This is an archived copy of the 2016-2017 catalog. To access the most recent version of the catalog, please visit http://catalog.valdosta.edu.

Dr. Barry Hojjatie, Coordinator
Room 2023, Nevins Hall

Engineering Transfer Programs

Engineering is the application of mathematical and scientific principles, technological tools, and practical experience to the solution of real-world problems. The Engineering Studies Program at Valdosta State University is part of the Department of Physics, Astronomy, and Geosciences. No degree in engineering is offered; however, courses from engineering, the sciences, mathematics, computer science, the humanities, and the social sciences provide a strong and intensive curriculum that effectively covers two to three years of work for a wide variety of engineering fields. The remaining course work required for a Bachelor’s degree is completed by transfer to a four-year engineering institution. Formal agreements exist for transfer to the Georgia Institute of Technology and to Mercer University, but informal transfer arrangements can also be made with other qualified institutions.

The Engineering Studies Program is designed to prepare students to transfer as third-year students into an engineering curriculum at a degree-granting institution. A major part of this program is the Regents’ Engineering Transfer Program (RETP), administered by the Georgia Institute of Technology. The program covers course work through the first two years in four major tracks: civil engineering, electrical and computer engineering, industrial engineering, and mechanical and aerospace engineering. Other alternatives for transfer in engineering include the Mercer University Transfer Program in biomedical engineering, computer engineering, electrical engineering, environmental engineering, industrial engineering, and mechanical engineering; and the regular transfer option to the engineering programs at the University of Georgia, Southern Polytechnic University, and Georgia Southern University. The regular transfer program option also includes transfer to other universities in Georgia to complete a Bachelor of Science degree in an engineering technology major. In addition to the RETP, another degree program with the Georgia Institute of Technology, the Engineering Dual Degree Program, enables students to earn a B.S. degree from VSU as well as a B.S. in Engineering from Georgia Tech. Additional information about this program is given at the end of this section.

Students who desire to enter one of these programs should consult the engineering studies coordinator as early as possible to understand the requirements of the program and to develop an acceptable program of study. This contact is particularly important for planning the specialized Dual Degree curriculum.

Students in the Engineering Studies Program may be able to gain related work experience through the VSU Co-op Program. Such experience may prove valuable in terms of career exploration, acquisition of new skills, and career development. In most cases, the Co-op work contract can be continued without interruption after a student transfers to a four-year engineering school. Students seeking more information should contact the Coordinator of Engineering Studies or the Office of Career Opportunities.

Selected Educational Outcomes

  1. Students will demonstrate understanding of fundamental sciences through application to problem solving and experimental laboratory analysis.
  2. Students will demonstrate understanding of mathematics through application to mathematical analysis and problem solving.
  3. Students will be able to apply scientific and mathematical principles to solve engineering problems.
  4. Students will demonstrate the effective use of computers through application packages, programming, scientific calculations, and graphical applications.

Examples of Outcome Assessments

The curricula used at VSU to prepare engineering students to transfer are controlled primarily by the courses required at the degree-granting institutions. To be accepted as transfer credit, VSU courses must duplicate the corresponding courses at the transfer institution. Assessment of the VSU engineering program must therefore monitor the individual course contents, which can change from time to time, as well as the success of the students who transfer. To monitor the progress of students who transfer, records of the final grades, degree conferred, and any honors received are maintained and examined annually to determine the effectiveness of the Engineering Studies Program. Transfer students are also asked to provide an evaluation of their VSU engineering preparation during their final year before graduation.

Recommended Courses for the Regents’ Engineering Transfer Program

Engineering students are required to meet the Core Curriculum of the Georgia Institute of Technology by taking MATH 2261 in Area A, MATH 2262 and an approved lab science sequence in Area D, and CS 1010 in Area B.

Core Curriculum Area A
ENGL 1101Composition I3
or ENGL 1101H Honors Composition I
ENGL 1102Composition II3
or ENGL 1102H Honors Composition II
MATH 2261Analytic Geometry and Calculus I 14
Core Curriculum Area B
CS 1010Algorithmic Problem Solving3
MATH 2261Analytic Geometry and Calculus I 24
Core Curriculum Area C
See course requirements for Area C in the VSU Core Curriculum6
Core Curriculum Area D
Select eight hours from the following:8
Principles of Biology I
Principles of Chemistry I
and Principles of Chemistry Laboratory I
Principles of Chemistry II
and Principles of Chemistry Laboratory II
Principles of Physical Geology
Principles of Physics I
Principles of Physics II
MATH 2262Analytic Geometry and Calculus II 34
Core Curriculum Area E
See course requirements for Area E in the VSU Core Curriculum12
Core Curriculum Area F
PHYS 2211KPrinciples of Physics I4
Lab Science Sequence 40-8
ENGR 2010Introduction to Engineering2
MATH 2262Analytic Geometry and Calculus II 54
MATH 2263Analytic Geometry and Calculus III4
MATH 3340Ordinary Differential Equations3
1

 1 hour counts in Area B

2

 3 hours count in Area A

3

 1 hour counts in Area F

4

 if not taken in Area D

5

3 hours count in Area D

The engineering studies curriculum for each track is shown below:

Valdosta State University Engineering Studies Curriculum for Transfer to the Georgia Institute of Technology in Civil Engineering

First Year
FallHoursSpringHours
MATH 11133MATH 22614
CHEM 1211
1211L
4CS 10103
ENGR 20103ENGR 25003
ENGL 11013ENGL 11023
POLS 11013HIST 2111 or 21123
 16 16
Second Year
FallHoursSpringHours
MATH 22624MATH 22634
PHYS 2211K4PHYS 2212K4
CS 13014ENGR 22003
Select one of the following:3BIOL 1107K4
ENGL 21113 
ENGL 21123 
ENGL 21133 
 15 15
Third Year
FallHoursSpringHours
MATH 33403MATH 21503
ENGR 32103ENGR 32203
Area C63ECON 2105 or 21063
GEOL 1121K4Area C63
KSPE 20002Area E3
 15 15
Total Hours: 92
6

 COMM 1100 and ENGL 3020: recommended but not required

ECON 2105 or ECON 2106 is acceptable for the economics requirement.

Other supported courses: CS 1302, MATH 3600.

Valdosta State University Engineering Studies Curriculum for Transfer to the Georgia Institute of Technology in Computer Engineering or Electrical Engineering

First Year
FallHoursSpringHours
MATH 11133MATH 22614
CHEM 1211
1211L
4CS 10103
ENGR 20103Area C73
ENGL 11013ENGL 11023
POLS 11013HIST 2111 or 21123
 16 16
Second Year
FallHoursSpringHours
MATH 22624MATH 22634
PHYS 2211K4PHYS 2212K4
CS 13014ENGR 23104
Select one of the following:3Area C73
ENGL 21113 
ENGL 21123 
ENGL 21133 
 15 15
Third Year
FallHoursSpringHours
MATH 33403MATH 21503
ENGR 33203ENGR 220073
CS 13024Area D83
ECON 2105 or 21063ENGR 23203
Area E3KSPE 20002
 16 14
Total Hours: 92
7

ENGR 2500, COMM 1100, ENGR 2200: recommended but not required.

ECON 2105 or ECON 2106 is acceptable for the economics requirement.

8

 Area D can be satisfied by BIOL 1107K, CHEM 1212, or GEOL 1121K.

Valdosta State University Engineering Studies Curriculum for Transfer to the Georgia Institute of Technology in Industrial Engineering

First Year
FallHoursSpringHours
MATH 11133MATH 22614
Area D94CS 10103
ENGR 20103ENGR 2500103
ENGL 11013ENGL 11023
POLS 11013HIST 2111 or 21123
 16 16
Second Year
FallHoursSpringHours
MATH 22624MATH 22634
PHYS 2211K4PHYS 2212K4
CS 13014CS 13024
Select one of the following:3Area C93
ENGL 21113 
ENGL 21123 
ENGL 21133 
 15 15
Third Year
FallHoursSpringHours
Area D104MATH 21503
PSYC 11013ENGR 22003
ECON 21053ECON 21063
MATH 36003ENGL 30203
KSPE 20002 
 15 12
Total Hours: 89
9

ENGR 2500 and COMM 1100:recommended but not required

10

Area D can be satisfied by two of these courses: CHEM 1211/CHEM 1211L, CHEM 1212/CHEM 1212L, BIOL 1107K, and GEOL 1121K.
 

Valdosta State University Engineering Studies Curriculum for Transfer to the Georgia Institute of Technology in Aerospace Engineering or Mechanical Engineering

First Year
FallHoursSpringHours
MATH 11133MATH 22614
CHEM 1211
1211L
4CS 10103
ENGR 20103ENGR 25003
ENGL 11013ENGL 11023
POLS 11013HIST 2111 or 21123
 16 16
Second Year
FallHoursSpringHours
MATH 22624MATH 22634
PHYS 2211K4PHYS 2212K4
CS 13014ENGR 22003
Select one of the following:3Area C113
ENGL 21113 
ENGL 21123 
ENGL 21133 
 24 14
Third Year
FallHoursSpringHours
MATH 33403MATH 21503
ENGR 32103ENGR 32203
Area D124ECON 2105 or 21063
Area E3ENGL 30203
KSPE 20002 
 15 12
Total Hours: 97
11

COMM 1100, ENGL 3020: recommended but not required.

ECON 2105 or ECON 2106 is acceptable for the economics requirement.

Other supporting courses: CS 1302, MATH 3600

12

 Area D can be satisfied by BIOL 1107K, CHEM 1212/CHEM 1212L, or GEOL 1121K

Recommended Courses for Regular Transfer to the University of Georgia

All Majors (agricultural engineering, biological engineering): Students should follow the recommended courses for Regents’ Engineering Transfer Program, Mechanical Engineering.

Dual Degree Program

The Dual Degree Program offers a student the opportunity to earn a Bachelor of Science degree from Valdosta State University and, in addition, a Bachelor of Science degree in engineering from the Georgia Institute of Technology within a total time period of approximately five years. Three-fourths of the Valdosta State University degree requirements are completed before transfer to the Georgia Institute of Technology (nominally three years), while the remaining Valdosta State University degree requirements and the remaining engineering degree requirements are completed at the Georgia Institute of Technology (nominally two years). The bachelor’s degree from Valdosta State University may be awarded when the student has satisfied the degree requirements.

The major selected at Valdosta State University should be one that can easily incorporate the mathematics and science courses required in the first two years of the engineering field the student plans to enter, i.e., applied mathematics, computer science, physics, or chemistry. Other majors make the five-year time period unfeasible. The second degree at the Georgia Institute of Technology may be selected from any of the fields of engineering.

Recommended Courses for the Dual-Degree Program

Major: See course requirements for VSU major. Students must complete at least 90 hours at VSU before transferring. The remaining 30 (or fewer) hours required for the VSU degree must be engineering courses (ENGR) taken at either VSU or Georgia Tech. All ENGR courses from Georgia Tech will be accepted as transfer credit by VSU. Below is a sample program for the Dual Degree in Physics and Engineering.

Core Curriculum Areas A-E (See VSU Core Curriculum)42
Physics/Engineering Dual degree majors are required to take MATH 2261 in Area A and MATH 2262 in Area D2. They are advised to take PHYS 2211K and PHYS 2212K in Area D2.
Core Curriculum Area F18
MATH 2261Analytic Geometry and Calculus I (1 hour left over from Area A)1
MATH 2262Analytic Geometry and Calculus II (1 hour left over from Area D)1
MATH 2263Analytic Geometry and Calculus III4
CS 1301Principles of Programming I4
PHYS 2211K
PHYS 2212K
Principles of Physics I
and Principles of Physics II (if not taken in Area D2)
0-8
Lab courses, if PHYS 2211K and PHYS 2212K are taken in Area D20-8
Senior College Curriculum60
ENGR 2010Introduction to Engineering3
Required Courses in Physics24
PHYS 2700Modern Physics1
Advanced Lab Courses 8
Select two of the following
Electronics
Optics
Mathematical Methods of Physics
Experimental Physics
Upper Level Lecture Courses15
Select five of the following:
Mathematical Methods of Physics
Theoretical Mechanics I
Theoretical Mechanics II
Electromagnetism I
Electromagnetism II
Plasma Physics
Thermodynamics
Quantum Mechanics I
Quantum Mechanics II
Other Supporting Courses6
Introduction to Linear Algebra
Ordinary Differential Equations
Engineering Courses30
0-30 hours may be taken at engineering school
Up to 13 hours may be taken from the following:
Introduction to Engineering
Statics
Introduction to Signal Processing
Introduction to Computer Engineering
Engineering Graphics for Design
Dynamics
Mechanics of Deformable Bodies
Circuit Analysis
Statics
Introduction to Signal Processing
Engineering Graphics for Design
Dynamics
Mechanics of Deformable Bodies
Circuit Analysis
Introduction to Linear Algebra
Ordinary Differential Equations
Total Hours Required for the Degree120

See the Dual Degree Coordinator for additional requirements that must be satisfied before transferring.

Supporting Courses/Electives:  Students take the following courses as they fit into the major requirements at VSU and the engineering requirements at Georgia Tech: ENGR 201, ENGR 2200, ENGR 2310, ENGR 2500, ENGR 3210, ENGR 3220, ENGR 3320, MATH 2150, MATH 3340.

ENGR 1010. Technological Problem Solving. 3 Hours.

Prerequisite: MATH 1111 or higher. Development of the features and principles of problem solving techniques based on a variety of fundamental models for general application, such as physical component, sketching, graphical, and mathematical models. Emphasis is placed on solving problems of a technological nature.

ENGR 2001. Principles and Applications of Engineering Materials. 3 Hours.

Prerequisite: CHEM 1211. A treatment of structures, properties, processing, and performance of engineering materials and their relationships. The course introduces the molecular and microstructural basis for electrical, optical, thermal, and mechanical properties of engineering materials including metals, ceramics, polymers, semiconductors, and composites.

ENGR 2010. Introduction to Engineering. 3 Hours.

Interpretation of the scope of engineering; introduction to engineering disciplines that form the basis for a variety of career opportunities; engineering design as creative problem solving; lessons from design failures; professionalism and ethics; introduction to problem solving using MATLAB.

ENGR 2200. Statics. 3 Hours.

Prerequisite: PHYS 2211. Prerequisite or corequisite: MATH 2263. Elements of statics in two and three dimensions; forces and moments; particles, objects, and structures in equilibrium; centroids; distributed forces and beams; friction.

ENGR 2310. Introduction to Signal Processing. 4 Hours.

Prerequisites: CS 1301 and MATH 2262. Introduction to signal processing for discrete-time and continuous-time signals. Filtering, frequency response, Fourier Transform, Z Transform. Laboratory emphasizes computer-based signal processing.

ENGR 2320. Introduction to Computer Engineering. 3 Hours.

Prerequisites: CS 1301 and MATH 2262. Computer system and digital design principles; architectural concepts, software, Boolean algebra, number systems, combinational datapath elements, sequential logic, and storage elements; design of DRAM control and I/O bus.

ENGR 2500. Engineering Graphics for Design. 3 Hours.

Introduction to engineering design and three-dimensional visualization; geometric construction; graphical projection and sketching; introduction to descriptive geometry; computer graphics.

ENGR 3210. Dynamics. 3 Hours.

Prerequisite: ENGR 2200. Kinematics and kinetics of particles; kinematics and kinetics of rigid bodies in plane motion; kinematics and kinetics of rigid bodies in three-dimensional motion.

ENGR 3220. Mechanics of Deformable Bodies. 3 Hours.

Prerequisite: ENGR 2200. Definition and analysis of strain and stress, applications to axially loaded elements, torsion of circular shafts and bending of beams, introduction to simple plasticity and column stability.

ENGR 3320. Circuit Analysis. 3 Hours.

Prerequisites: ENGR 2310 and PHYS 2212. Corequisite: MATH 3340. Introduction to the basic concepts of DC and AC circuit theory and analysis.

ENGR 4310. Thermodynamics. 3 Hours.

Also offered as PHYS 4310. Prerequisites: PHYS 2211, PHYS 2212, MATH 2263, or consent of the instructor. Basic principles of classical thermodynamics, which includes open and closed systems for both steady and transient processes.

ENGR 4950. Directed Study in Engineering. 1-3 Hours.

Prerequisites: Junior standing; permission of advisor, instructor, and Department Head. Study in an area or subject not normally found in established courses offered by the department; may also allow student to explore in more depth an area or subject covered by the pre-engineering program. Up to maximum of 3 hours.