BSEE in Electrical Engineering
Degree Program Description
The Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering allows student to learn about electrical power generation, communication systems, instrumentation, circuit design and microprocessor design. Students have the opportunity to gain hands on experience as well as research experience and the opportunity to develop new products.
Major Program Requirements
The electrical engineering degree offers course work in all traditional areas of the electrical engineering field. Focused areas of work are offered in the areas of communications, digital systems, discrete and integrated electronics, electromagnetics, energy systems and power electronics, robotics and system control. (Focus areas are not listed on transcripts or diplomas).
Students must complete all university requirements, including general education, and degree requirements below.
Diversity Requirement
Engineering majors must take one 3-hour course that focuses on issues such as race, ethnicity, gender, or sexuality. Each semester a list of approved courses will be made available to students.
Major core requirements | ||
MATH 1500 | Analytic Geometry and Calculus I | 5 |
MATH 1700 | Calculus II | 5 |
MATH 2300 | Calculus III | 3 |
MATH 4100 | Differential Equations | 3 |
STAT 4710 | Introduction to Mathematical Statistics | 3 |
PHYSCS 2750 | University Physics I | 5 |
PHYSCS 2760 | University Physics II | 5 |
CHEM 1320 | 4 | |
ENGLSH 1000 | Writing and Rhetoric | 3 |
Select two of the following: | 6 | |
ENGINR 1200 | Statics and Elementary Strength of Materials | 3 |
ENGINR 2300 | Engineering Thermodynamics | 3 |
IMSE 2710 | ||
Economics Elective | ||
Select one of the following: | 3 | |
ECONOM 1014 | Principles of Microeconomics | 3 |
ECONOM 1015 | Principles of Macroeconomics | 3 |
Constitutional Elective | ||
Select one of the following: | 3 | |
HIST 1100 | Survey of American History to 1865 | 3 |
HIST 1200 | Survey of American History Since 1865 | 3 |
HIST 1400 | American History | 5 |
HIST 2210 | Twentieth Century America | 3 |
HIST 2440 | History of Missouri | 3 |
HIST 4000 | Age of Jefferson | 3 |
HIST 4220 | U.S. Society Between the Wars 1918-1945 | 3 |
HIST 4230 | Our Times: United States Since 1945 | 3 |
POL_SC 1100 | American Government | 3 |
POL_SC 2100 | State Government | 3 |
Humanities/Fine Arts courses | 9 | |
Social Science/Behavioral Science courses | 3 | |
Other major core requirement courses: | ||
ENGINR 1000 | Introduction to Engineering * | 1 |
CMP_SC 1050 | Algorithm Design and Programming I | 4 |
ENGINR 1050 | Foundations of Engineering ** | 2 |
ECE 2100 | Circuit Theory I | 4 |
ECE 2210 | Introduction to Logic Systems | 3 |
ECE 3210 | Microprocessor Engineering for Electrical Engineers | 4 |
ECE 3810 | Circuit Theory II | 4 |
ECE 3830 | Signals and Linear Systems | 3 |
ECE 3410 | Electronic Circuits and Signals I | 4 |
ECE 3510 | Electromagnetic Fields | 3 |
ECE 3610 | Semiconductors and Devices | 3 |
ECE 3840 | Measurement and Instrumentation | 3 |
ECE 4960W | Senior Capstone Design I - Writing Intensive | 3 |
ECE 4980 | Senior Capstone Design II (Senior Capstone Design II) | 3 |
Electives | ||
ECE or CMP_SC 2000+ Elective | 6 | |
ECE 4000+ Technical Elective | 9 | |
ECE 4000+ Senior Lecture/Lab | 4 | |
Any Elective | 3 |
- **
ENGINR 1050 waiver: Students with 60 or more credits have completed the ENGINR 1050 requirement**
- *
ENGINR 1000 waiver: Students with 60 or more credits have completed the ENGINR 1000 requirement
Accelerated BSEE to MS in Electrical Engineering
The accelerated option will allow students to earn a bachelors and masters degree within five years. Eligible students who have completed at least 90 credit hours with a cumulative GPA of 3.0 or higher. The academic requirements of the accelerated MS program will require a total of 30 graduate credit hours, to graduate. Accepted undergraduate students can take up to 15 hours of graduate level courses that will count toward both the undergraduate and the graduate degrees. The shared-credit graduate-level courses should be elective courses. Once the student has completed 126 credit hours, (includes at least 12 credit hours of dual enrollment), the corresponding bachelor’s degree will be conferred and they will become graduate students in our MS program to complete the remaining 18 hours of graduate credit. A minimum of 15 credit hours must be from courses at the 8000 level or above and no more than 9 credit hours can be from a combination of research and/or problems courses. The student's graduate course GPA must be 3.0 or greater.
Total credits required for graduation must be at least 144 total credit hours:
- Total undergraduate credit hours: 126
- Total dual enrollment credit hours: 12-15
- Total graduate credit hours: 30
Thesis/Non-Thesis Option
During the program, students will conduct an independent study that will result in a thesis or project report, under the guidance of their graduate advisor. In their last semester in the program, they must defend their thesis or project in front of an examination committee composed of their graduate advisor and at least two other faculty members.
Dual Degree
Electrical Engineering and Computer Engineering
Many students in the EECS department combine the BS in Electrical Engineering with the BS in Computer Engineering in a special 138-credit program. These students receive both the BS EE and BS CoE degrees.
Major Program Requirements
Constitutional Elective | ||
Select one of the following: | 3 | |
HIST 1100 | Survey of American History to 1865 | 3 |
HIST 1200 | Survey of American History Since 1865 | 3 |
HIST 1400 | American History | 5 |
HIST 2210 | Twentieth Century America | 3 |
HIST 2440 | History of Missouri | 3 |
HIST 4000 | Age of Jefferson | 3 |
HIST 4220 | U.S. Society Between the Wars 1918-1945 | 3 |
HIST 4230 | Our Times: United States Since 1945 | 3 |
POL_SC 1100 | American Government | 3 |
POL_SC 2100 | State Government | 3 |
Humanities/Fine Arts courses | 9 | |
Social Science/Behavioral Science courses | 3 | |
Select two of the following: | 6 | |
ENGINR 1200 | Statics and Elementary Strength of Materials | 3 |
ENGINR 2300 | Engineering Thermodynamics | 3 |
IMSE 2710 | ||
Other major core requirement courses: | ||
MATH 1500 | Analytic Geometry and Calculus I | 5 |
MATH 1700 | Calculus II | 5 |
MATH 2300 | Calculus III | 3 |
MATH 2320 | Discrete Mathematical Structures | 3 |
MATH 4100 | Differential Equations | 3 |
STAT 4710 | Introduction to Mathematical Statistics | 3 |
PHYSCS 2750 | University Physics I | 5 |
PHYSCS 2760 | University Physics II | 5 |
CHEM 1320 | 4 | |
ENGLSH 1000 | Writing and Rhetoric | 3 |
ECONOM 1014 | Principles of Microeconomics | 3 |
or ECONOM 1015 | Principles of Macroeconomics | |
ENGINR 1000 | Introduction to Engineering | 1 |
ENGINR 1050 | Foundations of Engineering | 2 |
CMP_SC 1050 | Algorithm Design and Programming I | 4 |
CMP_SC 2050 | Algorithm Design and Programming II | 4 |
ECE 1000 | 2 | |
ECE 2100 | Circuit Theory I | 4 |
ECE 2210 | Introduction to Logic Systems | 3 |
ECE 3210 | Microprocessor Engineering for Electrical Engineers | 4 |
ECE 3220 | Software Design in C and C++ | 3 |
ECE 3410 | Electronic Circuits and Signals I | 4 |
ECE 3510 | Electromagnetic Fields | 3 |
ECE 3610 | Semiconductors and Devices | 3 |
ECE 3810 | Circuit Theory II | 4 |
ECE 3830 | Signals and Linear Systems | 3 |
ECE 4220 | Real Time Embedded Computing | 3 |
ECE 4250 | VHDL and Programmable Logic Devices | 4 |
ECE 4270 | Computer Architecture | 4 |
ECE 3840 | Measurement and Instrumentation | 3 |
ECE 4960W | Senior Capstone Design I - Writing Intensive | 3 |
ECE 4980 | Senior Capstone Design II (Senior Capstone Design II) | 3 |
Electives | ||
2000+ ECE or CMP_SC Elective | 6 | |
ECE 4000+ Technical Elective | 6 | |
ECE 4000-level Senior Lecture/Lab | 4 | |
Any Elective | 1 |
Semester Plan
Below is a sample plan of study, semester by semester. A student's actual plan may vary based on course choices where options are available.
First Year | |||
---|---|---|---|
Fall | Credits | Spring | Credits |
CMP_SC 1050 | 4 | ECE 2210 | 3 |
CHEM 1320 | 4 | MATH 1700 | 5 |
MATH 1500 | 5 | Humanities or Fine Arts Elective | 3 |
ENGINR 1000 | 1 | Constitution SOC/BEH | 3 |
ENGLSH 1000 | 3 | ENGINR 1050 | 2 |
17 | 16 | ||
Second Year | |||
Fall | Credits | Spring | Credits |
ECE 2100 | 4 | MATH 4100 | 3 |
ECE 3210 | 4 | Humanities or Fine Arts Elective | 3 |
MATH 2300 | 3 | ECE 3810 | 4 |
PHYSCS 2750 | 5 | PHYSCS 2760 | 5 |
16 | 15 | ||
Third Year | |||
Fall | Credits | Spring | Credits |
ECE 3410 | 4 | ECE 3610 | 3 |
ECE 3510 | 3 | ENGINR 1200, 2300, or ISE 2710 | 3 |
ECE 3830 | 3 | ECE 3000+ or SCI 2000+ Elective | 3 |
STAT 4710 | 3 | Humanities/Fine Arts Elective | 3 |
Social/Behavioral Science Elective | 3 | ECONOM 1014 or 1015 (SOC/BEH Elective) | 3 |
16 | 15 | ||
Fourth Year | |||
Fall | Credits | Spring | Credits |
ECE 4960W | 3 | ECE 4980 (Senior Capstone Design II) | 3 |
ECE 3840 | 3 | ENGINR 1200, 2300, or ISE 2710 | 3 |
ECE 4000+ Technical Elective | 3 | ECE 3000+ or SCI 2000+ Elective | 3 |
ECE 4000+ Technical Elective | 3 | ECE 4000+ Senior Lecture/Lab | 4 |
Free Elective | 3 | ECE 4000+ Technical Elective | 3 |
15 | 16 | ||
Total Credits: 126 |
Semester Plan- Dual Degree Electrical Engineering and Computer Engineering
Below is a sample plan of study, semester by semester. A student's actual plan may vary based on course choices where options are available.
First Year | |||
---|---|---|---|
Fall | Credits | Spring | Credits |
CMP_SC 1050 | 4 | ECE 2210 | 3 |
CHEM 1320 | 4 | CMP_SC 2050 | 4 |
MATH 1500 | 5 | MATH 1700 | 5 |
ENGINR 1000 | 1 | ENGINR 1050 | 2 |
ENGLSH 1000 | 3 | Constitution SOC/BEH | 3 |
17 | 17 | ||
Second Year | |||
Fall | Credits | Spring | Credits |
ECE 2100 | 4 | ECE 3810 | 4 |
ECE 3210 | 4 | MATH 4100 | 3 |
MATH 2300 | 3 | PHYSCS 2760 | 5 |
PHYSCS 2750 | 5 | Humanities/Fine Arts Elective | 3 |
16 | 15 | ||
Third Year | |||
Fall | Credits | Spring | Credits |
ECE 3410 | 4 | ECE 3610 | 3 |
ECE 3220 | 3 | ECE 4250 | 4 |
ECE 3510 | 3 | MATH 2320 | 3 |
ECE 3830 | 3 | ECE 3000+ or SCI 2000+ Elective | 3 |
STAT 4710 | 3 | ECE 4000+ Elective | 3 |
16 | 16 | ||
Fourth Year | |||
Fall | Credits | Spring | Credits |
ECE 4220 | 3 | ECE 3840 | 3 |
ECE 4270 | 4 | ECE 4960W | 3 |
ENGINR 1200, 2300, or ISE 2710 | 3 | ENGINR 1200, 2300, or ISE 2710 | 3 |
ECE 3000+ or SCI 2000+ Elective | 3 | ECE 4000+ Technical Elective | 3 |
SOC/BEH Elective | 3 | Humanities/Fine Arts Elective | 3 |
16 | 15 | ||
Fifth Year | |||
Fall | Credits | ||
ECE 4980 (Senior Capstone Design II) | 3 | ||
ECE 4000-level Sr Lec/Lab | 4 | ||
Flexible Elective | 1 | ||
Humanities/Fine Arts Elective | 3 | ||
ECONOM 1014 or 1015 (SOC/BEH Elective) | 3 | ||
14 | |||
Total Credits: 142 |
Degree Audit
The degree audit is an automated report reflecting a student’s academic progress toward the completion of a degree.
MU students can request a degree audit by logging in to myDegreePlanner. Students may also access myDegreePlanner via myZou, in the Student Center, click on the Academic Progress Tile, then select Request Degree Audit. The audit automatically pulls in the student’s MU course work, transfer courses and courses in progress. This is available to current students, admitted students, and those who last attended less than three terms ago.
Past MU students can request a degree audit by contacting the Academic Advising Unit of the division in which they were last enrolled at MU. For contact information, go to https://advising.missouri.edu/contact/.
Prospective students, can access a preliminary MU degree audit via https://www.transferology.com. Information on the college credits already earned will have to be manually entered before it can be evaluated against current degree requirements.
For additional details on degree audits, go to https://registrar.missouri.edu/degrees-audits/degree-audits/.
Major and Career Exploration
The University of Missouri has many resources to assist you in exploring majors and career possibilities. For guidance, visit the Majors and Careers website or view specific resources below.
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If you are considering a change of major or are exploring multiple majors, schedule an appointment with an advisor in the Discovery Center by calling (573)884-9700 or through MU Connect Discovery Center service in you success network.
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If you have decided on a major, visit an academic advisor in the School or College that you are interested in to discuss the process of declaring the major.
- If you would like to learn more about your career interests, abilities, values and talents, visit the MU Career Center. No Appointment is necessary to explore career options with one of our staff members.
- If you would like information about MU majors and degree programs, visit:
- the Degrees, Majors (Degree Programs), Emphasis Areas, Minors and Certificates page in the catalog,
- the MU Majors website.
For additional major and career exploration resources, visit Major & Career Exploration in the catalog.