Brown University School of Engineering

Brown University School of Engineering
Established 1847 (first in Ivy League, third oldest civilian engineering program in U.S.)
Dean Lawrence E. Larson
Academic staff
50 full-time tenure-track faculty
Students

400 Undergraduate

150 Graduate
Location Providence, Rhode Island, United States
Degrees Offered Sc.B., A.B., Sc.B and A.B., 5-year Sc.B/Sc.M, Sc.M., Sc.M.I.M., Ph.D.
Website brown.edu/academics/engineering

The Brown University School of Engineering is the engineering school at Brown University, a private Ivy League research university located in Providence, Rhode Island. The school offers both graduate and undergraduate study in the field. Undergraduate students may declare their major in engineering as late as the end of their sophomore year.

History

The oldest undergraduate engineering program in the Ivy League, Brown's first course specifically in engineering was offered in 1847. It was a professional engineering program called, “English and Scientific Course,” and was a one or two-year program and included courses in mechanics, geometry, surveying, navigation, mensuration of heights and distances, chemistry and trigonometry. In 1850, the civil engineering curriculum was inaugurated as a focused one and a half year program. During the late 19th century, engineering instructional laboratories were held in University Hall, Sayles Hall and Wilson Hall. Engineering then moved to a new site over the heating station in the rear of the Chemical Laboratory (renamed Rogers Hall in 1900 and the Salomon Center for Teaching in 1989). In 1903, engineering moved into its own new building on Lincoln Field.

The current program was formed in 1916 from the combination of civil, mechanical, and electrical engineering departments.[1] Engineering was a Division at Brown until 2010 when the university elevated it to its current status as the Brown University School of Engineering, making it the only undergraduate department at Brown with such status.[2] In July 2011, Lawrence Larson became the school's inaugural Dean. Prior to this appointment he served as the chair of the Electrical and Computer Engineering Department in the Jacobs School of Engineering at the University of California, San Diego.[3]

Undergraduate Education

The Brown University School of Engineering offers ABET-accredited engineering concentrations in biomedical, chemical and biochemical, civil through May 2016, computer, electrical, materials, and mechanical engineering (Sc.B.). Also offered are non-ABET accredited programs in engineering-physics and environmental engineering. In addition, the Brown School of Engineering offer a bachelor of arts degree in engineering.

Master's and Ph.D. Programs

The Brown University School of Engineering offers Sc.M. programs in biomedical engineering, chemical and biochemical engineering, electrical sciences and computer engineering, fluids and thermal sciences, materials science, and mechanics of solids. An integrated five-year Sc.B./Sc.M. degree is also available. The Program in Innovation Management and Entrepreneurship (PRIME) is also a one-year master's degree in technology entrepreneurship.

The Brown University School of Engineering offers Ph.D programs in biomedical engineering, chemical and biochemical engineering, electrical sciences and computer engineering, fluids and thermal sciences, materials science, and mechanics of solids.

Ranking

The School of Engineering ranks as one of the top engineering schools in the United States. The U.S. News & World Report ranks Brown as the 35th best undergraduate engineering school in the country. The Graduate School of Engineering ranks tied for 49th.[4]

Field Ranks
Undergraduate School of Engineering 35
Graduate School of Engineering 49

Engineering Chairmen and Deans

Notable Alumni

John Chen
Mark Donohue '59 - Winner of 1972 Indianapolis 500
Alexander Lyman Holley
Ayanna M. Howard - SnoMote
Suzan LeVine '93 - United States Ambassador to Switzerland and Liechtenstein
Byron Lichtenberg
Dr. Thomas O. Paine '42 - Administrator of NASA during Apollo 11 landing on the moon.
Robert Henry Thurston

References

  1. History of Engineering at Brown
  2. Brown University Establishes School of Engineering
  3. Larson Named Inaugural Dean
  4. http://colleges.usnews.rankingsandreviews.com/best-colleges/brown-university-217156/overall-rankings
  5. Encyclopedia Brunoniana, "Kenerson, William H."
  6. Encyclopedia Brunoniana, "Bohl, Leighton, T."
  7. 2003 MIT Technology Review, Top 100 Innovators Under 35, "Sangeeta Bhatia"
  8. Nadis, Steve. "Sangeeta Bhatia Looks at Life's Architecture". The Scientist.
  9. 1 2 Brown Engineering Alumni Medal (BEAM) award
  10. Forbes, "America's Most Promising Companies"
  11. 2012 Inc. 5000 List, "America's Fastest Growing Companies"
  12. MIT Technology Review, "1999 Top 100 Innovators Under 35"
  13. 2003 MIT Technology Review, Top 100 Innovators Under 35, "Ayanna Howard"
  14. The 2008 TIME 100, "Mary Lou Jepsen"
  15. 2003 MIT Technology Review, Top 100 Innovators Under 35, "Ainissa G. Ramirez"

External links

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