Undergraduate Student
Handbook
Biological
Systems Engineering Major
Table of Contents
Mission, Objectives and Outcomes
Program
Objectives
Desired
Educational Outcomes
Machinery
Systems Engineering
Natural
Resources and Environmental Engineering
Food
and Bioprocess Engineering
Structural
Systems Engineering
General
Program Option
Official
Curriculum
Four
year Contract
Admission
to Degree-Granting Classification
Social
Science and Humanities Electives
Graduation
Requirements
Biological Systems Engineering Curriculum
Social Science and Humanities Courses
Machinery
Systems Engineering Option
Natural
Resources and Environment Engineering Option
Food
and Bioprocess Engineering Option
Structural
Systems Engineering Option
Obtaining
Credit for Work Experience
Finding
Employment
Benefits
of Coops/Internships
Programming
Policies, Options and Recommendations
Mandatory
Meetings With Advisors
Semester-by-Semester
Course Selection
Selecting
Technical Electives Courses
Farm
and Industry Short Course Credits
Semester
Credit Load Recommendations
Taking
Courses Pass/Fail
Double
Majors and Double Degrees
Certificate
Programs
Advanced
Degrees and Senior-Graduate Status
Scholarships and Financial Aid
Welcome to the
This manual has been prepared to
guide undergraduates in the Biological Systems Engineering Department through their
academic careers at University of Wisconsin-Madison, to help students
understand the requirements for a degree in Biological Systems Engineering, and
to give guidance for selecting elective courses..
Students are assigned an academic
advisor when they enter this department.
Your advisor will counsel you on the academic requirements of the major
and serve as a resource to answer other academic concerns. There are many sources of assistance on
campus for both academic and personal concerns.
Your advisor can assist you in locating needed assistance and can help
you in developing your career goals and objectives. It is your responsibility to seek out your
advisor. A student must see his/her
advisor each semester prior to registering for the next semester as an advisor
hold is placed on your record, and you will not be able to register until your
course schedule has been approved by your advisor. The
It is important that you access
your UW e-mail account regularly as much of the information you will be
receiving from the Department, the College, and the Registrar's Office is
transmitted via e-mail.
The Biological Systems
Engineering Department is committed to providing a stimulating education for
all students. Please inform the
Department Chair immediately of any barriers that create problems or
limitations in the educational opportunities for you or other students in the
department.
For further information about the
Biological Systems Engineering major, please contact:
David Bohnhoff, Professor and Undergraduate
Program Coordinator
Dept. of Biological Systems
Engineering
112Agricultural Engineering Bldg.
460 Henry Mall
608/262-9546
Richard
Straub, Professor and Chair
Dept. of Biological Systems
Engineering
115Agricultural Engineering Bldg.
460 Henry Mall
608/262-3311
Debby Sumwalt, Student Services
Coordinator
Dept. of Biological Systems
Engineering
115Agricultural Engineering Bldg.
460 Henry Mall
608/262-3310
bse@wisc.edu
or dsumwalt@wisc.edu
Biological Systems Engineering is
the application of engineering principles to biological and agricultural
systems which greatly impact our food, fiber and renewable energy resources. Since biological systems engineering programs
focus heavily on the protection and conservation of natural resources, it is
not uncommon for them to be described as sustainable engineering programs.
Courses in biological systems
engineering are very interesting and stimulating. The curriculum provides a thorough education
in mathematics, physics, and the engineering sciences common to all engineering
disciplines. All students complete a
core of courses in addition to courses specific to the option which they have
chosen.
Within the BSE program a student
must enroll in either the General Program
area or in one of the following four specialization areas: Machinery Systems Engineering,
Natural Resources and Environmental
Engineering, Food and Bioprocess
Engineering, and Structural Systems Engineering. These
areas are described in more detail in the Areas of Specialization section of this manual.
Students
who complete all degree requirements are awarded a Bachelor of Science Degree in Biological Systems Engineering. A student who completes one of the four
program specializations will have the area of specialization identified on
their official transcript.
The BSE program, like all undergraduate
engineering programs on the UW-Madison campus, is accredited by ABET. Accreditation by ABET is an indication of
program quality and has major benefits for individuals seeking registration as
a licensed professional engineer.
A UW-Madison BSE graduate may
apply for licensure as a registered professional engineer once they have passed
the Fundamentals of Engineering (FE) exam, obtained four years of qualifying engineering
work experience, and have passed the Professional Engineering (PE) exam. To obtain a BSE degree from UW-Madison, a
student must have taken (but is not required to have passed) the FE exam. Most BSE students take the FE exam during
their final semester as an undergraduate engineer.
Job opportunities for BSE
graduates remain plentiful and show no signs of decreasing given (1) the increase
in world population and corresponding increasing need for food, fiber and
renewable energy, (2) the measureable shortage of highly trained technical
personnel in the United States, and (3) the constantly expanding emphasis on protection
and conservation of natural resources.
The UW-Madison BSE program is
traditionally known for its emphasis on undergraduate education which is
reflected in outstanding one-on one advising and smaller class sizes.
An excellent way for students to
learn about biological systems engineering is to become active in the Pre-Professional Club. The Pre-Professional club is a student branch
of the American Society of Agricultural and Biological Engineers (ASABE), the
national society for engineering in agricultural, food and biological
systems. This is an excellent way to
meet practicing engineers and to develop a professional network. Check it out and become involved. All students in the
The mission of the Biological Systems Engineering
Undergraduate Program is to provide a technology-advanced, biology-based engineering
education that will enable students to design and implement efficient and
environmentally sensitive methods of producing and processing food, fiber and
renewable energy resources for an ever-increasing world population.
Program Objectives
The Biological
Systems Engineering Department recognizes that our graduates will choose to use
the knowledge and skills they have acquired during their undergraduate years to
pursue a wide variety of career and life goals, and we encourage this diversity
of paths. Whatever path graduates choose, be it a job, graduate school, or
volunteer service, be it in engineering or another field, we have for our
graduates the following objectives; that they will:
1.
exhibit strong skills in
problem solving, leadership, teamwork, and communication;
2.
use these skills to
contribute to their communities;
3.
make thoughtful,
well-informed career choices; and
4.
demonstrate a continuing
commitment to and interest in their own and others' education.
Desired
Educational Outcomes
Upon graduation Biological Systems Engineering students are
expected to have the following knowledge and skills:
1. an ability to
analyze systems, components and processes.
This includes:
a. an ability to
apply knowledge of mathematics, science, and engineering fundamentals,
b. an ability to
use the techniques and tools of modern engineering practice,
c. an ability to
identify, formulate, and solve engineering problems
2. an ability to
create a system, component, or process to meet desired needs within realistic
constraints such as economic, environmental, social, political, ethical, health
and safety, manufacturability, and sustainability
3. an ability to
formulate and conduct basic investigations such as laboratory experiments,
prototype tests, field trials, computer simulations and market analyses
4.
an
ability to identify important resources, and to retrieve,
interpret, analyze and critique information for use in solving engineering
problems and conducting basic investigations
5. an ability to
communicate effectively. This includes:
a. an ability to
effectively orally communicate,
b. an ability to
write in a clear, concise, grammatically correct and organized manner,
c. an ability to
document work activities and properly archive information,
d. an ability to
develop appropriate illustrations including hand sketches, computer generated
drawings/graphs and pictures
6. an understanding
of professional and ethical responsibility
7. an ability to
function on multidisciplinary teams
8. the broad
education necessary to understand and assess the impact of engineering
solutions in a global, economic, environmental, and societal context
9. a recognition of
the need for, and an ability to engage in lifelong learning
10. a knowledge of
contemporary issues
Within the BSE program a student
must enroll in either the General
Program area or in one of the following four specialization areas: Machinery
Systems Engineering, Natural Resources and Environmental Engineering,
Food and Bioprocess Engineering, and Structural Systems Engineering.
Machinery
Systems Engineering
Engineers in the Machinery
Systems Engineering specialization work in a variety of industries applying
mechanical technology and knowledge of biological systems to solve
equipment-related problems. From design
and construction to testing and evaluation and to sales and support, engineers
in the Machinery Systems Engineering provide the technical know-how to get the
job done. They work for small and large
companies that produce machines and systems for agriculture, food and fiber
processing, construction, mining, lawn and ground care, materials handling, and
forestry and paper industries.
Natural
Resources and Environmental Engineering
Engineers in the Natural
Resources and Environment Engineering specialization area combine engineering
with agricultural and environmental sciences to solve problems related to our
environment and natural resources.
Engineers in this field evaluate, design, modify, and improve erosion
control and runoff systems, animal and human waste handling and treatment
systems, irrigation and drainage systems, and water quality management
practices. They find most career
opportunities within government agencies and environmental consulting firms.
Food
and Bioprocess Engineering
Food and Bioprocess engineers
evaluate, design, modify, improve, and economize the processing and
distribution of food, feed, fiber and energy.
This growing field also includes the new world of biotechnology and
bioprocessing. They work in companies
large and small that are involved in one or more of the following: processing, packaging and distributing meat,
poultry and seafood products; canning and freezing fruits and vegetables; producing
ethanol and other fuels from biological materials; drying and storing grains
and other food stuffs; designing and testing machines and instruments; sensing
and controlling temperature, pressure and moisture during processing; and
developing new foods and processes.
Structural
Systems Engineering
Structural Systems engineers
combine a background in structural design with knowledge of biological systems
to develop the infrastructure that supports agriculture. Such work includes design, construction and
management of facilities for: growing plants and animals; storing and
processing food, feed and fiber; waste storage and handling; and energy
generation.
General
Program Option
The General Program option is for
those students who are interested in a combination of the four BSE specialization
areas, and/or are interested in a specialization area outside of the identified
four. Examples of others specialization areas
include aquaculture engineering, forest engineering, and biomaterials
engineering. Although the Food and
Bioprocess Engineering specialization provides an ideal curriculum for students
interested in biofuels processing, some students interested in related areas of
bioenergy production may elect the General Program option.
Unlike students enrolled in the
four identified specialization areas, students enrolled in the General Program
option must have their “planned course of study” approved by the BSE
Department’s Undergraduate Instruction and Program Committee (UIPC). The primary objective of this review is to
check that the planned course of study meets ABET requirements. A secondary objective of the UIPC review is
to recommend any adjustments that could provide for a more cohesive and/or
scholarly plan of study.
Students who complete the
requirements of one of the four specialization areas will have that area of
specialization identified on their official transcript. There is no such identification on the
transcript of a student enrolled in the General Program option.
The
Following
this section is the official
curriculum for the Biological Systems
Engineering major for the current
academic year, a list of social
science and humanities courses (you must select at least one
course from this list), current
written and oral communication requirements for CALS, and information
on obtaining credits for professional
work experience.
Official Curriculum
Students
may use the official
curriculum dated for the year they entered the program, or they
may elect to use a more current curriculum, but then must complete all
requirements of the newer curriculum. The
official curriculum is your contract with the major, and you must complete all
listed requirement. It is beneficial
to track your progress using your official curriculum, the checklist
for your option area, and an appropriate DARS report. There
should be no discrepancy between these three. If there is, see your advisor immediately. In all cases, the official curriculum takes precedence.
Some
students who plan on obtaining a BSE degree begin working on BSE degree
requirements prior to officially transferring into the program. These students should be aware that they will
be required to meet the requirements of the curriculum in effect on the date of
their official transfer into the program (i.e., they will not be allowed to use
a curriculum previously in effect). Once
enrolled in the program, they may (like all other enrolled students) elect to
use a more current curriculum, but then must complete all requirements of the
newer curriculum.
If you
are a student at another UW institution or technical college who plans to
transfer to UW-Madison to obtain a BSE degree, you should work with the
UW-Madison BSE Department to ensure that the courses you are taking will meet
BSE degree requirements. If possible, such
students should be enrolled in the Connections Program (http://www.connections.wisc.edu/). The Connections Program offers select
applicants, who are
Four Year Contract
Students,
if they desire, can enter into a contract with the University that guarantees
they will receive their degrees within 4 years (8 semesters), but there are
very strict requirements associated with this contract. If interested, please see Professor David
Bohnhoff (Room 112) who is currently the designated advisor for the 4-year
contracts.
Admission to Degree-Granting Classification
Students
are admitted to the department either as pre-
1.
A minimum of 24 credits
2.
Math 222 or equivalent
3.
A minimum of 17 credits in required
mathematics, statistics, science and engineering courses with a minimum GPA of
2.35 in these courses. “Required mathematics, statistics, science and
engineering courses” is taken to include all courses that have been completed
and that will be used to meet requirements in Sections 2 and 3 of the official curriculum
(degree and major requirements, respectively), and the following math,
statistics and chemistry requirements: MATH 221, MATH 222, MATH 234, STAT 224,
CHEM 109 and CHEM 341 or 343. Any transfer course from another university that
will be used to meet “required mathematics, statistics, science, and
engineering courses” must be included in the GPA calculation. If the same
course is taken more than once, only the grade from the last time the course
was taken will be used in the GPA calculation.
4.
A GPA of 2.0 for all courses not
included in 3, above.
As soon
as you have simultaneously met all four of the preceding requirements, you are guaranteed
a change in classification to ABE.
However, this change does not become official until your academic
advisor has filed an “Admission to Degree Classification” form with the CALS
Office of Student Academic Affairs.
Items 3
and 4 require GPA calculations. These
calculations are straight forward once courses have been properly divided into
two lists: (a) required mathematics, statistics, science and engineering
courses” (item 3), and (b) all other courses (item 4). If unsure about which courses to include in
the list for item 3, use the checklist
for your option area. All
courses NOT entered on the first page (i.e., the first page is the one which contains
a place for your name at the top) fall under item 3, which means that they are
used to check the 2.35 GPA requirement.
All courses entered on the first page fall under item 4 and thus are
checked against the 2.0 GPA requirement.
If you are unsure what counts for what, read the subheadings of each
checklist table.
Students
frequently are interested in taking a couple technical courses that are not
listed on the official curriculum. The
current curriculum enables this by allowing each student to count any 300 level
or higher engineering course, any advanced math course, and any advanced science
course as technical electives just as long as the total number of credits from
such courses does not exceed six. Many
students use this provision to count courses that are not listed on the
official curriculum that they took prior to transferring into the program
(e.g., advanced math courses MATH 319 or MATH 320). Once a student decides to count such a course
in this manner (i.e., as a technical elective and not a free elective), the
course must be included in the calculation used to check the 2.35 GPA
requirement. If the student does not want
to include the course in the 2.35 GPA check (perhaps because he/she obtained a
C or D in the course), then the student is never allowed to count the course as
a technical elective (i.e., it can only be counted as a free elective).
Social
Science and Humanities Electives
The
curriculum requires 15 credits of social science and humanities or liberal
studies. The following must be met.
1.
3 credits of Economics 101, 102 or 111
or Ag and Applied Economics 215.
2.
3 credits of ethnic studies. (The course selected must have an
"e" listed under column e in the Timetable.)
3.
3 credits of international studies with
courses listed on the curriculum sheet.
(The course selected may be used to meet an additional requirement in
the social sciences, humanities, or ethnic studies section if carefully
selected as not all courses in the list are suitable.)
4.
3 credits of social science designated
as "S" or "Z" in column B of the Timetable but not
in economics or agricultural and applied economics courses.
5.
6 credits of humanities designated as
"H", "L" or "Z" in column B of the Timetable.
One of
the courses used to meet the 9 credits of social science and humanities must be
from the lists of social science
and humanities courses.
These lists were compiled by BSE faculty.
Graduation Requirements
Students
must maintain a 2.0 GPA or better to remain in the program, have at least a 2.0
GPA for the last semester in attendance and also for the combined last two
semesters in attendance, and must have a 2.0 GPA or better for all courses
designated as BSE.
Each
student must complete the Fundamentals of Engineering Examination prior
to graduation but is not required to pass.
The Fundamentals of Engineering Exam is a national exam. It should be taken during your senior
year. You will be given more information
in BSE 409 Career Management for
Engineers. It is to your advantage
to take this exam as it is a precursor for the Professional Engineering (PE)
Examination which can be taken after gaining the prerequisite amount of professional
work experience. In some areas it is
essential to have a PE license.
Students
are asked to complete an Exit Survey just prior to graduation. Your survey responses are part of a continual
program assessment process.
2009-10 Curriculum Requirements For
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-MADISON
COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURAL AND LIFE
SCIENCES
Department: BIOLOGICAL SYSTEMS ENGINEERING
Major: BIOLOGICAL SYSTEMS ENGINEERING (038)
Degree: BS-BIOLOGICAL
SYSTEMS ENGINEERING (ABE)
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These
requirements apply to students declaring this major from Summer 2009 through Spring 2010
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Completion of the CALS degree
requirements will satisfy all University General Education Requirements (GER)
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Admission to UW
If admitted with
a deficiency, see an academic Dean in 116 Agricultural Hall
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SECTION 1 - CALS REQUIREMENTS
These requirements apply to all
degrees in the
Communication (I.C.)
___ Must complete one University Com A course
and one University Com B course. These courses can not be used to meet any
other requirements in SECTION 1 — CALS REQUIREMENTS.
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Mathematics
(I.A., I.B., VI.A.)
Required:
____ MATH 112 and 113, OR MATH 114, OR Requirement
may be satisfied by placement exam
____ MATH 221 (or MATH 217), and 222, and 234
____ STAT 224 or STAT 324
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Chemistry (I.D.)
_____ CHEM 109 (or CHEM 103 & 104)*
NOTE
1: *Taking the
combination of Chemistry 103 and 104 (9 credits) instead of Chemistry 109 (5
credits) will increase the total minimum number of credits required for
graduation.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
COURSES MAY ONLY BE USED ONCE WITHIN THESE
CATEGORIES (I.E.1.-I.E.4.)
Economics or Agricultural and Applied Economics
(I.E.1.)
____ One course required from: A A E 215, ECON
101, 102 or 111
Ethnic Studies (I.E.2.)
____ 3 credits required from any course
classified as "e"
Humanities (I.E.3.)
____ 6 credits* required from any course classified as H, L, or Z
Social Science (I.E.4.)
____ 3 credits* required from any course classified as S or Z - but
not Economics or Agricultural and Applied Economics
* One of humanities/social sciences must be selected
from the list in the BSE undergraduate student handbook.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
International
Studies (I.H.)
A course
satisfying this requirement may also meet one, but only one, other curricular
requirement, including one other requirement in Section 1.
3 credits
required from this list:
|
_____ |
A A E 344,
350, 374, 462, 473, 474, 567 AGRONOMY 377 AN SCI 370 ANTHRO 100,
104, 260, 277, 318, 327, 350, 358, 470 ATM OCN 121,
132 C&E SOC
(formerly RUR SOC) 222, 230, 260, 613, 630 ECON 467, 474,
552, 567 ENTOM 201, 371
F&W ECOL
360, 430, 450, 452 GEOG 120, 127,
139, 244, 260, 349, 353, 355, 538 HISTORY 103,
104, 142, 242, 260, 277, 349, 359, 410, 419, 436, 440, 441, 444, 445, 446,
458 INTL BUS 200 L SC COM 340 JOURN 621 MARKETNG 420 NUTR SCI 350 POLI SCI 103, 106, 252, 253, 254, 260, 261, 277, 312,
323, 331, 333, 338, 342, 346, 362, 379, 505, 618, 620, 621, 627, 630, 633,
639, 640, 642, 650, 651, 652, 655, 659, 660, 661, 663, 665 SOC 244, 252, 260, 277, 614, 634 |
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SECTION 2 - DEGREE REQUIREMENTS
These
requirements apply to the Biological Systems Engineering Degree.
Physical Science (I.G., VI.B.)
Required:
_____ E M A 201
_____ PHYSICS 202
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Biological Science (I.F.)
Three credits required from this
list:
_____ BOTANY/ZOOLOGY 151*
_____ BOTANY/ZOOLOGY 153
_____ BOTANY 130*
_____ ZOOLOGY 101
_____ MICROBIO 101
_____ MICROBIO 303
NOTE
1: MICROBIO 101
or 303 recommended for Food & Bioprocess Engineering Option.
NOTE
2: * Taking
Botany/Zoology 151 (5 credits) or Botany 130 (5 credits) instead of one of the
other 3 credit courses will increase the total minimum number of credits
required for graduation.
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Agricultural
and Life Sciences (VI.C.)
_____ 3 credits required from:
FOOD SCI 432 (required for FBE
Option)
AGRONOMY 100, 300, 302, 304,
320, 338, 377
FOOD
SCI 301, 412
F & W ECOL 312, 314, 318,
401, 410
HORT 227, 261, 320, 328
LAND ARC 250, 262, 361
AN SCI 101, 301, 305, 311, 312,
430, 431, 432, 503
SOIL
SCIENCE 301, 315
Selected
biology related course approved by advisor.
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SECTION 3 – MAJOR
REQUIREMENTS
Major (VI.D.)
All are required:
_____ BSE 249 or CBE 250 (CBE 250 recommended for FBE)
_____ BSE 364
_____ BSE 365
_____ BSE 375 (Biological Concepts for Engineers)
_____ COMP SCI 310
_____ M E 361 or CBE 211 (CBE 211 recommended for FBE option)
_____ I S Y E 313 (preferred)or M E 314 or ACCT I S 200 or FINANCE 300
_____ M E 170 or 231 (M E 231 is required for Machinery Systems Option)
Capstone and Professional
Experience (I.I.)
_____ BSE 409, 509 and complete Fundamentals of
Engineering Exam*
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COMPLETE A
MINIMUM OF 44 CREDITS IN THE GENERAL PROGRAM AREA OR IN ONE OF THE FOUR
SPECIALIZATIONS.
General Program*
All are
required:
_____ E M A 202 or M E 240
_____ One course required from: E M A 303, 304,
306, M E 306
_____ Minimum of four courses from the following
list: BSE 201,351, 356, 367,
372, 441, 460, 472, 473, 475,476,542, 571, 642, 671
AND
_____ Minimum of fifteen credits of math, science,
statistics or computer science courses that are designated “advanced” or
engineering courses with a 300 or greater course number. These fifteen credits can include BSE courses taken over and
above the required minimum of four.
AND
_____ Select any combination of courses from the
* The
combination of courses that an individual student will take to meet General
Program requirements must be approved by the BSE Undergraduate Program and
Instruction Committee
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Food & Bioprocess Engineering (FBE)
Specialization
All required:
_____ BACT 325
_____ BIOCHEM 501
_____ BSE 441, 542
_____ CBE 320
_____ Chem 341 or 343 (Chem 341 recommended)
_____ FOOD SCI 410, 532
_____ One course required from: CBE 326, M E 364
_____ One breadth elective required from: BSE 351, 356, 367, 372, 460, 472,
473, 475, 476, 571, 642
AND
Select courses to bring total
specialization credits to 44.
_____ BSE 351, 356, 367, 372, 460, 472, 473, 475,
476, 571, 642 (only courses not used above)
_____ B M E 310, 315, 401, 430, 461, 505, 530, 547
_____ CBE 311, 324, 426, 525, 540, 541, 560, 561,
562, 565
_____
CIV ENGR 310, 311, 315, 320, 322, 325,
330, 423, 426, 428, 500, 521
_____ E C E 230, 330, 376
_____ E M A 202, 304, 307, 405
_____ E P D 160 (for freshman only)
_____ M E 232, 240, 306, 340, 342, 350, 363, 417, 418, 424, 443, 444,
467, 508, 520, 525, 563, 573
_____ MS & E 271, 350
_____ Physics 201 (required for BSE/FBE students getting a double
degree in Food Science)
_____ Up to 6 credits of math, science, statistics or computer science
courses that are designated “advanced” or engineering courses with a 300 or
greater course number not on the above list.
_____ BSE 001, 299, 399, 699 (combined total from these 4 courses
cannot exceed 3 credits)
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Structural
Systems Engineering Specialization
All are required:
_____ BSE 351, 356
_____ BSE 201 or CIV ENGR 251
_____ CIV ENGR 340
_____ E M A 202, 303
AND
_____ One course required from: CIV ENGR 310, M E 363
_____ One course required from: BSE 367, 372, 441, 460, 472, 473, 475,
476, 542, 571
AND
Select courses to bring total
specialization credits to 44.
_____ BSE 367, 372, 441, 460, 472, 473, 475, 476,
542, 571 (only courses not used above)
_____ CIV ENGR 320, 330, 440, 442, 445, 447, 492,
496, 497, 498, 530, 531, 532
_____ E M A 405, 506
_____ I S Y E 315, 323, 510
_____ No more than one course from the
_____ E P D 160 (for Freshman only)
_____ Up to 6 credits of math, science, statistics or computer science
courses that are designated “advanced” or engineering courses with a 300 or
greater course number not on the above list.
_____ BSE 001, 299, 399, 699 (combined total from these 4 courses
cannot exceed 3 credits)
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Machinery
Systems Engineering Specialization
All are required:
_____ BSE 475, 476
_____ E M A 202 or M E 240
_____ M E 331, 306, 307, 313, 340, 342, 363
_____ One course required from: BSE 351, 356, 367, 372, 441, 460,473,
542, 571
AND
Select courses to bring total
specialization credits to 44. May take
an additional 3-4 credit from section I.F. or VI.C. to count here.
_____ BSE 351, 356, 367, 372, 441, 460, 473, 542,
571 (only courses not used above)
_____ M E 364, 415, 417, 418, 426, 428, 437, 443, 444, 446, 447, 448,
450, 451, 452, 469, 545, 549
_____ M S & E 350
_____ E M A 405, 506, 519, 545
_____ E P D 160 (for Freshman only)
_____ Up to 6 credits of math, science, statistics or computer science
courses that are designated “advanced” or engineering courses with a 300 or
greater course number not on the above list.
_____ BSE 001, 299, 399, 699 (combined total from these 4 courses
cannot exceed 3 credits)
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Natural
Resources and Environment Specialization
All are required:
_____ BSE 372, 472, 473, 571
_____ BSE 201 or CIV ENGR 251
_____ CIV ENGR 310 or M E 363
_____ One course required from: E M A 303, 304, 306, M E 306
_____ One course required from: BSE 351, 356, 367, 441, 460, 475, 476,
542
AND
Select courses to bring total
specialization credits to 44
_____ BSE 351, 356, 367, 441, 460, 475, 476, 542
(only courses not used above)
_____ CIV ENGR 301, 302, 303, 304, 307, 308, 315, 316, 320, 330, 357,
411, 412, 414, 416, 423, 424, 426, 427, 429, 530, 531, 532
_____ GEOLOGY 627, 629
_____ SOIL SCI 532, 622, 632
_____ E P D 160 (for Freshman only)
_____ Up to 6 credits of math, science, statistics or computer science
courses that are designated “advanced” or engineering courses with a 300 or
greater course number not on the above list.
_____ BSE 001, 299, 399, 699 (combined total from these 4 courses
cannot exceed 3 credits)
AND
No more than 6 credits can come
from this subset.
_____ BACT 303, 304, 425, 523
_____
_____ GEOG 320, 325, 326
_____ SOIL SCI 301, 322, 323, 324, 325, 523, 622
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SECTION 4:
Electives
The student may
complete this section with any courses.
_____
_____
_____
_____
_____
_____
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SPECIAL
NOTES: For the Bachelor of Science
Degree, students must complete a minimum of 128 credits with 256 grade points
and with at least a 2.0 cumulative GPA.
For purposes of calculation, two grade points will be granted for each
transferable degree credit earned at institutions other than UW-Madison. Students must take their last 30 credits in
residence while officially enrolled in the
To be
admitted to the Biological Systems Engineering program, the following must be
completed:
1. A minimum of 24 credits
2. Math 222 or equivalent
3. A minimum of 17 credits in
required mathematics, statistics, science and engineering courses with a
minimum GPA of 2.35 in these courses. “Required mathematics, statistics,
science and engineering courses” is taken to include all courses that have been
completed and that will be used to meet requirements in Sections 2 and 3
(degree and major requirements, respectively), and the following math,
statistics and chemistry requirements: MATH 221, MATH 222, MATH 234, STAT 224,
CHEM 109 and CHEM 341 or 343. Any transfer course from another university that
will be used to meet “required mathematics, statistics, science, and
engineering courses” must be included in the GPA calculation. If the same
course is taken more than once, only the grade from the last time the course
was taken will be used in the GPA calculation.
4. A GPA of 2.0 for all courses not
included in 3, above.
Pre-Biological
Systems Engineering students will have a PAE classification. After admission to the program their
classification will be changed to ABE.
All
students must complete the National Fundamentals of Engineering Exam, offered
twice yearly, prior to graduation. Students are responsible to provide the
Department with verification that they took the exam.
Social Science and
Humanities Courses
Select one course to meet the
social science and humanities requirement (curriculum sections I.E.3-4). The
other two social science and humanities courses can be selected from this list
or from other courses in the Timetable or Undergraduate Catalog
designated S, H, L or Z. These tables
are arranged by option. You may select a
course listed under your option or from any of the following tables.
|
Science and Humanities Courses
selected for the Food and Bioprocess Engineering Option |
|||||
|
Department |
Course
No. |
Course
Title |
Breadth |
Level |
Crds |
|
Community and Environmental
Sociology
(also Sociology) |
222 |
Food,
Culture, and Society |
S |
E |
3 |
|
Community and Environmental
Sociology
(also Sociology) |
266 |
People and Places: The Demography of Rural |
S |
E |
3 |
|
Community and Environmental
Sociology
(also AAE) |
340 |
Issues in Food Systems |
S |
I |
3-4 |
|
Environmental
Toxicology (also Institute for Environmental Studies) |
368 |
Environmental Law, Toxic Substances, and
Conservation |
S |
I |
2 |
|
Consumer
Science |
477 |
The Consumer and the Market |
S |
I |
3 |
|
Consumer
Science |
478 |
Consumer Information |
S |
I |
3 |
|
Communication
Arts |
368 |
Theory and Practice of Persuasion |
S |
I |
3 |
|
Communication
Arts |
459 |
New Media and Society |
H |
I |
3 |
|
Science and Humanities Courses
selected for the Machinery Systems Engineering Option |
||||||
|
Department |
Course
No. |
Course
Title |
Breadth |
Level |
Crds |
|
|
History
of Science |
202 |
The
Making of Modern Science |
H |
E |
3 |
|
|
History
of Science |
203 |
Science in the Twentieth Century: A Historical Overview |
Z |
E |
3 |
|
|
History
of Science |
222 |
Technology and Social Change in History |
H |
I |
3 |
|
|
History
of Science |
337 |
History of Technology |
H |
A |
3 |
|
|
History |
247 |
American Business History |
S |
I |
4 |
|
|
History |
357 |
The Second World War |
S |
I |
3-4 |
|
|
Community and Environmental
Sociology
(also History of Science) |
230 |
Agriculture and Social Change in Western History( |
Z |
E |
3 |
|
|
Rural
Sociology (also Sociology) |
266 |
People and Places: The Demography of Rural |
S |
E |
3 |
|
|
Consumer
Science |
477 |
The Consumer and the Market |
S |
I |
3 |
|
|
Consumer
Science |
478 |
Consumer Information |
S |
I |
3 |
|
|
Communication
Arts |
368 |
Theory and Practice of Persuasion |
S |
I |
|
|
|
Communication
Arts |
459 |
New Media and Society |
H |
I |
3 |
|
|
Science and Humanities Courses
selected for the Natural Resources and Environmental Engineering Option |
|||||||
|
Department |
Course
No. |
Course
Title |
Breadth |
Level |
Crds |
||
|
Forest
Ecology and Management (also Com. &
Envtl. Soc.;
Soc) |
248 |
Environment, Natural Resources, and Community |
S |
E |
3 |
||
|
|
330 |
Resource-Oriented Recreation Management |
S |
I |
3 |
||
|
Forest
Ecology and Management (also AAE, Econ) |
431 |
Natural Resource Economics |
S |
I |
3 |
||
|
Inst.
for Environmental Studies |
112 |
Environmental
Studies: The Social Perspective |
S |
E |
3 |
||
|
Inst.
for Environmental Studies |
113 |
Environmental Studies: The Humanistic Perspective |
H |
E |
3 |
||
|
Inst.
for Environmental Studies |
307 |
Literature of the Environment: Speaking for Nature |
L |
I |
3 |
||
|
Inst.
for Environmental Studies (also Geography) |
339 |
Environmental
Conservation |
S |
I |
3-4 |
||
|
Inst.
for Environmental Studies (also Agr. & Applied Econ) |
344 |
The
Environment and the Global Economy |
S |
E |
3 |
||
|
Inst.
for Environmental Studies (also History of Science) |
353 |
History of Ecology |
H |
I |
3 |
||
|
Inst.
for Environmental Studies (also Environmental Toxicology) |
368 |
Environmental Law, Toxic Substances, and
Conservation |
S |
I |
2 |
||
|
Inst.
for Environmental Studies (also Philosophy) |
441 |
Environmental Ethics |
Z |
A |
3-4 |
||
|
Inst.
for Environmental Studies (also Poli Sci, Econ, |
449 |
Government and Natural Resources |
S |
D |
3-4 |
||
|
Inst.
for Environmental Studies (also History, Geography) |
460 |
American Environmental History |
Z |
I |
4 |
||
|
Inst.
for Environmental Studies (also Geography) |
537 |
Culture and Environment |
S |
A |
4 |
||
|
Inst.
for Environmental Studies (also |
548 |
Environmental Aesthetics |
S |
A |
2-3 |
||
|
Urban and Regional
Planning (also Geography) |
312 |
Regional Development and
Planning |
S |
I |
3 |
||
|
Urban and Regional
Planning (also Real Est, Econ) |
420 |
Urban and Regional
Economics |
S |
A |
3 |
||
|
Urban and Regional
Planning |
613 |
Water Policy: Politics and Institutions |
S |
A |
3-4 |
||
|
Political Science |
405 |
State Government and
Public Policy |
S |
D |
3-4 |
||
|
Science and Humanities Courses
selected for the Structural Systems Engineering Option |
|||||
|
Department |
Course
No. |
Course
Title |
Breadth |
Level |
Crds |
|
Art
History |
208 |
Western
Architecture: Renaissance to Modern |
H |
E |
4 |
|
Art
History |
319 |
Gothic
Architecture |
H |
I |
3-4 |
|
Art
History |
327 |
Renaissance
Architecture |
H |
I |
3-4 |
|
Art
History |
357 |
European
Architecture: The Nineteenth Century |
H |
I |
3-4 |
|
Art
History |
358 |
European
Architecture: The Modern Movements |
H |
I |
3-4 |
|
Art
History |
367 |
American
Architecture: Colonial and Federal |
H |
I |
3-4 |
|
Art
History |
368 |
American
Architecture: The 19th
Century |
H |
I |
3-4 |
|
Art
History |
449 |
Topics
in Architectural History |
H |
D |
3 |
|
Art
History |
468 |
Frank
Lloyd Wright |
H |
D |
3-4 |
|
Environment,
Textiles and Design |
221 |
Person
and Environment Interactions |
H |
I |
3 |
|
Landscape
Architecture |
250 |
Survey
of Landscape Architecture Design |
H |
E |
3 |
|
Landscape
Architecture |
260 |
History
of Landscape Architecture |
H |
I |
3 |
|
Landscape
Architecture (also |
463 |
Evolution
of American Planning |
S |
I |
3 |
|
Landscape
Architecture (also |
548 |
Environmental
Aesthetics |
S |
A |
2-3 |
|
Business
– Real Estate (also AAE, Econ, |
306 |
The
Real Estate Process |
S |
I |
3 |
|
Business
– Finance, Investment and Banking |
300 |
Introduction
to Finance |
S |
I |
3 |
|
Business
– Marketing |
300 |
Marketing
Management |
S |
I |
3 |
|
Business
– Mgmt and Human Resources |
300 |
Organizational
Behavior |
S |
I |
3 |
|
Business
– Mgmt and Human Resources |
205 |
Human
Resource Management |
S |
A |
3 |
|
Business
– Transportation and Public Utilities |
325 |
Public
Utilities |
S |
I |
3 |
All CALS students must meet the
university requirement for Communications A and B.
A student may receive credit for only
one Comm A course. Students who take two Comm A courses will not
receive credit for the second course and cannot use it to meet any CALS or
UW-Madison requirement.
UW-COMM
A2 Communication Courses
COM ARTS 1001
ENGLISH 1001, 1181, X04
EPD 1551
L SC COM 1001
AP English1,3
or any other course noted as Comm A; see Comm A list web page at: http://www.ls.wisc.edu/gened/courselists/commacourses.htm
UW-COMM B Communication
Courses
COM ARTS 262,
266, 272
ENGLISH 201, 203
EPD 397
ILS 200
L SC COM 111,
130, 212, 360, 430, 560
BACT 551
BOTANY/ZOOLOGY
152
BIOCORE 301-2,
or 303-4
or any other
course noted as Comm B; see Comm B list
web page at : http://www.ls.wisc.edu/gened/courselists/commbcourses.htm
NOTES:
1 Course not available to students who test out of
Comm-A on UW-Placement exam or have Comm-A credit for AP English. Students who do not test out of Comm-A may
receive credit for one, but only one, Comm-A course, including AP English.
2 A student may be exempt from the Comm-A requirement
by the UW-Placement Exam.
3Advanced Placement Program
1. Composition and Language Exam
AP
exam score of 4 or 5: exempt from UW-COMM A
AP
exam score of 3: not exempt from UW-COMM A
2. Literature and Composition Exam
AP
exam score of 4 or 5: exempt from UW-COMM A
AP
exam score of 3: not exempt from UW-COMM A
It
is extremely important for students to obtain as much practical professional
experience as possible before graduation.
In addition to the knowledge and skills to be gained from such experiences,
it demonstrates to potential employers one’s enthusiasm for their selected
profession.
Obtaining Credit for Work
Experience
Although
there is no requirement that students obtain professional work experience prior
to graduation, each student can receive up to a maximum of 3 credits of
technical elective credit for such experience.
It is important to note that to receive technical elective credit for a
particular work experience a student must register for either BSE 001, BSE 299,
BSE 399 or BSE 699 and pay the associated fees.
Under which of these four courses a student registers, and the number of
credits for which a student registers, depends upon the type of work experience.
BSE 001: Cooperative Education Program
A student who will be employed full-time (considered to be
approximately 40 hours per week for 15 weeks) off-campus can enroll in BSE 001.
Registration is for a single credit for each spring, summer or fall in
which the student is employed. By
registering for 1 credit of BSE 001 during the fall and/or spring semester, the
student retains their status as a full-time UW-Madison student (note that any
student who is registered as a fulltime student during the spring semester and
has not graduated, retains their fulltime status during the following summer
even if they are not registered for a course).
Maintaining status as a fulltime student is often a requirement for
retention of health insurance (under their parent’s policy) and to continue deferral
of student loans.
A student who registers for BSE 001 must
complete the BSE Internship/Cooperative Education
Agreement Form prior to beginning their coop. This form must be signed by the student,
their academic advisor and the supervisor to whom they will be reporting during
their employment. In accordance with
this signed agreement, the student must submit (to their academic advisor)
monthly progress reports and a final written report (the latter must be no less
than 1000 words in length).
Students who are on a co-op are not
eligible for student loans or grants while on the co-op, and some scholarships
may be deferred until the student returns to campus.
One advantage of living in
University-owned housing is that University Housing will allow a student to be
released from their contract to leave campus for a co-op. No payment is required, however the student
must forfeit their deposit. Contact the
Division of University Housing for more information (608-262-2522)
BSE 399: Coordinative Internship
A student working part-time while attending
UW-Madison may elect to enroll in BSE 399.
The BSE Department policy is that a student may register for 1 credit of
BSE 399 for each 150 hours of work.
Although a student can register for more than one credit of BSE 399
during a particular spring, summer or fall, nor more than two credits per
semester can be used to meet technical elective requirements.
A student who registers for BSE 399 will
not automatically be granted fulltime status as a UW-Madison student unless
they are registered for 12 or more credits.
When a student is registered for less than 12 credits, and the
combination of course work and professional work experience are deemed
equivalent to full-time professional employment, the student is encouraged to
apply for an academic load exception that grants fulltime student status. Such an application must be obtained from an academic
dean in the CALS Undergraduate Program and Services Office, 116 Ag Hall.
A student who registers for BSE 399 must
also complete the BSE Internship/Cooperative Education
Agreement Form prior to beginning their
internship. This form must be signed by
the student, their academic advisor and the supervisor to whom they will be
reporting during their employment. In
accordance with this signed agreement, the student must submit (to their
academic advisor) monthly progress reports and a final written report. The
final report shall be a minimum of 1000 words for each academic credit in which
the student is enrolled.
BSE
299: Independent Study
BSE 299 is for any freshman, sophomore
or junior who is engaged in one-on-one instructional sessions during which they
work with and/or under the guidance of a faculty member on a specific
project. Quite frequently, the project
is associated with the faculty member’s research, and the student is an
employee of the faculty member.
The policy of the BSE Department is that
a student work a minimum of 45 hours for each credit of BSE 299 for which they
enroll. Each student who enrolls in BSE
299 must submit a final report with a minimum length of 1500 words.
Additionally, each student must make a formal oral presentation of their
work. This could be a “brown bag”
presentation to faculty, staff and students, a presentation at an ASABE student
branch meeting, a presentation to a class of students enrolled in another
course, or a presentation at a professional society meeting.
BSE
699: Special
Problems
BSE 699 is for any senior who is engaged
in one-on-one instructional sessions during which they work with and/or under
the guidance of a faculty member on a specific project. Quite frequently, the project is associated
with the faculty member’s research, and the student is an employee of the
faculty member.
The policy of the BSE Department is that
a student work a minimum of 45 hours for each credit of BSE 699 for which they
enroll. Each student who enrolls in BSE 699
must submit a final report with a minimum length of 1500 words. Additionally,
each student must make a formal oral presentation of their work. This could be a “brown bag” presentation to
faculty, staff and students, a presentation at an ASABE student branch meeting,
a presentation to a class of students enrolled in another course, or a
presentation at a professional society meeting.
Finding Employment
There
are numerous sources available to students seeking coops and internships. The two primary sources for BSE students are
the Engineering Career Service Office M1002 Engineering Centers, 1550 Engineering
Drive (608.262.3471),
and the CALS Career Services Office, 116 Agriculture Hall,
1450 Linden Drive (608 262-3460).
Employers looking for BSE students will generally contact one or both of
these offices directly, or will be told by BSE staff to contact these
offices. Both offices maintain employer
request lists, employer business cards, and other company information. In addition to these on-campus resources,
students are encouraged to: visit eemployer websites and on-line sources that specialize in job placement,
contact their local chamber of commerce, browse newspapers
and journals, attend local career fairs, and network with family, friends,
relatives, fellow students, alumni and professional associates.
If you are interested in
international work, note that many companies who recruit UW-Madison engineering
students are multi-national. Another
option is to contact IAESTE (International Association for the Exchange of Students for
technical experience). IAESTE helps students locate jobs in more than 70
countries and will help a student with the required work authorization
paperwork. IAESTE’s annual registration
deadline is January 1. UW-Madison’s
student chapter of IAESTE is one of the most active in the nation.
Benefits of Coops/Internships
Obtaining work experience prior to
completing your degree requirements typically increases employment
opportunities and starting salaries at graduation.
Companies use coop/internships as a means to
screen potential employees. Through
various work activities/assignments, an employer can assess critical personal
characteristics/traits such as punctuality, enthusiasm, honesty, integrity,
temperament, etc., in addition to teamwork and communication skills, basic
knowledge, analytical skills and creativity.
Upon completion of their co-op/internship, many students receive offers
for full-time employment from the company for which they worked. This is not surprising, given the desire that
companies have to reduce the risk associated with hiring individuals that they
have not been able to observe in a work environment.
Programming
Policies, Options and Recommendations
Mandatory Meetings With
Advisors
Any specific interests or questions you
have should be discussed with your advisor.
It is your responsibility to meet with your advisor at least once each
semester for counsel, guidance, and career development information. An "advisor hold" is put on your
record each semester, and you will not be able to register until it is
removed. The hold will be removed after
you have met with your advisor to decide which courses you should take during
the next semester. Not all departments
use such registration holds, but we feel it is extremely important that you
visit with your advisor each semester about your class schedule for the next
semester. Contact your advisor at
least a week prior to the time you can register so you do not delay your
registration.
If a hold still exists after you have
talked to your advisor, please make sure the hold relates to the next semester
and not a later semester. You may be
able to register for the up-coming semester but not for semesters after
that. Also, holds may be placed on your
record that are not advisor holds but relate to some other issue.
Semester-by-Semester Course
Selection
The checklist for each option area also
contains a four-year road maps. Each four-year
road map provides a semester-by-semester list of courses to be completed. The exact order in which you take courses is
unlikely to match your four-year road map since the order in which you take
courses will be influenced by success on advanced placement exams, choice of
technical electives and occasional scheduling conflicts. When you are unsure of which courses to take
during a particular semester and/or run into a scheduling conflict, it is
always best to consult your academic advisor.
In such situations, three good rules of thumb are to: (1) take first
those courses that are prerequisites for other required courses (2) take
required courses before electives, and (3) save your social science,
humanities, ethnics studies, economics and international studies courses for
your junior and senior years and/or a study abroad experience.
Students who plan to study abroad should
avoid taking courses at UW-Madison that could be taken while studying
abroad. This includes basic math,
statistics, and science courses as well as social sciences and humanities. In many cases, the university attended abroad
will have courses related to the major that, with special action, can be
counted for technical elective credit.
Selecting
Technical Electives Courses
In addition to the
required courses for each area of specialization the curriculum contains a list
of technical electives for each specialization.
These are courses that have been identified as being both relevant to
the specialization and at the appropriate level for a bachelor’s degree in
engineering.
It is important to
note that a student’s selection of technical electives is not restricted to the
list published for their area of specialization. More specifically, a student can petition to
count as a technical elective, a course not on their published list. A student makes this request to their
academic advisor who then brings it to the BSE Undergraduate Instruction and
Program Committee (UIPC). The UIPC will
approve the request as long as it compliments the program’s engineering
content, and the student’s overall program contains sufficient ABET-required
engineering design content.
As a rule of thumb,
the UIPC will allow a student to count as a technical elective, any course that
is required or listed as a technical elective in another area of
specialization.
The fact that
students can petition to count as technical electives, courses not on their
published list, recognizes the fact that new courses are continually being
developed and taught at UW-Madison, and some of these courses make outstanding
technical electives. Additionally,
flexibility in technical elective selection makes it easier to accommodate
transfer of students into the BSE program, and makes it easier to accommodate
courses taken while studying abroad.
Technical elective
course substitutions (as well as other course substitutions) do not become
official until approved at the college level.
To obtain this approval, the student must complete a CALS Scholastic
Policies and Action Committee (SPAC) form after receiving approval of the BSE
UPIC, and submit it to the CALS Undergraduate Program and Service Office. The form is available at: http://www.cals.wisc.edu/students/
Farm
and Industry Short Course Credits
The
Some
FISC courses contain content that is not available in other UW-Madison courses
but is germane to a student’s BSE program.
As a BSE major, it is possible to petition to have these particular FISC
courses counted as technical elective credit.
Semester Credit Load
Recommendations
The number of credits in which you
enroll may be influenced by a number of factors. Chief among these is typically the cost of
college. At UW-Madison, undergraduate tuition
is the same for a student taking 12 credits as it is for a student enrolled in
18 course credits. Students taking fewer
than 12 credits essentially pay by the credit.
There is a surcharge for credits taken in excess of 18. In addition, any student who desires to
enroll in more than 18 credits must obtain permission from their advisor and
the CALS Undergraduate Program and Services office.
Given the fee structure, students are
encouraged to enroll in at least 15 credits per
semester. Note that it takes 2 extra
semesters to accumulate 120 credits when you take 12 credits per semester
instead of 15. Also keep in mind that
educational expenses continually increase, and thus the last year you spend in
school is likely to be your most expensive.
Students working on- or off-campus often
reduce their academic load in proportion to the time they spend working. In some cases, students opt to enroll as
part-time students. Since a student’s
earning power generally increases sharply once they obtain a professional
engineering degree, it is often not in a student’s long-term financial interest
to work while attending school when such work results in a reduced academic
work load which extends their time-to-degree.
In many cases, it pays to take out a loan to complete school – a loan
that can be rapidly repaid once a student is professionally employed. When making school versus work decisions,
keep in mind that the cost of room and board (which exist whether or not one is
an enrolled student) are generally very near to the cost of tuition.
Students who are struggling to meet the
requirements for ABE classification, may want to take a reduced work load that
enables them to put extra effort into improving their GPA.
A student on academic probation is
advised to carry no more than 14 credits per semester unless repeating a
course. For every three credits being
repeated, the student is advised to carry not more than one additional credit
beyond 14, up to a maximum of 16 credits.
Taking Courses Pass/Fail
Only courses
that will count as free electives under the BSE curriculum can be taken
pass/fail. Courses graded with the
pass/fail system cannot be used to satisfy any of the university, college,
degree program, or major requirements.
With the exception of Physical Education activity and dance courses,
students must receive permission from their advisor. Continuing students with
at least a 2.0 cumulative GPA, new freshmen, and new
transfer students may elect one pass/fail course each semester, with a maximum
of eight such courses prior to graduation. For all courses students must come
to 116 Ag Hall and receive permission from the Office of Academic Student
Affairs. Students must fill out the application to take a course on a pass/fail
basis. After approval, the student cannot change the grading back to the
conventional (A, AB, etc.) basis. The grade is excluded from the GPA. Students are warned that although a grade of D carries
credit under the conventional system, it carries no degree credit when it is
converted to a grade of U under the pass/fail privilege.
Double Majors and Double
Degrees
The difference between a “major” and a
“degree” is not clear to most students and faculty and thus there is confusion
between what it means to double major
and what it means to double degree. A major
is defined as a field of academic study in which one
concentrates or specializes. A degree is an award conferred by a
college or university signifying that the recipient has satisfactorily completed
a specific course of study.
At UW-Madison, students who
specialize (i.e., major) in biological systems engineering receive a Bachelor
of Science – Biological System Engineering degree when they complete all
requirements for the degree. This is the
only degree available to a student majoring in BSE. Students who major in other fields may have
more than one degree that they can pursue.
For example, a student majoring in entomology could get a B.S. in
Natural Science, a B.S. in Agricultural Science, or a B.S. in Natural Resources
depending on which degree requirements they meet. In other cases, the same degree is available
for students with different majors. For
example, a B.S. in Agricultural Sciences degree is available to many different
CALS majors (agricultural and applied economics, agricultural
education, life sciences communication, agronomy, animal sciences, community
and environmental sociology, dairy science, entomology, food science,
horticulture, plant pathology, poultry science, and soil science).
A student who is double majoring is specializing in two
different areas but receiving only one degree.
The degree that a student is pursuing dictates the areas in which the
student can officially double major.
Students majoring in BSE (and thus pursuing a B.S. in Biological Systems
Engineering) can not double major in another engineering field, nor can they
double major in business or in another CALS discipline. BSE majors may earn an
additional major in the
A student who is
a double degree candidate is simultaneously pursuing two different
degrees. To obtain a second degree, all requirement
for both degrees must be met, with the minimum total number of credits required
equal to 30 more than the minimum number
of credits required for the two degrees.
This means if a student elects to complete a second degree that by
itself requires a minimum of 120 credits (which is less than the 128 required
for a B.S. in BSE), then the minimum total required for the dual degree would
be 150 credits (120 + 30). A student must have an advisor in both major fields. To work on two
degrees simultaneously within the college, a student should seek permission as early
as possible to ensure that it is feasible to complete both degrees. If
the two degrees to be earned are from two different colleges (one degree
in Agricultural and Life Sciences and one degree in another school or college
on this campus), the undergraduate dean in both colleges must approve the
student's plan. Note that not all colleges will allow dual degrees.
Certificate Programs
Few BSE students
double major and even fewer pursue a second undergraduate degree. Far more common are BSE students who obtain
certificates. Certificate programs -
some of which are called “areas of emphasis,” “concentrations,” or “professional
development programs,” - are small sets of courses, often from more than one department,
which focus on a given topic. These
programs are offered in addition to traditional major and degree programs,
although the courses carried may also count toward the completion of major and
degree requirements. With their emphasis on a theme, and their interdisciplinary
approach, certificate programs seem to be of increasing interest to students.
The opportunity they provide to pursue an area of interest and to achieve
recognition for its mastery over-and-above, but concurrently with a regular
academic program, also adds value to a student's educational experience.
Courses which are "packaged", so to speak, into a certificate
program, offer recognition for unified segments of course work while the
student pursues a traditional degree program. Nevertheless, certificate
programs are not degree programs, and in many cases, they will prolong the time
it takes to receive an undergraduate degree.
The
Advanced
Degrees and Senior-Graduate Status
As the flagship institution
in the UW-System, UW-Madison has a world renowned graduate school that offers
numerous advanced degrees. For this
reason, few UW-Madison students pursue a second undergraduate degree. When compared to a second undergraduate
degree, a Masters degree: (1) generally requires fewer additional credits to
complete, (2) allows students greater flexibility with respect to course
selection (i.e., Master’s students essentially design their own curriculums whereas
undergraduate degree programs are fairly rigid except with respect to technical
elective selection), and (3) is more prestigious/influential.
UW-Madison seniors who plan on going on to graduate school may benefit by
obtaining senior-graduate
status. Senior-graduates
are UW-Madison undergraduate seniors who are within 1-6 credits of completing
the requirements for a bachelor's degree and who are simultaneously enrolled in
the
One of the advantages of having
senior-graduate status is that a student is eligible for teaching assistantship
or project assistantship appointments, including tuition remission. They are
not eligible for fellowships or research assistantships. For this reason, it is not uncommon for a BSE
student to be employed as a project assistant while they are a senior-graduate and
then switched to a research assistantship once they have completed their
bachelor degree requirements.
Scholarships
and Financial Aid
The
Roger
William Ambrose Scholarship (1)
Lyndon
and Norma Brooks Scholarship (1)
Ham
Bruhn
Gail Edwin
and Janice Gaye Janssen
John
Deere Foundation Scholarship (1)
Don
S. Montgomery Scholarships (2)
Schroeder
Biological Systems Engineering Scholarships (2)
Dick
and Grace Stith Scholarship (1)
It is extremely beneficial for students
to join student organizations to learn about their chosen profession and to
develop leadership skills. This type of
activity is highly regarded by potential employers. Without it you may be overlooked, even though
you have a very good GPA. Joining and
actively participating in the ASABE Pre-Professional Club is an excellent way
to meet other students and faculty, to learn about your profession, to meet
people from industry, and to learn about job opportunities. The Club meets monthly with announcements
posted in the