Dec 09, 2024  
2016-2017 University Catalog 
    
2016-2017 University Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Industrial Engineering, BSIE


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About the Program

Industrial engineers design, analyze, and manage complex human-integrated systems such as manufacturing systems, supply chain networks, and service systems.  These systems typically consist of a combination of people, information, material, and equipment. In such systems industrial engineers determine how to optimize the system for maximum efficiency, effectiveness, throughput, safety, or some other objective of interest to the stakeholders of the system.  To achieve these objectives, an industrial engineer draws upon knowledge of mathematics, along with physical, engineering, management, and behavioral sciences to function as a problem-solver, innovator, designer, coordinator, and system integrator. Industrial engineers are employed in and apply their skills in an extremely wide range of organizations, including manufacturing industries, service industries, and governmental agencies.

The complexity of these organizations and the emphasis on increased effectiveness, efficiency, and productivity have led to a growing need for industrial engineering analysis and design, resulting in an increased demand for industrial engineering graduates. This increased demand recognizes the modern industrial engineer’s versatility and responsiveness to the challenges of a rapidly changing society. Industrial engineering is one of the nation’s largest and most rapidly growing engineering professions.

The industrial engineering program prepares graduates for careers in all phases of industrial engineering and enables them to perform both technical and managerial functions that require scientific and engineering backgrounds. By combining the study of science, mathematics, engineering fundamentals, design, and management principles, an industrial engineering education provides a unique background and a sound basis for lifelong career development in engineering practice, research, or management.

Senior design projects consist of a real-world application of IE principles by teaming students with a local industry in Indiana. Teams have taken on full-scale projects like designing floor layouts for factories and hospitals, designing operations to improve system efficiency, reducing time and waste in processing, allocating resources to optimize system performance, and developing a safety plan for preventing work-related injuries.

Degree Requirements and Supplemental Information

The full Program Requirements for 2016-17 Industrial Engineering  include all Supplemental Information and selective lists of those categories which a student must fulfill in order to earn their degree. These are intended to be printer-friendly, but include less descriptive course detail.

Please see below for program requirements and the necessary degree fulfillments.

 

code-BSc-IE
123 Credits for Graduation
Students need cumulative GPA of 2.0 to graduate.

Industrial Engineering Major Courses (36 credits)


IE Technical Electives - (15 credits)


NOTE: 6 credits required in IE courses, Must do two of the first three options listed below

https://engineering.purdue.edu/IE/Academics

Other Departmental/Program Course Requirements (55-57 credits)


Science Requirements (14 cr.)


General Education Elective Requirements (24 cr.)


Foundational Core

(http://www.purdue.edu/provost/initiatives/curriculum/course.html)

  • (satisfies Information Literacy selective for core; ENGL 10600 /ENGL 10800  strongly recommended) - Credit Hours: 3.00
  • (satisfies Written Communication selective for core; ENGL 10600 /ENGL 10800  strongly recommended) - Credit Hours: 3.00
  • (satisfies Oral Communication selective for core; COM 11400  strongly recommended) - Credit Hours: 3.00
  • (satisfies Human Cultures: Humanities selective for core) - Credit Hours: 3.00
  • (satisfies Human Cultures: Behavioral/Social Science selective for core) - Credit Hours: 3.00
  • (satisfies Science, Technology & Society selective for core) - Credit Hours: 3.00

University Core Requirements


  • Human Cultures Humanities
  • Human Cultures Behavioral/Social Science
  • Information Literacy
  • Science #1 - PHYS 17200  
  • Science #2 - CHM 11500  
  • Science, Technology & Society
  • Written Communication
  • Oral Communication
  • Quantitative Reasoning - MA 16100 /MA 16500  

Program Requirements


14 Credits


16 Credits


16 Credits


15 Credits


18 Credits


15 Credits


Fall 4th Year


15 Credits


Spring 4th Year


  • Technical Elective III - Credit Hours: 3.00
  • Technical Elective IV - Credit Hours: 3.00
  • Technical Elective V - Credit Hours: 3.00
  • General Elective VIII - Credit Hours: 3.00

15 Credits


Note


*Satisfies a University Core Requirement

**Satisfies a Non-departmental Major Course Requirement

123 semester credits required for Bachelor of Engineering degree.

2.0 Graduation GPA required for Bachelor of Engineering degree.

Degree Requirements


The student is ultimately responsible for knowing and completing all degree requirements.

Critical Course


The ♦ course is considered critical. A Critical Course is one that a student must be able to pass to persist and succeed in a particular major.

Foreign Language Courses


Foreign Language proficiency requirements vary by program.  For acceptable languages and proficiency levels, see your advisor:

American Sign Language, Arabic, Chinese, French, German, (ancient) Greek, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Latin, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish

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