2008-2009 Master of Science in Engineering Online Program

UCLA
7440 Boelter Hall
Box 951594
Los Angeles, CA 90095-1594

 

(310) 206-4523
fax: (310) 825-3081
http://msengrol.seas.ucla.edu

Christopher S. Lynch, Ph.D., Director

Scope and Objectives

The primary purpose of the Master of Science in Engineering online degree program is to enable employed engineers and computer scientists to augment their technical education beyond the Bachelor of Science degree and to enhance their value to the technical organizations in which they are employed. The training and education that the program offers are of significant importance and usefulness to engineers, their employers, California, and the nation. It is at the M.S. level that engineers have the opportunity to learn a specialization in depth, and those engineers with advanced degrees may also renew and update their knowledge of the technology advances that continue to occur at an accelerating rate.

The M.S. program is addressed to those highly qualified employed engineers who, for various reasons, do not attend the on-campus M.S. programs and who are keenly interested in developing up-to-date knowledge of cutting-edge engineering and technology.

Graduate Study

For information on graduate admission, see Graduate Programs, page 23.

The following introductory information is based on the 2008-09 edition of Program Requirements for UCLA Graduate Degrees. Complete annual editions of Program Requirements are available at http://www.gdnet.ucla.edu/gasaa/library/pgmrqintro.htm. Students are subject to the degree requirements as published in Program Requirements for the year in which they matriculate.

M.S. in Engineering Online Program

Course Requirements

The program consists of nine courses that make up a program of study. At least five courses must be at the 200 level, and one must be a 596 directed study course. The latter course satisfies the University of California requirement for a capstone event (in the on-campus program the requirement is covered by a comprehensive examination or a thesis); the directed study 596 course consists of an engineering design project that is far better suited for the working engineer/computer scientist.

The program is structured in a manner that allows employed engineers/computer scientists to complete the requirements at a part-time pace (e.g., one 100/200-level course per term). Courses are scheduled so that the program can be completed within two academic years plus one additional term.

Advanced Structural Materials

Jenn-Ming Yang, Ph.D. (Materials Science and Engineering), Director; jyang@seas.ucla.edu

The program provides students with a broad knowledge of advanced structural materials. Courses cover fundamental concepts of science and engineering of lightweight metallic and composite materials, advanced metallic and composite materials, fracture mechanics, damage tolerance and durability, failure analysis and prevention, nondestructive evaluation, structural integrity and life prediction, and design of aerospace structures. Students are required to complete a project on a topic related to structural materials.

Required: Materials Science and Engineering 143A, 151, 243A, 243C, 250B, 298, Mechanical And Aerospace Engineering 154B, 297; one design project course (Materials Science and Engineering 596).

Computer Networking

Mario Gerla, Ph.D. (Computer Science), Director; gerla@cs.ucla.edu

Three undergraduate elective courses complement the basic background of the undergraduate electrical engineering or computer science degree with concepts in security, sensors, and wireless communications. The graduate courses expose students to key applications and research areas in the network and distributed systems field. Two required graduate courses cover the Internet and emerging sensor embedded systems. The electives probe different applications domains, including wireless mobile networks, security, network management, distributed P2P systems, and multimedia applications.

Required: Eight courses selected from Computer Science 111, 118, M213B, 217A, 236, Electrical Engineering 131A, 132B, 230B, 231E; one design project course (Electrical Engineering 596).

Electronic Materials

Ya-Hong Xie, Ph.D. (Materials Science and Engineering), Director; yhx@ucla.edu

The program provides students with a knowledge set that is highly relevant to the semiconductor industry. The program has four essential attributes: theoretical background, applied knowledge, exposure to theoretical approaches, and introduction to the emerging field of microelectronics, namely organic electronics. All faculty members have industrial experience and are currently conducting active research in these subject areas.

Required: Materials Science and Engineering 122, 200, 221, 223, 224, 252, 271, 298; one design project course (Materials Science and Engineering 596).

Integrated Circuits

Dejan Markovic, Ph.D. (Electrical Engineering), Director; dejan@ee.ucla.edu

The program includes analog integrated circuit (IC) design, design and modeling of VLSI circuits and systems, RF circuit and system design, signaling and synchronization, VLSI signal processing, and communication system design. Summer courses are not yet offered in this program; therefore it cannot currently be completed in two calendar years.

Required: Eight courses selected from Electrical Engineering 201C, 209AS, 215A through 215E, M216A, 216B; one design project course (Electrical Engineering 596).

Manufacturing and Design

Daniel C.H. Yang, Ph.D. (Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering), Director; dyang@seas.ucla.edu

The program covers a broad spectrum of fundamental and advanced topics, including mechanical systems, digital control systems, microdevices and nanodevices, wireless systems, failure of materials, composites, and computational geometry. The program prepares students with the higher educational background that is necessary for today’s rapidly changing technology needs.

Required: Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering 162A, 166C, 171B, 294, 295C, 296A, 297, and a new course to be established; one design project course (Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering 596).

Mechanics of Structures

Ajit K. Mal, Ph.D. (Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering), Director; ajit@seas.ucla.edu

The program provides students with the knowledge required for the analysis and synthesis of modern engineered structures. The fundamental concepts of linear and nonlinear elasticity, plasticity, fracture mechanics, finite element analysis, and mechanics of composites and structural vibrations are developed in a series of undergraduate and graduate courses. These concepts are then applied in solving industry-relevant problems in a number of graduate-level courses. Students develop hands-on experience in using finite element packages for solving realistic structural analysis problems.

Required: Civil and Environmental Engineering 233, 235A, 235B, Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering 156A, M168, M256A, 256F, M269A; one design project course (Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering 596).

Signal Processing and Communications

Kung Yao, Ph.D. (Electrical Engineering), Director; yao@ee.ucla.edu

The program provides training in a set of related topics in signal processing and communications. Students receive advanced training in multimedia systems from the fundamentals of media representation and compression through transmission of signals over communications links and networks.

Required: Electrical Engineering 113 (or 230A), 131A, 132B, 210A, M214A, 231A, 231E (or 238), 232B; one design project course (Electrical Engineering 596).