Mar 28, 2024  
2011-2012 General Catalog 
    
2011-2012 General Catalog ARCHIVED CATALOG: To search archives, MUST use search box to left. Current catalog: catalog.usu.edu.

Environmental Engineering, BS


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College of Engineering

Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering

Effective for students beginning degree Summer Sem. 2011 thru Spring Sem. 2012

Admission to the College of Engineering

In addition to the policies of the University concerning admission of students, the following regulations apply to the College of Engineering:

1. Transfer students from other colleges or universities will be referred to the Engineering Admission Committee for evaluation. Criteria considered in admission decisions for transfer students include resources available in the requested department and the transfer GPA, along with an evaluation of the program of the former college or university. Decisions concerning academic standing once the student is admitted to USU will be based solely on USU grades.

2. Students registered on campus (including Undeclared) must be approved by the Engineering Admission Committee before transferring to the College of Engineering. Students in this category must have demonstrated, by courses taken at USU, a potential to succeed in the major of their choice.

Pre-Engineering and Professional Engineering Requirements

Students interested in Engineering careers enter the University with a wide variety of educational backgrounds. Therefore, it is necessary for all students to demonstrate a satisfactory level of proficiency in basic engineering, mathematics, science, and English before they are admitted into a professional engineering program. Specific courses used to evaluate this proficiency are listed on the applications to the Professional Program available in the individual departments or in the Engineering Advising Center. The professional engineering program consists of the last two years of study listed in the departmental sections of the General Catalog. Students will not be admitted into engineering classes numbered 3000 or higher until they have been admitted into a professional engineering program. Applications listing the required pre-professional courses and admission standards are available from the various departments and the office of the Dean of Engineering. The minimum requirements a student must satisfy in order to be considered for admission to a professional program are:

1. The student must achieve a grade of C- or better in every required pre-professional course. The P/D+, D, F grading option may not be used except in freshman English composition.

2. Civil and Environmental Engineering students must achieve an overall grade point average of 2.3 or better for all required pre-professional coursework completed at USU.

3. A student can repeat no more than three of the required pre-professional courses in order to satisfy the eligibility requirements. Multiple repeats of the same course are included in the total of three repeats. Audits count as a time taking a class unless prior written approval is obtained from the college academic advisor. Satisfying minimum eligibility requirements does not ensure that a student will be admitted to a professional program in a specific department. The number of students accepted will be based upon the number of students that can be accommodated in upper-division classes. Applicants will be ranked and selected in order of their academic standing in the required pre-professional courses.

Public demand for increasingly safer environments has resulted in unprecedented demands for competent, well-trained environmental engineers. Expertise must be developed to focus on protection of public health from the mismanagement of toxic and hazardous wastes, and on the management and renovation of impacted terrestrial and aquatic systems.

The undergraduate Environmental Engineering program is accredited by the EAC Accreditation Commission of ABET, www.abet.org. The program is based on a strong engineering and science foundation developed in the pre-professional program from which an environmental engineering specialty can be developed in the balance of the four-year program. The Senior Design Project required of all Environmental Engineering students will demand that they synthesize the technical information they have learned in their undergraduate program to produce creative engineering solutions to particular environmental engineering problems related to their elective specialty areas. A major component of the professional program is the development of students’ competence in two specialty areas by completing a minimum of two technical electives in each during the junior and senior years of the program. The five specialty areas from which a student may choose technical elective courses include: Occupational Safety and Health, Solids, Water, Air, and Natural Systems. With the breadth and depth of training involved in this program, students successfully completing this degree will be well-qualified to productively and competitively enter the environmental engineering field or a graduate environmental engineering program of their choice.

The Program Educational Objective for the Environmental Engineering undergraduate program is to graduate engineers who (1) have a solid educational foundation with broad experiences in engineering, the sciences, and the humanities and (2) are prepared to enter graduate school, other professional training, or the workplace as effective professionals. These graduates will (1) understand the significance of lifelong learning and the importance of ethical conduct, (2) be qualified to assume roles of leadership in business, community, government, and the engineering profession, and (3) be prepared to contribute significantly to global society as a whole.  

The schedule provided in this guide should be followed as closely as possible, as many of the courses are presented in, and must be taken in, a specific sequence. Students should seek recommendations for coursework from their advisor and use this guide as an aid in planning a program of study. 

Career Opportunities

Graduates in Civil and Environmental Engineering have found employment in supervisory or administrative positions, ranging from supervisor of a construction site to city engineer to top-level executive. Environmental engineers work as members of teams with other physical and biological scientists and engineers in aerospace, naval, forestry, medical, and consulting fields, with numerous employment opportunities in private industry; large and small engineering consulting firms; federal, state, county, and city governments; public utilities; regulatory agencies; and educational institutions. Many of the department’s past graduates now have theirownconsulting offices and often hire new graduates from the department.

Recommended High School Courses

Students interested in entering any field of engineering should take two or three years of algebra, one year of geometry, and one-half year of trigonometry while in high school, as well as calculus, if possible. Four years of English and courses in chemistry, physics (especially AP Physics), and mechanical drawing are also recommended. If the suggested mathematics courses are not taken in high school, they must be taken in college prior to starting calculus. This additional work need not cause a delay in graduation if CLEP orAP credit is earned or if summer semester enrollment is used to supplement course credits.

Academic Advisement

All students should contact their academic advisor for assistance with course selection, program planning, and meeting graduation requirements. If they do not know who their advisor is, students should contact the Engineering Advising Center, ENGR 314 A.

Academic Requirements

The Engineering Advising Center maintains a handout sheet giving current details of all academic regulations of the college. It is the responsibility of the student to know the current regulations and to follow these regulations.

Pre-professional Program

Students must maintain a USU GPA of 2.0 to remain in good standing both in the college and the University. Students in a pre-professional program who are not making satisfactory progress toward acceptance into a professional program or who become ineligible to enter a professional program will be suspended from the college. Students in good standing in a pre-professional program must still meet the entrance requirements for admission into a professional program.

Professional Program

For all engineering majors in the professional program, the following academic regulations apply in addition to University regulations:

1. A GPA of 2.0 or higher must be maintained in all upper-division engineering/ math/science courses required for, or used as technical electives in Environmental Engineering. Courses which were part of the pre-professional program requirements and University Studies courses are not included in this GPA calculation.

2. No more than 10 hours of D or D+ credit may be applied toward meeting graduation requirements in engineering/math/science classes.

3. College of Engineering courses may be repeated only once. Audits count as a time taking a class unless prior written approval is obtained from the department head.Amaximumof three required or elective courses completed as part of a professional program can be repeated in order to meet graduation requirements. (Courses completed as part of a pre-professional program are not included in this total of three repeats.)

4. The P/D+, D, F grading option may not be used in required or elective courses completed as part of a professional program. (The P/D+, D, F grading option is approved for University Studies Courses.)

5. The academic regulations listed above (1-4) apply to required coursework and any elective engineering/math/science course which could be used to satisfy graduation requirements for the chosen degree. That is, once a student completes a particular technical elective, it becomes a required course for that student.

6. Students in violation of departmental or college academic regulations, no longer eligible for graduation, or not making satisfactory progress toward a degree, will be placed on probation.

a. Students will be placed on probation if they (i) earn an F in an engineering/ math/science course which could be used to satisfy graduation requirements for the chosen degree (see No. 5 above); (ii) have more than 10 hours of D credit (see No. 2 above); or (iii) have a GPA of less than 2.0 (see No. 1 above).

b. Students remain on probation until they improve their standing by repeating and passing all failed classes, repeating classes to reduce the number of D credits to 10 or less, and/or by raising their GPA above 2.0.

c. While on probation, a student must earn a semester GPA of 2.0 or higher in engineering/math/science classes and must not earn any grades ofD or F. While on probation, a student may not preregister. The student’s major code will be changed to a pre-professional code. The student must meet at least once per semester with the college academic advisor to work out a schedule having the primary goal of correcting the existing academic problems. 

Students must complete the General Education Requirements :

  • GEO 1110  or GEOG 1000  will fulfill the Physical Sciences requirement
  • BIOL 1010  will fulfill the Life Sciences requirement
  •   and   will fulfill the Quantitative Literacy (QL) and/or Exploration requirement

Students must also complete the University Studies Depth Requirements :

  • CEE 4790  and CEE 4890  will fulfill the Communications Intensive (CI) requirement
  • MATH 2250  will fulfill the Quantitative Intensive (QI) requirement
  • Complete at least 2 credits in 3000-level or above courses from each of the following two categories: Humanitites and Creative Arts (DHA) and Social Sciences (DSS)

Transfer Students

Transfer students coming to USU with an associate degree from a regionally- accredited institutution may be deemed as having satisfied the General Education portion of the USU University Studies Requirements, but not necessarily the College of Engineering requirements. For example, BIOL 1010  is required, even if a BLS class has been taken. Students with transfer credits in University Studies areas will need to have their transfer credit evaluated by the College of Engineering to determine which of the University Studies requirements it will satisfy. In general, transfer students will still need to satisfy the Depth Education portion of University Studies. Also, since not all associate degrees granted by institutions outside of Utah include an American Institutions course (a State of Utah requirement), studentsmayneed to complete such a course while at USU.

Undergraduate Course Requirements for Environmental Engineering (131 credits)


Pre-engineering Program: Freshman and Sophomore


Professional Engineering Program: Junior and Senior


Junior Year (33 credits)


Senior Year (32-33 credits)


Spring Semester (16-17 credits)


  • 2
  • Technical Elective course (Area 1, 2, or 3) 3 4
  • Technical Elective course (Area 4 or 5) 3 4
  • University Studies Depth Humanities and Creative Arts (DHA) and Depth Social Sciences (DSS) courses 5-6
  • University Studies Breadth course 3

Technical Elective Courses


Note:


1 These courses are required for admission to the Professional Engineering Program (PEP).

2 CEE 3610  and ENGL 3080  must be taken concurrently or ENGL 3080  may be taken before.

3 Environmental Engineering students are required to complete a Senior Design elective course concurrent with CEE 4790  . Available Senior Design elective courses are listed above.

4 Environmental Engineering students must select at least two Technical Elective courses (totaling 6 credits) chosen from the specialty areas (options).

 

Civil and Environmental Engineering Mentors


 

The following list of faculty interests is provided to help students select the appropriate faculty member to contact for career and elective selection counseling.

L. R. Anderson, geotechnical engineering, dams
S. L. Barfuss, hydraulics
P. J. Barr, structures, concrete, bridges
L. Bastidas, hydrology
J. A. Bay, geotechnical engineering, soil dynamics
A. B. Bishop, engineering systems and planning
D. S. Bowles, risk assessment, hydrology, water resources
J. A. Caliendo, geotechnical engineering, piles, drilled shafts
S. Chauhan, risk management, hydrology, water resources
A. Chen, transportation, network planning
W. J. Doucette, environmental analytical chemistry
R. R. Dupont, environmental engineering, hazardous waste management
W. J. Grenney, water resources
M. W. Halling, structures, earthquake engineering
K. Heaslip, transportation
R. W. Hill, irrigation engineering
M. C. Johnson, hydraulics
J. J. Kaluarachchi, subsurface hydrology, transport process
S. S. Manuel-Dupont, technical writing
R. S. Martin, environmental engineering, air pollution
M. J. McFarland, environmental engineering, biosolids
M. McKee, water resource planning and analysis
J. E. McLean, fate and behavior of metals in subsurface
L. S. McNeill, environmental engineering, drinking water
G. P. Merkley, irrigation engineering, drip irrigation system design
C. M. U. Neale, irrigation engineering, remote sensing
B. T. Neilson, environmental engineering
R. T. Pack, GIS
R. C. Peralta, groundwater modeling optimization, groundwater remediation
W. J. Rahmeyer, hydraulics, hydraulic structures
J. D. Rice, geotechnical engineering
D. Rosenberg, water resources
D. L. Sorensen, aquatic microbiology
D. K. Stevens, environmental engineering, treatment process analysis
D. G. Tarboton, hydrology, water resources
B. P. Tullis, hydraulics, hydraulic structures
G. E. Urroz, hydraulics, hydraulic structures
W. R. Walker, surface irrigation systems design
K. C. Womack, structures, structural mechanics

Requirement Changes

Graduation requirements shown on this sheet are subject to change. Students should check with their assigned advisor concerning possible changes.

For information contact

Civil and Environmental Engineering Department; Engineering Laboratory 211; Utah State University; 4110 Old Main Hill; Logan UT 84322-4110; tel. (435) 797-2938; marlo@engineering.usu.edu; www.cee.usu.edu/

 

Minimum University Requirements


Total Credits

120

Grade Point Average (most majors require higher GPA)

2.00 GPA

Credits of C- or better

100

Credits of upper-division courses (#3000 or above)

40

USU Credits (10 of last 40 must be USU credits)

30

Completion of approved major program of study

See college advisor

Credits in minor (if required)

12

Credits in American Institutions (ECN 1500 ;HIST 1700 , HIST 2700  or HIST 2710 ; HONR 1300 POLS 1100 ; or USU 1300 

3

General Education Requirements  and University Studies Depth Requirements 

 

 

 

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