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The College of Engineering (Berkeley Engineering, CoE) is one of 14 schools and colleges at the University of California, Berkeley. Established in 1931, the college is considered among the most prestigious engineering schools in the world, ranked third by U.S. News & World Report and with an acceptance rate of 9%.[1] Berkeley Engineering is particularly well known for producing many successful entrepreneurs; among its alumni are co-founders and CEOs of some of the largest companies in the world, including Apple, Boeing, Google, Intel, and Tesla.
The college is currently situated in 14 buildings on the northeast side of the central campus, and also operates at the 150 acre (61 ha) Richmond Field Station. With the Haas School of Business, the college confers joint degrees and advises the university's resident startup incubator, Berkeley SkyDeck. There are over 57,000 living graduates of Berkeley Engineering, living in all 50 states and nearly 100 countries.[1]
Contents
1 Departments
2 Students
3 Research units
3.1 Major research centers and programs
4 Notable projects
5 Notable faculty
6 Notable alumni
7 Student organizations
8 See also
9 References
10 External links
Departments
Bioengineering (BioE)
Civil and Environmental Engineering (CEE)
Electrical Engineering and Computer Science (EECS)
Industrial Engineering and Operations Research (IEOR)
Materials Science and Engineering (MSE)
Mechanical Engineering (ME)
Nuclear Engineering (NE)
Engineering Science
Energy engineering
Engineering mathematics and statistics (EMS)
Engineering physics
Environmental Engineering Science (EES)
The College of Letters and Science also offers a Bachelor of Arts in computer science, which requires many of the same courses as the College of Engineering's Bachelor of Science in EECS, but has different admissions and graduation criteria. Berkeley's chemical engineering department is under the College of Chemistry.
Students
There are approximately 3,200 undergraduates in the College of Engineering, representing all departments. Undergraduate admissions to the College of Engineering is the most selective in the university as a whole. For the 2016-2017 application cycle, the acceptance rate has continued to stay at a low 8.4%, largely a result of increased nonresident interest.[1] The campus as a whole had a 17.5% acceptance rate that year.[2] Applicants apply directly to one of the departments and enter as declared majors within their department. It is also possible to apply as Engineering Undeclared and enter the college; major declaration is required at the end of sophomore year.[3] Once within the college, it is possible to change majors with the approval of Engineering Student Services. It is extremely difficult for undergraduates in other colleges at UC Berkeley to change college into Engineering, as they can only be admitted if a current engineering undergraduate drops.[4] The College of Engineering accepts junior transfer applications for those who have completed at least 60 semester units at another college or university. Preference is given to students at California Community Colleges. Only 9.2% of the over 2,300 junior transfer applicants were admitted for the 2015–16 academic year.[5] Dean Shankar Sastry has stated that the disparity between the college's and the university's acceptance rates is due to the university's failure to respond to the rise in demand for engineering degrees.[6]
85% of undergraduates admitted to the college graduate from the college, and 91% graduate from some college at UC Berkeley.[7] The college has a 4-year graduation policy, with extra semesters approved only in certain cases. Engineering Student Services provides academic advising, peer tutoring, and career services to engineering students. Various student organizations are run in conjunction with the college, including Pioneers in Engineering, Hackers @ Berkeley, Berkeley Engineers and Mentors, and the Open Computing Facility. Many students belong to the student chapters of their corresponding professional organizations (e.g. the American Nuclear Society, American Society of Civil Engineers, or Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers).[8]
Graduate admissions in the College of Engineering is administered by department. In Fall 2015, there were 492.5 master's and 1,337 doctorate students in the college.[9]
The college's enrollment is approximately 26% women.[1] Although the proportion of women has increased over time, issues of gender disparity in the college remain. According to a 2011 survey, female engineers reported a high number of instances of passive harassment, discrimination, and judgment.[10] The college's administration has taken steps to prevent this sexism.[11] The Society of Women Engineers (SWE) is one of the student groups representing women in the college.
Research units
All research facilities are managed by one of five Organized Research Units (ORUs):
Earthquake Engineering Research Center - research and public safety programs against the destructive effects of earthquakes
Electronics Research Laboratory - the largest ORU; advanced research in novel areas within seven different university departments, organized into five main divisions:
Berkeley Sensor & Actuator Center
Berkeley Wireless Research Center
Berkeley Northside Research Group
Micro Systems Group
Engineering Systems Research Center - focuses on manufacturing, mechatronics, and microelectro mechanical systems (MEMS)
Institute for Environmental Science and Engineering - focuses on applying basic research to current and future environmental problems
Institute of Transportation Studies - sponsors research in transportation planning, policy analysis, environmental concerns and transportation system performance
Major research centers and programs
Jacobs Institute for Design Innovation[12]
Berkeley Institute of Design[13]
Berkeley Multimedia Research Center
Center for Information Technology Research in the Interest of Society (CITRIS)
Center for Intelligent Systems - developing a unified theoretical foundation for intelligent systems.
Consortium on Green Design and Manufacturing
Digital Library Project
UCSF/Berkeley Ergonomics Program
International Computer Science Institute - basic research institute focusing on Internet architecture, speech and language processing, artificial intelligence, and cognitive and theoretical computer science
Intel Research Laboratory @ Berkeley
Integrated Materials Laboratory - facilities for research in nano-structure growth, processing, and characterization
Microfabrication Laboratory
The Millennium Project - developing a hierarchical campus-wide "cluster of clusters" to support advanced computational applications
Nokia Research Center @ Berkeley
Pacific Earthquake Engineering Research Center
Partners for Advanced Transit & Highways - researching ways to improve the operation of California's state highway system
Power Systems Engineering Research Center
Notable projects
BSD (Berkeley Software Distribution)
Berkeley Astrophysical CFD Results
Berkeley Lower Extremity Exoskeleton
Multigate device (FinFET)
RAID (Redundant Array of Inexpensive Disks)
SPICE (Simulation Program with Integrated Circuits Emphasis)
RISC-V (An open Reduced Instruction Set Computing Instruction set architecture)
Notable faculty
Further information: Category:UC Berkeley College of Engineering faculty
Richard Karp, Turing Laureate for contributions to the field of algorithms
William Kahan, Turing Laureate for fundamental contributions to numerical analysis
Stuart Russell, author of Artificial Intelligence: A Modern Approach
Ruzena Bajcsy, leader in computer vision and robotics
Michael I. Jordan, most influential computer scientist in the world in 2016 according to Semantic Scholar[14]
Lotfi Zadeh, founder of fuzzy mathematics
Jitendra Malik, leader in computer vision and graphics
David Patterson, Turing Laureate for contributions to computer architecture, founder of reduced instruction set computing (RISC)
Ken Goldberg, leader in robotics
Christos Papadimitriou, leader in complexity theory
Eli Yablonovitch, founder of the field of photonic crystals
Scott Shenker, leader in networking research
Carlo H. Séquin, pioneer in processor design
Claire J. Tomlin, leader in hybrid systems and control theory
S. Shankar Sastry, Dean and leader in robotics and control theory
Homayoon Kazerooni, leader in robotics
Alice Agogino, leader in engineering diversity
Paul K. Wright, leader in rapid prototyping
Ashok Gadgil, environmental policy leader
Luke Pyungse Lee, pioneer in bionanophotonics and integrated molecular diagnostics systems
Jay Keasling, pioneer in synthetic biology
Peidong Yang, leader in nanomaterials
Ramamoorthy Ramesh, leader in ferroelectric materials
Paul Alivisatos, authority on the synthesis of nanocrystals
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