COLLEGE REQUIREMENTS
FOR THE BACHELOR'S DEGREE

College of Engineering

Unit Requirements

Each candidate for the degree of Bachelor of Science in Engineering must satisfactorily complete an approved curriculum in engineering. Each curriculum consists of a specified Lower Division Program (or an approved equivalent program for students who transfer into the College with 90 or more quarter units) and a specified Upper Division Program. Detailed requirements for the approved curricula are given in the Programs and Courses section of this catalog; to see the courses required in your major, consult this section. For more specific advice on your requirements, see the transfer counselor of your institution.

If you are admitted with 90 or more quarter units, you are classified as having upper division standing, but you are required to complete the minimum number of quarter units in the subject areas specified below before your Lower Division Program is considered complete. You may, however, start your Upper Division Program while completing your Lower Division Program requirements.

Once you have completed the Lower Division Program and fulfilled these specified subject area requirements, you need not take additional lower division courses, except those that are prerequisite to upper division courses in your curriculum.

The minimum number of required units in the combined Lower and Upper Division Programs varies, with the curriculum, from 180 to 195.

You may, for good cause, request a modification of particular degree requirements by submitting a student petition. These petitions, which are available in the Undergraduate Office, can be a valuable aid in resolving individual program conflicts or other special problems. Such petitions are subject to approval by the Undergraduate Study Committee, a body of six professors and six (non-voting) students. A negative decision by the committee may be appealed to the College faculty for action at a regular meeting.

Credit in University Extension Courses. Appropriate courses taken through University Extension may be used for degree credit. Simultaneous registration in resident courses and Extension courses requires prior approval by the College's Associate Dean for Undergraduate Studies. Such approval will be given only for a limited number of credits. No grade points are assigned for courses completed in University Extension.

Residence Requirement

In addition to fulfilling the university residence requirement, you must complete at least 35 of the final 45 units characteristic of your curriculum in engineering while registered in the College.

Scholarship Requirement

In addition to meeting the university scholarship requirement, you are required to maintain a 2.0 grade point average for all engineering coursework.

English Composition Requirement (Upper Division)

After completing 70 quarter units, you may elect to satisfy the upper division English Composition requirement by passing the English Composition Examination administered by the College of Letters and Science. (You should take it early in your junior year and must take it before your last quarter. Units of credit are not given for passing this examination.)

OR, upon completion of 90 quarter units, you may satisfy this requirement by completing English 101, 102, 104A, or 104E with a grade of C­ or higher.

This requirement is in addition to the expository writing course requirement (English 1 or 3; Comparative Literature 1, 2, 3 or 4; or Native American Studies 5) specified in the Lower Division Programs.

During the 1996-97 academic year, the English Composition Examination will be offered on the following three Saturdays: October 26, 1996, January 25, 1997 and April 26, 1997. Sign-up rosters will be posted on the bulletin board near the main English Department office (176 Voorhies), Monday until noon on Friday (or until they are filled) just preceding each Saturday examination date. You must sign up, in person, by Friday. You must obtain the English Composition Examination form, available at the UCD Bookstore, to take the exam.

Engineering Design Requirement

Engineering design is the process of devising a system, component, or process to meet certain needs. Design involves a decision-making process (often iterative), in which the basic sciences, mathematics and engineering sciences are applied to convert resources optimally to meet a stated objective. Among the fundamental elements of the design process are the establishment of objectives and criteria, synthesis, analysis, construction, testing and evaluation. You must take at least 24 quarter units of such design coursework through a combination of required and restricted elective courses. Specific comments about design are included in individual curricula descriptions. You should also review the design content of your individual program with your adviser in the course of completing the upper division advising worksheet.

Electives

In general, there are four kinds of elective courses in the engineering curricula: Humanities­Social Sciences, General Education, technical and unrestricted. Transfer students have an additional set of electives: Physical and Biological Sciences electives or Mathematics/Science electives.

Humanities­Social Sciences electives: Because engineers are significant agents of social change, they must be sensitive to the human setting in which that change takes place. The Humanities­Social Sciences (HSS) electives have been selected within the engineering curricula to increase your awareness of the human and societal implications of engineering practice. The humanities include subject areas such as literature, philosophy, history and the fine arts. The social sciences include areas such as anthropology, political science, sociology, psychology and economics.

You must take at least 24 quarter units of coursework in the humanities and social sciences. Subjects that are vocationally oriented or skills oriented, such as management and accounting, or that contain a preponderance of scientific or mathematical content, are not suitable for HSS credit even though a course may be offered by a department ordinarily classified as a humanities or social science department. Foreign language courses must stress literature, not skills, and fine arts courses must emphasize the history and appreciation of forms of expression, not development of performance or other technical skills. You may petition to have a non-literature course in a foreign language which is not your native language count as a humanities course. Students enrolled in the Davis Honors Challenge may receive HSS credit for approved Honors Seminars; consult with the Undergraduate Advising Office for a list of approved seminars each quarter. You may petition for HSS credit for 92, 98, 99, 192, 197, 198 and 199 courses in appropriate cases. If you repeat any of the courses which may be repeated for credit, not more than 4 units in any such courses can be counted toward your HSS requirement.

Your HSS electives should be selected to include a comprehensive and coherent set of courses and may, in some cases, be integrated with your General Education electives, as described in the next section. HSS electives must be selected from the following list.

General Education electives are used to satisfy a campus requirement and are chosen from the list of General Education Courses for 1996-97 given earlier in this chapter. Since all engineering majors are in the Science and Engineering GE topical breadth area, you must fulfill the campus requirement by taking courses in the Arts and Humanities and Social Sciences areas.

You should note that the requirement of 24 quarter units of Humanities and Social Science (HSS) coursework is a College of Engineering requirement and is in addition to the campus General Education (GE) requirement of a fixed number of courses. You may satisfy the HSS and GE requirements simultaneously, provided that you take the courses that are listed on both the list of HSS courses above and the GE courses list shown earlier in this chapter. In general, a good academic strategy is to satisfy the campus GE requirement first and then to satisfy any remaining HSS requirements by taking courses from the HSS list. In this way, you can benefit from the breadth and depth of course coverage inherent in the GE requirements.

In satisfying the GE requirement, note that (a) you must take GE courses for a letter grade and (b) you must fulfill the Subject A requirement before you can receive GE credit for any course providing writing experience credit. In consultation with your academic adviser, you should attempt to design a comprehensive and coherent set of courses using both the HSS electives and GE electives.

Technical electives permit you to tailor a program to your own academic and career objectives. For some, the technical electives offer the opportunity to prepare for a specific occupation. For others, they offer an opportunity to broaden a background in the sciences and engineering.

You may receive technical elective credit up to a maximum of 6 units for any combination of engineering courses numbered 190C, 192, 197, 198 and 199. Academic credit for 199 courses is limited to a maximum of 5 units per quarter for each substantially different project. Academic credit for engineering internship courses (192s) is also limited to a maximum of 5 units per quarter.

With the exception of the following courses, all upper division courses in engineering, physics, chemistry, mathematics and statistics may be taken as technical electives. The courses which may not be used are:

In addition to engineering, physics, chemistry, mathematics and statistics courses, the following courses may be taken as technical electives:

Agricultural Economics 100A, 100B, 113, 118A, 118B, 155, 157, 171A, 171B, 175, 176

You are urged to discuss the selection of technical elective courses with your academic adviser.

Unrestricted electives. You may count any course for which university credit is allowed as an unrestricted elective in the engineering curricula.

Physical and Biological Science electives. Engineering students are required to have 26 units in physical and biological sciences, typically 10 units of chemistry and 16 units of physics. Students who transfer into the College of Engineering with advanced standing are required to complete 26 units of physical and biological science by graduation, but need only have completed 5-10 units of chemistry (depending on major) and 12 units of physics by the time of transfer. Transfer students may make up the remaining 4 units by taking 4 additional units of chemistry, 4 additional units of physics, or 4 units in courses selected from any of the curricula listed below, with the restrictions that follow.

Atmospheric Science
Biological Science
Chemistry
Evolution and Ecology
Geology
Microbiology
Molecular and Cellular Biology
Neurobiology, Physiology and Behavior
Physics
Plant Biology

All courses in these departments numbered 10 and 190­199 are excluded for credit, as are the following courses:

Evolution and Ecology 138
Geology 1-1G, 3-3G, 43, 113-113G, 116-116G, 131, 135, 144
Microbiology 20
Physics 137, 160
Plant Biology 191

Electrical Engineering and Computer Engineering students should also use this list to identify the courses to satisfy the mathematics/science electives. To identify additional courses that may also satisfy this requirement, please refer to the Electrical Engineering and Computer Engineering curricula outlines.

Degree Check

Use the Degree Requirement Check sheets for each of the curricula for monitoring your progress toward a degree. The Undergraduate Office will prepare only one unofficial preliminary degree check for you (preferably at the end of your junior year). You should also request an exit interview during the quarter before you plan to graduate. To have this degree check prepared, submit a signed Degree Check Request and request an appointment. You can get further information concerning these services and the forms for requesting a degree check or an exit interview in the Engineering Undergraduate Office.

Degree Requirement Changes

Since engineering is a rapidly developing profession, curricular changes are made by the faculty from year to year. To ensure that you benefit from these changes, the College of Engineering has established a policy that you must fulfill the degree requirements stated in the catalog for the year in which you complete degree work or in the catalog for the year immediately preceding.


Undergraduate programs offered by the College of Engineering.

Bachelor's Degree Requirements for the


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UC Davis 1996-97 Online General Catalog
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Keitha Hunter and Barbara Anderson