In the College of Engineering .
Engineering Advising
167 Olin Hall, (607) 255-7414, www.engineering.cornell.edu/advising
Engineering Advising implements the academic policies of the College Curriculum Governing Board (CCGB). The Advising staff provides a variety of advising services and programs to assist students in achieving their undergraduate academic and personal goals. Engineering Advising and CCGB evaluates good academic standing for unaffiliated students at the end of each semester and supports students through the affiliation process during sophomore year.
Engineering Advising staff responsibilities include:
- Supplementing advising provided by faculty advisors and departments;
- Focusing on first- and second-year students, with continued access for upper-class students;
- Focusing primarily on issues related to the Engineering Common Curriculum and successfully affiliating with a major;
- Providing specialty advising for:
- study abroad/international experiences;
- pre-health careers and how to integrate requirements into curriculum;
- transferring internally (between colleges) within Cornell;
- student disability services;
- major exploration including independent major and the affiliation process;
- voluntary, required, and health leaves;
- minors, double majors;
- transfer credit, petitions, curricular substitutions.
- Coordinating the Early Intervention program; supporting students having academic or personal difficulties and referring students to appropriate campus resources;
- Providing case management for students who are in need of academic consideration and/or in distress.
Engineering Registrar
158 Olin Hall, (607) 255-7140, www.engineering.cornell.edu/registrar
The Engineering Registrar’s Office is the main repository of all engineering undergraduate and Master of Engineering student records. The Registrar’s Office oversees all course enrollment, grading, course scheduling, room assignments, and examination scheduling for the College of Engineering. It is responsible for maintaining current student information on the university’s student data systems, including all grade, enrollment, affiliation and transfer credit changes. Additionally, the office manages diploma ordering and official degree posting for all graduating engineering students, ensuring that all requirements are satisfied for the Bachelor of Science degree and the Master of Engineering degree. The office also provides student verification letters, Dean’s List posting, petition processing, and assistance with other student registration issues. Official documents relating to academic matters are filed as part of each student’s permanent record and held there.
Students who need an official transcript or certification of enrollment should visit the Office of the University Registrar, registrar.sas.cornell.edu, located in B07 Day Hall.
Engineering Communications Program
424 Hollister Hall, (607) 255-8558, www.engineering.cornell.edu/ECP
The Engineering Communications Program (ECP) provides instruction in technical and non-technical communication, oral presentation, the use of visuals, and group and/or team interaction.
ECP believes that communication is an important way of acting in the world. And, because that world is constantly changing, professionals in engineering must be prepared throughout their career to learn how to communicate. Consequently, the most important objective of the Engineering Communications Program (ECP) is to enable undergraduate engineering students to develop strategies for learning to learn how to act effectively and efficiently as communicators.
Enrollment in ECP courses is typically 20-30 students per section. Courses taught by the ECP are discussion classes. Students’ work and participation receives abundant response, and conferences are frequent.
ECP members are available to consult with the faculty teaching writing-intensive technical courses and anyone else interested in including communication instruction in their courses. They oversee the communications component of the Writing-Intensive Co-op and occasionally give talks to alumni and student groups.
Diversity Programs in Engineering
146 Olin Hall, (607) 255-6403, dpeng@cornell.edu, www.engineering.cornell.edu/diversity
The Diversity Programs in Engineering (DPE) office operates programs at the precollege, undergraduate, graduate, and faculty levels to facilitate the outreach, recruitment, retention, and overall success of all members of our community, but especially women, first generation college students, and others identifying with backgrounds traditionally underrepresented in Engineering. The DPE office is responsible for fostering a vision of inclusion and diversity appreciation reflective of the College of Engineering’s strategic plan, which help enables students from all backgrounds and cultures to thrive and succeed at Cornell. The DPE office provides an institutionalized approach for meeting the needs of students by providing community, academic, professional, and personal development opportunities that support overall student success. Additionally, the DPE office works collaboratively with university partners to administer graduate fellowships, undergraduate research opportunities, high school outreach programs, as well as several mentoring initiatives. The DPE office also supports and advises/co-advises the following engineering student organizations: American Indian Science and Engineering Society, National Society of Black Engineers, Out in Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics, Society of Asian Scientists and Engineers, Society of Hispanic Professional Engineers, and the Society of Women Engineers.
Engineering Learning Initiatives
167 Olin Hall, (607) 255-9622, www.engineering.cornell.edu/learning
The office of Engineering Learning Initiatives (ELI) offers programs designed to enhance the undergraduate academic experience through peer education, collaborative learning, research support, and teaching assistant development.
Academic Excellence Workshops (AEWs), offered through ELI, are taken in conjunction with core engineering courses including math, computer science, statistics and chemistry. The 1-credit AEWs are weekly two-hour collaborative problem-solving sessions. Designed to enhance student understanding, they feature peer-facilitated group work on problems at or above the level of course material.
Undergraduate Research Grants, offered through ELI, facilitate opportunities for students to obtain hands-on research experience with a faculty mentor. Students and faculty may apply for funding to cover student wages and expense costs for the fall, spring, and summer terms.
Tutors-on-Call, offered through ELI, provides one-on-one peer tutoring free of charge for engineering students in many first- and second-year core courses, including math, chemistry, physics, computer science, and statistics courses.
Engineering Teaching Assistant Development Program, provides training sessions, development resources, and a midterm evaluation process for both graduate and undergraduate teaching assistants in the College of Engineering.
Engineering Cooperative Education and Career Services
201 Carpenter Hall, (607) 255-5006, www.engineering.cornell.edu/careerservices
This office assists engineering students (first-year through Ph.D.) on issues related to career development and job search via individual advising and group seminars. It also administers the Engineering Cooperative Education Program. Each year, more than 200 national employers visit the office to recruit technical interns and graduates; additional job opportunities are posted on Cornell’s electronic job posting service. Undergraduate and graduate students can use these resources to pursue permanent, summer, or co-op employment.
The Engineering Cooperative Education Program (Co-op) provides an opportunity for undergraduates to gain practical experience in engineering-related organizations before they graduate. By supplementing course work with carefully monitored, paid positions, Co-op students can explore their own interests and acquire a better understanding of engineering as a profession—and still graduate in four years.
To be eligible, a student must have been enrolled in the College of Engineering an equivalent of five semesters before starting the first work term. (Exceptions may be made for transfer students and others pursuing an accelerated curriculum.) Students majoring in computer science or biological engineering, but not registered in the College of Engineering, are also eligible. In most cases, a GPA ≥ 2.7 is required. Applicants interview with participating employers in February of the sophomore year. Those who receive offers and join the program usually complete their fifth-semester course work on campus during the summer after sophomore year and begin the first Co-op work term the following fall. They complete the sixth semester on campus with their classmates and then return to their Co-op employer (but not necessarily to the same department or location) the following summer to complete a second work term. Students then spend the senior year on campus, graduating on schedule with their class. Students who have flexible course curriculums may prefer to complete one 28-week spring/summer or summer/fall Co-op work term during the junior year.
Engineering Leadership Program
156 Olin Hall, (607) 255-9074, http://www.engineering.cornell.edu/resources/leadership_program
Cornell engineering students use their technical skills to define problems and devise solutions. To manifest the potential of their technical training, engineers must know how to lead others. Inventing and executing on innovations requires teamwork. The most successful engineers pair their technical excellence with the ability to communicate a vision, motivate people to act, and guide and coordinate others’ efforts.
Our mission is to grow powerful leaders who take on our world’s biggest challenges with knowledge, skill, insight and courage. We achieve this through experiential seminars offered to all, stand-alone courses, leadership content integrated with existing engineering classes, the Engineering Leadership Certificate Program, and individual and team coaching. Because we believe great leadership development engages the heart and the mind, we emphasize empirically derived knowledge combined with personal inquiry and growth.
Cornell Engineering Leaders stand for integrity, curiosity, self-awareness, responsibility for impact, compassion, growth, and determination.
Team Projects in Engineering
www.engineering.cornell.edu/teams
The College of Engineering’s student project teams are unsurpassed in terms of the range of experiences available to students and the success that the teams have enjoyed. Our student project teams bring together people whose collective experiences, perspectives, and creativity provide the foundation for solving problems that leave even the most astute individuals perplexed.
The success of our teams springs not only from the sound engineering principles they use but also from the diversity the teams bring to bear on the problems they encounter. Teams generally have members from several different majors, not only in engineering but across the campus.
There are numerous and varied teams, ranging from those focused on engineering-based group service projects that offer real-life engineering research and design experience; to those that develop prototypes to compete in international, professional society organized events. Student participants are recognized of their achievements by awards and accolades, while developing professional skills that enhance their career opportunities.
Check out the various teams on the web page listed above.
Engineering Teaching Excellence Institute
167 Olin Hall, (607) 254-6514, www.engineering.cornell.edu/academics/teaching/teaching_excellence/
The College of Engineering is committed to providing an outstanding education for its students. In support of this mission, Engineering’s James McCormick Family Teaching Excellence Institute (MTEI) collaborates with faculty in developing innovative and effective teaching methods and in improving course design, supports faculty efforts in engineering education research, and assists faculty with the education or outreach components of grant proposals. MTEI plays a lead role in classroom redesign, innovation and support.
MTEI gives workshops and provides individual support to faculty on all aspects of education, including development of course syllabi, the use of technology in the classroom, active learning, learning styles, and assessment of student learning.
The MTEI collaborates with the university’s Center for Teaching Excellence on various events throughout the year.
International Programs
An international perspective, sensitivity to other cultures, and the ability to read and speak a second language are increasingly important for today’s engineers. The College of Engineering encourages students to study or work abroad during their undergraduate years. Currently, the college has exchange agreements with the University of Cantabria, Spain; Hong Kong University of Science and Technology; and with Technion- Israel Institute of Technology. Students may also apply to and participate in study abroad programs through Cornell Abroad. Visit www.engineering.cornell.edu/studyabroad and Engineering Advising, 167 Olin Hall, for the latest information. In addition, the college is working on developing international Co-op and internship work experiences. For information, visit the Engineering Cooperative Education and Career Services Office, 201 Carpenter Hall.
Cooperative Program with the Johnson Graduate School of Management
Undergraduates may be interested in a cooperative program at Cornell that leads to both master of engineering and master of business administration (M.B.A.) degrees. See Master of Engineering Degrees for details.
Lester Knight Scholarship Program
The Lester Knight Scholarship Program is designed to assist and encourage Cornell Engineering students and alumni interested in combining their engineering graduate education with a business degree. See www.engineering.cornell.edu/student-services/rgs/financial-aid/knightscholarship.cfm.
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