE courses taken to
satisfy requirement #3 above. At least six credits must be NucE 500-level
courses.
5)
Specific course requirements
a) NucE
301, 302, 403, 450 or their equivalent. Students with
an undergraduate or graduate degree in Nuclear Engineering
will usually have completed the equivalent of NucE 301,
302, and 450. Some students may have the equivalent of
NucE 403. You need to review this with your advisor.
Students whose baccalaureate degree is not in nuclear
engineering have two ways of fulfilling the undergraduate
requirement. If they enter in the Summer Session, they
take NucE 297A/497A, a four-credit reactor theory course,
which is considered an acceptable substitute for NucE
301 and 302. The student can then proceed to NucE 403
in the Fall Semester. It is recommended that students
who have not had reactor theory follow this path. If
the student enters in the Fall Semester, NucE 301 must
be taken in the Fall Semester and NucE 302 in the Spring
Semester. Courses below the 400 level do not count toward
the graduate program. The intention in the NucE 450 requirement
is to make sure the entering student has had an adequate
laboratory experience in (at least) radiation detection
and measurement.
b) The
NucE 597X courses are allowed to fulfill part of the
graduate degree requirements. These typically are regular
Nuclear Engineering classes which are being taught on
an experimental basis (and thus have no official course
number). This requires special approval by the Nuclear
Engineering Graduate Faculty, for which a petition must
be submitted.
c) NucE
596 and NucE 496 (Individual Studies) courses can be
used in special circumstances to fulfill part of the
graduate degree requirements. This requires special approval
by the Nuclear Engineering Graduate Faculty, for which
a petition must be submitted. The petition must state
clearly:
• the
rationale for taking the Individual Studies course, rather
than regular courses,
• the
program of study defining the content of the course and
the work to be performed by the student in taking the
course, and
• the
grading criteria whereby the student’s work will
be assessed.
The
petition must be submitted by the end of the first week
of class of the semester in which the course is to be
taught. The graduate faculty will evaluate the petition
and render a decision by the second week of classes.
If the course is approved, the faculty member must document
the student’s work and the grading in the student’s
file.
No
more than six (6) total credits of NucE 496 and NucE
596 courses may be applied toward the graduate degree.
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