Electrical Engineering
- Bachelor of Science
Do you want to use technology to improve healthcare, transportation, communications and beyond? Electrical engineering is an extremely diverse field ranging from the ultra-small devices inside our computer chips to global-scale communications systems. Electrical engineers design, develop, build, and test the electronic devices that are ever-present in the modern world. Everything ranging from autonomous electric vehicles to solar panels and smart phones depend on devices, circuits, signals and systems developed by electrical engineers.
Major Requirements
You will begin with a rigorous series of courses in mathematics, natural sciences and basic engineering to prepare yourself for more advanced study. At the upper-division level, you may choose to specialize in one of the following five areas: physical electronics, electromagnetics, analog electronics, digital electronics or signal processing and communication. You may also choose a broad program of study that allows you to distribute your coursework among two or more of these areas.
Contact Information
Careers
- Electrical Engineer
- Test Engineer
- Field Engineer
- Process Engineer
- Analog Design Engineer
- Digital Design Engineer
- RF Engineer
Graduate Study
- Computer engineering
- Information systems
- Integrated circuits and systems
- Photonic electronic devices
- Biotechnology
Alumni Employers
- Intel
- Texas Instruments
- Keysight
- Qualcomm
- Uber
- Square
Your course roadmap
Find the detailed course requirements for your program and map out your path to graduation.
The faculty you will work with
Our undergraduates work directly with our faculty through research projects and labs.
Global learning programs
Expand your horizons by studying abroad or pursuing global learning on campus.
Undergraduate research
Get hands on with your interests. Participate in one of our hundreds of research opportunities.