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Physics Advisor 2006-2007: Paul Tjossem -
tjossem@grinnell.edu
From the Engineering section of the 2002-2003 Grinnell College academic catalog...
At Grinnell, students who plan careers in engineering have two options. A student
may spend three years at Grinnell and two years in one of the engineering programs
with which Grinnell cooperates: Columbia University, California Institute of
Technology, Renssaleaer Polytechnic Institute, and Washington University.
(Special arrangements can sometimes be made with other institutions.) Under
normal progress the student receives a B.A. degree from Grinnell at the end of the
fourth year and a B.S. degree from the cooperating institution at the end of the fifth
year. Alternately, a student may follow a complete B.A. course at Grinnell, and after
graduation, undertake further study at an engineering school.
In either case, the prospective engineer studies the natural sciences as an integral
part of a liberal education. Students are required to establish at Grinnell a strong
foundation in mathematics, physics, and chemistry. A broad base of knowledge in
the humanities and social sciences also is strongly recommended. The required
science courses are those taken by any student with a serious interest in science,
so a definite commitment to engineering is not necessary until enrollment at the
engineering school.
Common Requirements of all four schools:
Mathematics through differential equations (Math 220)
Two semesters of physics (Physics 131-132)
Two semesters of chemistry (Chemistry 129-130)
3.0 GPA - Higher GPA is required for some programs
Special Requirements:
Columbia University ("Combined Plan") http://www.studentaffairs.columbia.edu/admissions/engineering/combined.php
One additional semester of modern physics
One course in computing, a knowledge of Java or C is required for some areas.
Two courses of literature, philosophy, history or culture studies; one
course of economics, one course of art or music history.
Washington University ("Dual Degree")
http://www.dualdegree.seas.wustl.edu/
One course in computing
Eighteen hours of humanities and social studies, with eight hours in one department and including course work with significant prerequisites.
California Institute of Technology ("3-2")
http://admissions.caltech.edu/admissions/3-2/
Four additional courses in physics (Modern Physics, Electromagnetic Theory,
Mechanics, and Wave Phenomena).
(Cal Tech gives a two-year introductory physics course, and the stipulated
Grinnell courses cover more than Cal Tech's courses, but they are necessary
to ensure that students transferring will have had at least the background of
Cal Tech students.)
Twenty-four semester hours of humanities and social studies. At least six hours must be in humanities (art, history, languages, literature,
music, philosophy) and at least six hours must be in social studies (anthropology,
economics, political science, psychology).
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute ("Transfer Admission")
http://admissions.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=20&setappvar=page(2)
One additional semester of physics
Four courses in humanities and social studies.
Persons interested in chemical engineering should have a year of organic
chemistry. Those interested in environmental or biomedical engineering
should have some biology. A major at Grinnell must be completed, but credit
to complete it can be transferred back from the engineering school. Usually
a Grinnell major in chemistry, computer science, mathematics, or physics
is required.
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