Title: Civil Engineering Undergraduate Program
1Civil Engineering Undergraduate Program
- An Overview
- https//www.engr.uky.edu/ce/students/undergraduate
/ - https//www.engr.uky.edu/ce/students/student-handb
ooks/ -
2CE Educational Objectives
2
- The program educational objectives for the civil
engineering program reflect the mission of the
Department of Civil Engineering. They are
important for successful professional practice
and the ability to pursue advanced degrees. The
Civil Engineering graduates from the University
of Kentucky will be prepared to - Use technical, teamwork, and communication
skills, along with leadership principles, to
pursue civil engineering careers in areas such as
structural, transportation, geotechnical,
materials, environmental, construction, and water
resources engineering, and/or other fields. - Pursue graduate degrees in civil engineering and
other fields. - Function ethically in their professional civil
engineering roles. - Pursue professional licensure.
- Engage in life-long learning by participating in
self-study, professional conferences, workshops,
seminars, or continuing education. - updated Jan 2011
3CE Vision and Mission
1
- All activities conducted by the Civil Engineering
Department are designed to fulfill its Vision and
Mission statements. These statements are listed
below - Vision Statement
- To be recognized nationally and internationally
for excellence in Civil Engineering education,
research and service. - Mission Statements
- To provide education, research, and service in a
scholarly environment for our constituents and
the citizens of the Commonwealth, the Nation, and
the World. - To prepare CE students for successful scholarly
endeavors. - To prepare CE students for successful
professional careers.
4CE Program Educational Outcomes
2
- (a) An ability to apply knowledge of mathematics,
science, and engineering. - (b) Ability to design and conduct experiments,
as well as to analyze and interpret data. - (c) An ability to design a system, component, or
process to meet desired needs within realistic
constraints such as economic, environmental,
social, political, ethical, health and safety,
manufacturability, and sustainability. - (d) An ability to function on multi-disciplinary
teams. - (e) An ability to identify, formulate, and solve
engineering problems. - (f) An understanding of professional and ethical
responsibility. - (g) An ability to communicate effectively.
- (h) The broad education necessary to understand
the impact of engineering solutions in a global,
economic, environmental, and societal context. - (i) A recognition of the need for, and an ability
to engage in life-long learning. - (j) A knowledge of contemporary issues.
- (k) An ability to use the techniques, skills, and
modern engineering tools necessary for
engineering practice.
5Faculty Responsibilities
13
- Provide syllabus that outlines course procedures,
administration and grading policies. - Student Learning Outcomes.
- Course content description if different from
University Bulletin. - Grading based on fair and just evaluation as
outlined in syllabus. - Letter grade mid-term evaluation before the last
day to withdraw 11.5 weeks into semester. - Homework, quizzes and exams based on covered
material and reading assignments.
6Student Responsibilities
13
- ASCE Code of Ethics (1/1/77)
- Strive to increase the competence and
prestige of the engineering profession by acting
in such a manner as to uphold and embrace the
honor, integrity, and dignity of the engineering
profession. - At a minimum, this means all work completed under
a persons name will be there own work. - Violations will be dealt will according to the
provisions in the Student Code. -
-
7Student Responsibilities
- For each class contact hour, you are expected to
spend 1.5 to 3 hours studying course material
outside of class. - Attendance is expected unless absence is excused.
- Class behavior is to be consistent with a
professional environment. - Homework is to be completed in the manner stated
by the instructor. - After studying the appropriate material,
students are encouraged to ask instructors or
teaching assistants for help if needed.
8University Course Numbering
26
- 001 099 Non-credit and/or non-degree
- 100 199 Freshman level
- 200 299 Sophomore level
- 300 399 Junior or senior classification
- 400 499 Junior or senior classification
graduate credit for non-majors only if letter G
appears after number - 500 599 Junior, senior, or graduate
classification - 600 799 Graduate classification or consent from
Deans of the College and the Graduate School - 800 999 Open only to professional students in
professional colleges except by permission of
the College Dean
9CE Course Numbering
- X0X GENERAL ENGINEERING/CONSTRUCTION
- X1X SURVEYING
- X2X CIVIL ENGINEERING SYSTEMS
- X3X TRANSPORTATION/TRANS. MATERIALS
- X4X FLUIDS/HYDRAULICS
- X5X ENVIRONMENTAL/WATER QUALITY
- X6X HYDROLOGY/WATER RESOURCES
- X7X GEOTECHNICAL
- X8X STRUCTURES/STRUCTURAL MATERIALS
- X9X INDEPENDENT STUDY/PROJECT/
EXPERIMENTAL COURSES
10BSCE Curriculum
27
- Flexibility is provided by elective courses as
follows - 6 UK Core electives (of 10 UK Core
classes) - 1 structures elective
- 1 supportive elective
- 1 engineering science elective (ME 220 or EM
313) - 1 math elective (MA 321, 322, 416G or 432G) or
- 1 science elective (BIO 208, CHE 230, CHE 236,
EE 305, GEO 409G, EES 430, GLY 560, MNG 551 or
other half of engineering science elective) - 1 technical elective (see handbook)
- 2 technical design electives (see handbook)
11BSCE Curriculum
- Electives may be chosen to allow concentration in
a CE sub-discipline. - Four-year curriculum is designed so that
prerequisites will have been completed in advance
of their need. - Normal curriculum requires 130 credit hours, 128
is the minimum required for a BSCE AP credit
hours count as part of the 130.
12CE Curriculum (Freshman)
28
Credit Credit
First Semester Hours Second Semester Hours
CE 120 - Intro to Civil Engrg 1 CE 106 - Computer Graphics/Comm 3
UKCore CC (WRD110-Comp and Comm I) 3 MA 114 - Calculus II 4
UKCore QR QF(MA 113 - Calculus I) 4 UKCore Physical (PHY 231 - Gen Univ Physics) 4
UKCore Arts Creativity 3 UKCore Physical (PHY 241 - Gen Univ Phy Lab) 1
UKCore Social Science 3 CHE 105 - Gen Coll Chem I 4
Semester Hours 14 Semester Hours 16
13CE Curriculum (Sophomore)
28
Credit Credit
First Semester Hours Second Semester Hours
CE 211 - Surveying 4 CS 221 - First Course in CS for Engrs 2
CHE 107 - Gen Coll Chem II 3 EM 302 - Mech of Deform Solids 3
EM 221 - Statics 3 MNG 303 - Deformable Solids Lab 1
MA 213 - Calculus III 4 MA 214 - Calculus IV 3
UKCore QR (STA 381 Intro Engg Stat) 3 PHY 232 - Gen Univ Physics 4
PHY 242 - Gen Univ Physics Lab 1
UKCore CC (WRD 111 - Comp and Comm II) 3
Semester Hours 17 Semester Hours 17
14CE Curriculum (Junior)
28
Credit Credit
First Semester Hours Second Semester Hours
CE 329 - Civil Engr Comm Teams 1 CE 331 - Transportation Engrg 3
CE 303 - Intro to Constr Engrg 3 CE 351 - Intro Envr Engrg 3
CE 341 - Fluid Mechanics 4 CE 382 - Structural Analysis 3
CE 381 - CE Materials 3 Engr Science Elective (1) 3
EES 220 - Physical Geology 4 Math or Science Elective (2) 3
Gen Ed Humanities 3
Semester Hours 15 Semester Hours 18
15CE Curriculum (Senior)
28
Credit Credit
First Semester Hours Second Semester Hours
CE 461G - Water Resources Engr 4 CE 401 - Seminar 1
CE 471G - Soil Mechanics 4 CE 429 - CE Systems Design 3
CE 48X - Structures Elective (3) 3 Design Elective (4) 3
Design Elective (4) 3 Technical Elective (5) 3
UKCore Citizenship US 3 Supportive Elective (7) 3
UKCore Citizenship Global Dynamics 3
Semester Hours 17 Semester Hours 16
16CE Curriculum
29
-
- Communication across the curriculum course
-
- (1) Engineering Science Elective
- ME 220 Thermodynamics or
- EM 313 Dynamics
- (2) Math or Science Elective Courses MA
321, MA 322, MA 416G, MA 432G, BIO 208, CHE 230,
CHE 236, EE 305, GEO 409G, EES 430, EES 560, MNG
551 or the other half of the engineering science
elective in (1) - (3) Structures elective CE 482 or CE 486G
-
17CE Curriculum
29
- (4) Students are required to select two design
electives from different areas. Chose from CE
508, CE 531 or CE 533, CE 534, CE 549, CE 551, CE
579, CE 589. Design elective courses are
typically taught once a year. - (5) Technical Elective is to be chosen from any
of the courses at the 300-level or above that
carry a CE prefix and in which a student is
qualified to enroll, exclusive of required
courses. Engineering elective courses are
typically taught once a year. - (6) Supportive elective Any course excluding
elementary versions of those required such as
pre-calculus math or PHY 211 and can be taken
Pass-Fail
18UK Core - General Education
55
- Designed to
- Broaden the students understanding of
themselves, of the world we live in, of their
role in our global society. - Help individuals effectively put into action
their acquired knowledge, to provide the bases
for critical thinking and problem solving, and to
develop life-long learning habits.
19UK Core - General Education
55
- Learning Outcomes
- Students will demonstrate an understanding of and
ability to employ the processes of intellectual
inquiry (12 hrs). - Students will demonstrate competent written,
oral, and visual communication skills both as
producers and consumers of information (6 hrs). - Students will demonstrate an understanding of and
ability to employ methods of quantitative
reasoning (6 hrs). - Students will demonstrate an understanding of the
complexities of citizenship and the process for
making informed choices as engaged citizens in a
diverse, multilingual world (6hrs).
20University Writing Requirement
31
- 1. WRD110 and WRD111
- or
- ACT 32, SAT 700, or 4-5 AP English Exam
- or
- Honors Colloquia
- Graduation Composition and Communication
Requirement (GCCR) (after 30 hours), choose from
approved list (department plan). -
21Admission to Civil Engineering
6
- 1st Level of Admission Pre-Engineering
- - Open to all engineering students (ACT Math
25, or equivalent) - - Calculus AP exam 3 or above
- - Placement (math exam) into MA 110
- - Pass (C or better) MA 110 or MA109
- Note Departmental transfers allowed
22Admission to Civil Engineering
6
- 2nd Level of Admission Engineering Standing
- - Application for admission is required
- - Prerequisite for all 300, 400 and 500 level
CE prefixed courses
23Admission to Dept. of CE
6
- Criteria
- Complete the following core courses with a GPA of
2.50 or higher - Writing WRD110, or
Honors Program, or equivalent - Chemistry CHE 105 and
CHE 107 - Physics Sequence PHY 231 and PHY 241
- Calculus Sequence MA 113, MA 114, and
MA 213 - CE Courses CE 120, CE 106,
and CE 211 - EM Course EM 221
- Earn a C or better in all core classes
- Complete a minimum or 45 semester credit hours
towards a CE Degree - If criteria are not met, a departmental review
may be requested provided the core GPA is not
less than 2.25.
24Departmental Review - Appeal
6
- A written statement must be provided by the
applicant that describes personal motivation,
work experiences, career plans, why a waiver is
deserved, etc. - Additional review materials
- Core GPA and UK GPA
- Repeated courses and grades
- EM 302 grade
- Currently enrolled classes and previous semester
courses and grades - Copy of curriculum sheet
25Departmental Review-Appeal
- Appeals committee will decide upon one of the
following options - Unconditional YES (Best outcome)
- Unconditional NO (Worst outcome)
- Conditional
- e.g. Must earn a semester GPA 2.75 on
full-time load of courses accepted by CE Degree
Program. - Must earn a C or better in specified
- courses _________________________
- Conditions _______________________
26Advising
7
- The Student Affairs Officer assigns and posts
student advisors. - Students should introduce themselves to advisor.
- If needed or desired, any student can request an
advisor change to the Student Affairs Officer. - Students are required to schedule an academic
advisor appointment during the advanced
registration periods. - Advisor hold can only be lifted by the Student
Affairs Officer and only after the student has
been advised.
27CE Faculty Members
8
- Construction Engineering and Management
Professors Tim Taylor, Gabe Dadi and Bill Maloney - Geotechnical Engineering Professors Mike
Kalinski and Sebastian Bryson - Environmental Engineering Professors Gail
Brion, Kelly Pennell and Y.T. (Ed) Wang - Hydraulic Water Resources Engineering
Professors James Fox, Lindell Ormsbee and Scott
Yost
28CE Faculty Members
8
- Materials Engineering Professors Kamyar Mahboub
and Jerry Rose - Structural Engineering Professors George
Blandford, Brad Davis, Hans Gesund, and Issam
Harik - Transportation Engineering Professors Mei Chen,
Reg Souleyrette and Nick Stamatiadis
29Degree Requirements (BSCE)
29
- Complete required CE curriculum
- Complete a minimum of 128 credit hours, exclusive
of college algebra, college trigonometry, etc.
(CE gtgt 130 credit hours) - Have a cumulative GPA ? 2.0
- Have a GPA ? 2.0 in CE courses, structural
elective, technical electives and technical
design elective - Be accepted into the Engineering Standing of the
CE program for at least the final semester
30Degree Requirements (BSCE)
29
- Earn a C or better in 300 level and lower CE
courses (1 D is allowed in 400 or 500 level
course) - Earn a C or better in EM 221 and EM 302
- Complete the University writing requirement
- Complete the UK Core requirements
- Have no delinquent financial obligations to the
University - 30 of last 36 credits must be earned as a student
at the University of Kentucky
31Awarding of Degree
- To be eligible for an undergraduate degree, a
student must file an electronic application with
the dean of the college from which the
undergraduate degree is to be awarded by November
30 for degrees to be awarded the following May,
by February 28 for degrees to be awarded the
following August, and by June 30 for degrees to
be awarded the following December. Students who
apply late, or who fail to apply at all, will not
graduate at the expected time.
32Employment
29
- Recommendation (University of Maryland study of
its engineering students)
Work Hours University Credit Hours
0-3 16-19
4-10 12-15
10-20 9-12
20-30 6-9
30-40 3-6
33Employment Sources
- College of Engineering Cooperative Education
Program Marsha Phillips, 287 RGAN, 257-8863,
phillips_at_engr.uky.edu - College of Engineering Career Services Ilka
Balk, 285 RGAN Building, 257-4178,
ibulk_at_engr.uky.edu - Computer Bulletin Board requires that you check
your engineering email account or have the mail
rerouted to the account you use! - Register with University Career Center in the
Stuckert Building (corner of Rose Street and Rose
Lane) - CE Department Bulletin Board
- Faculty, KTC
34Employment Sources
- Engineering Course Instructors
- Engineering Student Services
- Fellow students
- Local engineering consulting and governmental
agencies - Financial Aid Office, 131 Funkhouser Building
- Classified advertisements in local newspaper
- Telephone directory yellow pages
35Course Prerequisites
27
- Students cannot enroll in a course without having
satisfied all prerequisite requirements. - Students cannot enroll in a course without having
enrolled in or completed all concurrent
requirements. - Engineering Standing is a prerequisite for most
junior and senior level courses. - Students enrolled in a course without having
completed the prerequisites may be dropped by the
instructor or the department.
36CE Optional Concentration
43
- A BSCE is the only undergraduate degree awarded
in civil engineering. - However, the selection of CE elective courses
offer students the option of concentrating in a
particular interest area or sub-discipline of
Civil Engineering.
37CE Optional Concentration
43
- Construction Engineering
- Math/Science Elective MA 322
- Engineering Science Elective EM 313
- Structures Elective CE 482
- Technical Electives CE 509
- CE Technical Design Elective CE 508, CE 579
- Supportive Elective CE 507
38CE Optional Concentration
44
- Environmental/Water Quality Engineering
- Math/Science Elective CHE 236
- Engineering Science Elective ME 220
- Structures Elective CE 482
- Technical Electives CE 555
- CE Technical Design Elective CE 551, CE549
- Supportive Elective Environmental Engrg.
- Certificate
Class
39CE Optional Concentration
44
- Geotechnical Engineering
- Math/Science Elective MNG 551
- Engineering Science Elective EM 313
- Structures Elective CE 486G
- Technical Electives CE 487G
- CE Technical Design Elective CE579, CE589
- Supportive Elective CE 534
40CE Optional Concentration
44/46
- Hydraulic/Water Resources Engineering
- Math/Science Elective MA 321, MA 322, MA 432G,
EM313 - Engineering Science Elective ME 220
- Structures Elective CE 486G
- Technical Electives CE 541
- CE Technical Design Elective CE 549, CE551
- Supportive Elective another Math/Sci elective
41CE Optional Concentration
45
- Structural Engineering
- Math/Science Elective ME 220, MA 321, or MA 322
- Engineering Science Elective EM 313
- Structures Elective CE 486G
- Technical Electives CE487G
- CE Technical Design Elective CE589, CE579
- Supportive Elective CE 584, CE 586, ME 501, ME
513, or ME 532
42CE Optional Concentration
45
- Surveying
- Math/Science Elective GEO 409G (??)
- Engineering Science Elective EM 313
- Structures Elective CE 482
- Technical Electives CE 517
- CE Technical Design Elective Any for which you
qualify - Supportive Elective CE525, GEO 305, 415 or 420G
43CE Optional Concentration
45
- Transportation Engineering
- Math/Science Elective GEO 409G
- Engineering Science Elective EM 313
- Structures Elective CE 482
- Technical Electives CE525, CE 581, CE 539 or
other design elective - CE Technical Design Elective CE 531 or CE 533,
CE 534 - Supportive Elective GEO 285 or GEO 305
44Homework Assignment
- Curriculum Planning
- Plan your CE studies to complete a BSCE on a
spreadsheet provided by the instructor. - Plan to meet all prerequisites and technical
elective courses. - Include transferred courses that satisfy portions
of the CE Curriculum. - Remember, this planning may save a semester of
schoolwork, which could result in saved tuition
and professional income ? 30,000.