MASTERS IN
Stilwell Hall 107
(216) 687-2400
http://www.csuohio.edu/engineering/civil/programs.html
Nobert Dellate, Chair
Stephen Duffy, Graduate Program Director
The Master of Science in Environmental Engineering degree is offered through the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering in the Fenn College of Engineering. This program represents the engineering component of the cross-disciplinary, environmental academic studies program at Cleveland State University.
Although this program is designed for individuals with a bachelor’s degree in engineering, non-engineering graduates also can take advantage of this program.
Faculty research and publications reflect areas in which students may conduct their theses or project investigations. Faculty research areas include adsorption, waste-site remediation, pollution prevention, green manufacturing, industrial waste treatment, brownfields, air-pollutant control, biological treatment processes, waste recycle and reuse, solid-waste engineering, physiochemical treatment processes, soil decontamination, combustion-process emissions, energy conversions, risk assessment, environmental policy, and real-time environmental monitoring.
Current faculty information can be located on the Cleveland State University Faculty Profile page.
University-supported assistantships and graduate tuition grants are available to qualified graduate students on a competitive basis. Additional assistantships and support are available through the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering; the Environmental Institute; and external federal, state, and industrial grants of program faculty. Applicants should indicate their interest in assistantships or tuition grants on the Application for Graduate Admission.
Graduates of the MS in Civil Engineering program work as project engineers for consulting firms; perform research in government laboratories; conduct analysis, design, and research in industry; and manage public works facilities. Recent graduates are working as a structural designer, a ceramics researcher, and a stress analyst. Job prospects for those with advanced degrees in civil engineering are excellent.
The Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering also offers an Accelerated Program that would enable students to a earn a Bachelor of Civil Engineering degree as well as a Master of Science in Environmental Engineering in 5 years. Students are eligible to apply after they have completed sixty credit hours in their undergraduate program, with at least 30 credit hours earned at CSU. Once admitted to the combined program, the student may complete up to 11 credit hours of graduate courses while enrolled in the undergraduate program. These 11 credit-hours count towards both the undergraduate degree and the graduate degree requirements, either as electives or as requirements. For more details, please refer to the department webpage
For more details, please refer to the department webpage http://www.csuohio.edu/engineering/civil/programs.html
Admission to the graduate program in environmental engineering is open to qualified students with a baccalaureate degree in engineering or science. A minimum baccalaureate grade-point average of 3.0 usually is required. Applicants from undergraduate programs other than environmental, civil, and chemical engineering may be required to take additional courses.
The GRE General section is required if one or more of the following conditions is true:
• The undergraduate degree was not in environmental, civil,
or chemical engineering.
• The undergraduate degree was awarded by a college or university
outside of the United States, or by a Canadian institution not
accredited by the Canadian Engineering Accreditation Board of
the Canadian Council of Professional Engineers.
• An unaccredited college or university awarded the undergraduate
degree.
• The student’s undergraduate cumulative grade-point
average is below 2.75.
• The year of the baccalaureate degree precedes the date
of application to the College of Graduate Studies by more than
six years; however, in this case, the examination requirement
may be waived, with program approval, if the applicant’s
undergraduate grade-point average is 3.0 or above.
If the GRE is required, the admission decision is based on the applicant’s performance on the quantitative section of the GRE along with the undergraduate grade-point average. A minimum of the 50th percentile on the GRE quantitative is required, but this minimum score does not guarantee admission.
All non-native English speakers must demonstrate proof of English-language proficiency. Any individual who has earned a bachelor’s (or higher) degree from a U.S. institution, in which the primary language of instruction is English, is not required to take an English-language proficiency examination. International students who want to be considered for teaching assistantships are advised to take the Test of Spoken English (TSE).
Apply Now: http://www.csuohio.edu/gradcollege/admissions/apply.html
Students in the MS in Environmental Engineering program may elect a thesis or non-thesis option. In addition to University requirements, a master’s candidate must meet the following departmental requirements:
1. Students following the non-thesis option must complete a
minimum of 33 credit hours for the degree, including the core-competency
requirements, the engineering core curriculum, and two additional
courses from the environmental engineering elective courses listed
in this section.
2. Students following the thesis option must complete a minimum
of 31 credit hours for the degree, including the core competency
requirements, the engineering core curriculum, and a minimum of
six credit hours of thesis.
Core Competency Requirements
(8 to 10 credits)
Competency requirements introduce students to areas outside of their major area of study and promote an interdisciplinary approach to solving environmental problems. All students enrolled in environmental graduate-degree programs are required to complete these courses, which are listed below. The environmental engineering faculty determines whether completion of a similar course(s) satisfies a specific competency requirement.
Core competencies for the MS in Environmental Engineering program are fulfilled through courses in science, law/policy, and technical writing.
1. Science
EVS
506 Ecosystem Science (3 credits) or PHY
570 Environmental Physics (4 credits)
2. Law/Policy
LAW
671 Environmental Law (3 credits) or ENV
652 Environmental Policy and Administration (4 credits)
3. Technical Writing
ENG
509 Technical Writing (2 credits)
Core Curriculum
(17 credits)
Required core courses in the MS in Environmental Engineering program provide a sound foundation for environmental work, regardless of an individual’s background in engineering. Since some of these core courses are prerequisites for elective courses, it is generally helpful to complete core courses early in the program.
The core courses are:
EVE
534 Environmental Transport Phenomena (4 credits)
EVE
570 Environmental Chemistry (4 credits)
EVE
572 Biological Principles of Environmental Engineering (4
credits)
EVE
595 Environmental Seminar (1 credit)
EVE
671 Physical and Chemical Principles of Environmental Engineering
(4 credits)
If a student has already completed a course with content very
similar to a core course, he or she may be able to substitute
an elective course for the specific required core course, with
program approval.
Elective Courses:
Non-thesis students are required to take two elective courses from the list below:
EVE
533 Pollution Prevention and Sustainability (4 credits)
EVE
540 Soil Stabilization and Decontamination (4 credits)
EVE
564 Groundwater Hydrology (3 credits)
EVE
566 Groundwater Modeling (3 credits)
EVE
574 Industrial Wastewater Treatment (4 credits)
EVE
575 Solid and Hazardous Waste Engineering (4 credits)
EVE
576 Environmental and Occupational Health Engineering (4 credits)
EVE
578 Water Treatment Plant Design (4 credits)
EVE
579 Wastewater Treatment Plant Design (4 credits)
EVE
581 Air Pollution and Abatement (4 credits)
EVE
585 Hazardous Waste Site Remediation (4 credits)
In addition to the courses listed, a maximum of four credits of
Special Topics (EVE
593) courses may count toward master’s degree requirements.
Students must obtain approval from their advisors prior to registration
for Special Topics.
Thesis/Research Courses
EVE
697 Master’s Research (1-8 credits per semester)
EVE
699 Master’s Thesis (1-8 credits)
Transition Courses
Transition courses prepare incoming students, who do not have a background in engineering, for the graduate program. The requirements are presented below. Courses previously completed—and to some extent the applicant’s professional experience—are compared to the content of the transition courses. Based on an evaluation of the applicant’s academic and professional background, the specific courses required to satisfy the Transition curriculum are determined. Transition courses do not count toward the degree.
A non-degree graduate student may take up to three courses in the MS program, provided that all prerequisites are satisfied, while taking the Transition courses.
Transition Curriculum Science Requirements
One year of chemistry (CHM
261/266 and CHM
262/267*)
One year of physics (PHY
241/242*)
Mathematics Requirements
One year of calculus (MTH
181 and
MTH 182*)
Statistics (ESC
310*)
Differential equations (ESC
250*)
Linear algebra (ESC
350*)
Engineering Requirements
Statics (ESC
201*)
Fluid mechanics (ESC
301*) Thermodynamics (ESC
321*)
Hydraulics (CVE
361*)
*Cleveland State Equivalent
Each specialization requires the completion of a set of core courses shown below.
A faculty advisor is assigned to each student when he or she enters the MS program. The student must meet with the advisor to establish a personalized program plan.The personalized program plan addresses which core competency courses are required, any engineering core courses for which a substitution is sought, the elective area of concentration, and thesis/project requirements. This plan must be approved by the Environmental Engineering Coordinating Committee (EECC), which is comprised of Environmental Engineering faculty.
If Core Competency Courses are required, the EECC may allow these courses to count as electives toward the degree, but not toward the elective area of concentration.
To receive approval for an Engineering Core Course, the student must submit a petition to the EECC requesting a course substitution for a specific elective course. If granted, this does not reduce the number of credit hours needed for graduation, but allows individuals to take other electives.
Selecting a thesis faculty advisor should be done early in the program. The advisor helps the student establish a thesis Advisory Committee of faculty from the student’s area of interest. After the committee has been established, the student is required to prepare a research proposal that must be approved by the Advisory Committee. The committee members also monitor the progress of the student’s thesis.
Exit Requirements
Thesis students must submit a thesis to their graduate committee, following the Thesis and Dissertation Format Guidelines, available on the College of Graduate Studies web page: http://www.csuohio.edu/gradcollege/students/thesis/
In order to graduate, each student’s thesis must be accepted by the graduate committee and pass an oral defense of the thesis.
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