The Doctor of Engineering degree is designed to prepare engineers to study engineering problems of complex nature and to develop solutions that address the most pressing engineering issues of the future. This document describes the procedure and timeline to earn the D.E. degree at Â鶹ӳ»Ó°Òô.
Type | Courses* | Dissertation | Seminar | Total |
Students admitted with a B.S. degree from a four-year engineering college | 45 | 30 | 4 | 79 |
Students admitted with a M.S. degree in Engineering | 27 | 30 | 4 | 61 |
* All courses must be approved by the student’s supervising professor and the department graduate coordinator.
The D.E. qualifying examination should be administered, preferably in the first semester of the second year, and must be completed no later than the end of the second year of D.E. study.
The examination must be conducted in the semester when the student takes ENGR 6320 (Justification of Engineering Project). The test examines the technical literacy of a D.E. student in an oral examination conducted by the student’s dissertation committee as part of ENGR 6320 coursework.
One week before the examination, the student’s committee assigns one or more peer-reviewed articles in the student’s research area for his/her review. During the examination, the student is required to make a short presentation of the reviewed literature with cross-referencing materials and answer the questions from the committee.
Students who pass the qualifying examination are admitted to candidacy. Students who fail to pass the qualifying exam can schedule a second and final re-examination within 6 weeks after the first attempt. Failing to pass the qualifying exam for the second time will remove the student from the D.E. program.
Upon admitted to D.E. candidacy, the student performs D.E. research by taking D.E. dissertation courses (ENGR 6603 and ENGR 6604) offered by his/her supervising professor. The first dissertation course (ENGR 6603) should be taken only once for the development of a D.E. research proposal, which is a concise technical document outlining the proposed research agreed upon by both the student and his/her supervising professor.
The student must successfully defend for the proposal while taking the first dissertation course. Once the proposal is approved by the dissertation committee, the student continues to work on the D.E. research while taking the second dissertation course (ENGR 6604 ) at least 3 semesters until graduation. In the graduating semester, the student must successfully defend for the D.E. dissertation.
Unless under special circumstances, the following timeline is recommended by the College of Engineering.
For students admitted with a M.S. engineering degree*
Year # | Courses* |
1 |
|
2 |
|
3 |
|
4 and on |
|
* The procedures for students admitted with a B.S. degree from four-year engineering college are similar, except that the Year 1 & 2 activities may stretch to three years because 18 more semester hours of course are required for students admitted to the program with a B.S. degree.
Dr. Gleb Tcheslavski
Phone: (409) 880-7622
Email: gvtcheslavs@lamar.edu
Office: Cherry Engineering 2030
Dr. Selahattin Sayil
Phone: (409) 880-8756
Email: ssayil@lamar.edu
Office: Cherry Engineering 2212