Graduate Degree Program Summary

Graduate Degrees Offered
M.Eng. in Engineering with an area of study in Engineering Management
This program is online only. There is no campus component.
Distance Education Opportunities
M.Eng. with an area of study in Engineering ManagementEngineering Management
- On the WebDepartment Website
- Graduate ChairProfessor Jeffrey Woldstad
jwoldstad2@unl.edu
402-472-0426 - Department Address175 Nebraska Hall
Lincoln NE 68588-0518
Application Checklist and Deadlines
Required by the Office of Graduate Studies
- Application for Graduate Admission
- $50 non-refundable application processing fee
- One set of transcripts, uploaded to MyRED (see upload requirements)
- If your native language is not English: verification of English proficiency
- If you are not a US citizen and you expect to hold an F or J visa: financial resource information
See also: US steps to admission or international steps to admission.
Required by Engineering Management in GAMES
After you apply, allow one business day for us to establish your access to GAMES, where you'll complete these departmental requirements:
- Entrance exam(s): GRE recommended
- Minimum TOEFL: Paper-550 Internet-79
- Personal statement (strongly recommended)
- Three letters of recommendation
Application Deadline
For Financial Consideration
Fall: February 15 Spring: September 15Otherwise
Rolling admissions, contact the department for more information.Related Pages
Students interested in Engineering Management also may want information about:
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Description
The Master of Engineering (M.Eng.) is a professional practice-oriented advanced degree offered by the College of Engineering. This non-thesis program provides a broad-based technical education and is not designed to prepare students for doctoral-level work. Graduate students have access to premier research labs such as the Center for Nontraditional Manufacturing Research and the Center for Ergonomics and Safety Research, among others. Students benefit from a high degree of hands-on experience in the numerous research centers and laboratories which are well-equipped and available for teaching and research.Successful candidates for admission should have a bachelor's degree in engineering and technology, physical science, computer science or mathematics. Students with non-engineering degrees may be required to take some undergraduate course work in engineering science.
Courses and More
The Graduate Bulletin provides course descriptions, program requirements, and more:Faculty and Research
Discrete Systems; Engineering Educational Systems Design
Emeritus
Emeritus
Ergonomics; Quality Control; Information Processing; Design and Experiments; and Statistics
Design and Control of Manufacturing Systems; Modeling Uncertainty for Decision Making Under Risk
Occupational Safety and Health; Musculoskeletal Disorders; Cumulative Trauma Disorders
Emeritus
Emeritus
Innovative Design and Ergonomic Analysis: Development of Laparoscopic Surgical Tools, Methodology Standardization For Operating Room Medical Device Usability, Development of Neutron Detection Sensors
Industrial Packaging; Computer Networks; Facility Design; Robots; Project Management Control
Emeritus
Emeritus
Design; Manufacturing; Supply Chain; Applied Operations Research; Measurement Systems
Advancid Machining of Materials Used in Aerospace, Automotive and Medical Device Industries
Safety; Ergonomics
Discrete-Event Software; Healthcare Management; Engineering Education
Abrasive Flow Machining; Nontraditional Finishing Processes; Rapid Prototyping; Tooling
Ergonomics; Occupational Biomechanics; Energy Systems
Graduate Chair
Graduate Chair
Departments: Have an update for this page? Contact Becky Eby.
The University of Nebraska-Lincoln does not discriminate based on gender, age, disability, race, color, religion, marital status, veteran's status, national or ethnic origin, or sexual orientation.
