Electrical Engineering at Iowa State University
Iowa States electrical engineering program, one of the nations oldest, was ABET accredited in 1936. It is offered by the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering (ECpE), which is the largest academic department at Iowa State and one of the largest such departments in the United States.
Will you be lost in a big department? Not at all! The ECpE department encourages a close, scholarly interaction between students and faculty inside and outside of class. Staff advisors in the departments Student Services Office work closely with students to meet their every academic need and keep them on track toward a timely graduation.
In fact, size is a major advantage in electrical engineering. The diverse interests and expertise of our faculty members give students the opportunity to study in a broad range of areas within the field. Once you begin to focus on an area in electrical engineering, you will find a small-school atmosphere with a group of students working in the same interest area. These interest areas are
- communications and signal processing
- electric power and energy systems
- microelectronics and photonics
- nondestructive evaluation
- systems and controls
- Very Large Scale Integrated circuits (VLSI)
- electromagnetics and microwave engineering
Top-Notch Faculty
Our faculty are dedicated to the principle that providing an excellent education to our students is the fundamental mission of the department. They have varied technical backgrounds and interests, are nationally recognized for their teaching and research, and maintain active research programs that help bring the newest concepts into the classroom. Several of our faculty are associated with on-campus research centers in microelectronics, nondestructive evaluation, and virtual reality. Many ECpE faculty have authored textbooks used throughout the world, and most have experience in industry.
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World-Class Facilities
Coover Hall, the Durham Center, and the Microelectronics Research Center house most of the faculty, classrooms, and laboratory facilities of the department. The department has state-of-the-art computer facilities, including 400 PCs, Macs, and workstations. Laboratories for hands-on learning, include the following:
- systems and controls learning lab
- electronics lab
- circuits and instrumentation lab
- power systems computational lab
- power electronics lab
- communications and signal processing lab
- analog and mixed-signal VLSI design lab
- electromagnetics and microwave lab
The department also has Iowa States first Active Learning Complex, an exciting new space designed specifically for students to work together on group projects outside of class. The room is equipped with wireless infrared keyboards, electronic white boards, large-screen computers, and other high-tech equipment to facilitate group interaction and learning.
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Endless Opportunities
Today, engineering education is comprised of more than just the traditional classroom and laboratory experience.
- Students are encouraged to participate in engineering internships or co-ops (cooperative education programs). The department offers a five-year co-op program that combines classroom learning with on-the-job experience in industry. As a co-op student, you complete the requirements for a B.S. degree, but also have 12 to 16 months of work experience when you graduate. Monthly salaries for electrical engineering interns and co-op students range from $2,208 to $2,333*, allowing you to earn part of your college expenses.
- Extracurricular activities that blend friendship, learning, and leadership are also part of your engineering education. The student chapter of the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers (IEEE) presents speakers from companies like Motorola and Hewlett Packard, offers tours of manufacturing plants, and creates and staffs displays for VEISHEA and other events. ECpE students have also designed and built two robots, Cybot and Oscar, which they exhibit and use in demonstrations. Electrical engineering students on Iowa States solar car team have gained practical experience designing and building the cars electrical components like the lights, driver instrumentation, sensors, and telemetry system. In addition, eligible students can participate in the electrical and computer engineering honorary, Eta Kappa Nu; the engineering honorary Tau Beta Pi; and the Honors Program.
- International study can give engineering students an edge in todays global markets. Electrical engineering students can study in Germany, Mexico, Norway, Scotland, and many other countries. Electrical engineering students have also participated in the solar car teams exchange program with the solar car team at the University of New South Wales in Australia.
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Scholarships
The support of more than 200 individuals and corporations maintains an engineering scholarship endowment of nearly $9 million. From these and other funds, the college awards more than 900 scholarships totaling more than $1.3 million each year. In addition, engineering students compete well for scholarships available to all Iowa State students.
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Employment Outlook
Engineering is a career path that works! More than 3 million engineers work in the U.S. today, making engineering the nations second-largest profession. According to the U.S. Department of Labor, the job market is predicted to remain strong well into the millennium. The average starting salary for an electrical engineering graduate is more than $45,000. Additionally, starting salaries are expected to increase about six percent a year.
Electrical engineering graduates are in great demand. Nearly all students with engineering-related work experience have jobs by graduation. For example:
- 95% of co-op students are placed by graduation
- 85% of interns are placed by graduation
- 79% of graduates with summer work experience are
placed by graduation
Some 7,500 students have graduated from ECpE and have gone on to enjoy successful and lucrative careers across the country and throughout the world. Our alumni have served as CEOs, presidents, and vice presidents of top industrial companies like Texas Instruments, Tellabs, IBM, and Silicon Graphics.
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To explore how you might fit in electrical engineering, contact:
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
2215 Coover Hall
Iowa State University
Ames, IA 50011-3060
(515) 294-2663
www.ee.iastate.edu
* All statistics are based on surveys conducted in spring 1999.
Go to Electrical and Computer Engineering web.
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