Undergraduate Study / ProgramsBachelor's Degrees
Earn your bachelor of science (BS) degree from the McCormick School of Engineering.
Explore the areas of study available for your undergraduate degree:
Applied Mathematics
Learn to apply mathematical ideas, modeling, and techniques to problems that arise in engineering and science.
Biomedical Engineering
Learn to apply engineering techniques to the analysis of biological systems, providing full integration of biology and engineering.
Chemical Engineering
Solve practical problems that involve chemistry and biochemistry, as well as the composition or structure of materials.
Civil Engineering
Learn to plan, design, build, and operate the public infrastructure, including roads, airports, bridges, tunnels, water supplies, and power facilities.
Computer Engineering
Explore the design and engineering of computer hardware and software. This area of study synthesizes computer engineering, computer science, and electrical engineering.
Computer Science
Take on the challenges posed by the world of ubiquitous, interactive, networked, multimedia computing.
Electrical Engineering
Investigate the development and application of electronic and optical technologies for generating, communicating, and processing information.
Environmental Engineering
Develop and apply scientific and technological knowledge to eliminate or reduce environmental problems.
Industrial Engineering
Learn about the design, analysis, implementation, operation, and improvement of complex organizations, or systems, that provide society’s vital goods and services.
Manufacturing and Design Engineering
Learn to integrate design and manufacturing processes into an effective system, including all aspects of product realization, from product design to manufacturing technologies and operations.
Materials Science and Engineering
Explore the development of high-technology materials, with an emphasis on the scientific reasons why materials behave the way they do.
Mechanical Engineering
Study in a rapidly diversifying field that includes areas such as robotics, biological molecular machines, microelectromechanical systems (MEMS), nanotechnology, product design, and computer-aided manufacturing.
Customize Your Major
Integrated Engineering Studies
Develop an individualized engineering degree program to explore a cross-disciplinary area of study beyond current academic boundaries.