Major in Electrical, Industrial or Mechanical Engineering

At ÃÄÄïÖ±²¥, students majoring in engineering are being trained to be fundamentally sound and application-ready. Students can choose to major in electrical, industrial or mechanical engineering. ÃÄÄïÖ±²¥â€™s engineering programs feature a design-forward curriculum. In each of their first two years, engineering majors work in teams to complete a real-world design project mentored by an industry partner or research faculty. Third-year students may participate in a semester- or summer-long industry internship or research experience. Fourth-year students work in interdisciplinary teams to complete a year-long capstone, a real-world project with an industry partner.


The John R. Post School of Engineering houses new labs for undergraduate learning, containing millions of dollars of hands-on, real-world equipment and a continuously expanding maker space. Faculty-taught courses feature small class sizes with athlete-friendly scheduling. Regularly scheduled lunch-and-learn presentations feature local industry members looking for summer interns and full-time employees and research faculty presenting their innovative work.
 

What makes ÃÄÄïÖ±²¥'s Engineering Programs Special?

  • Interdisciplinary approach
  • Exposure to your discipline of choice within your first three semesters
  • 1st class within your discipline of choice occurs during your 4th semester
  • 4-year design sequence culminating in a year-long design project sponsored by a local business
  • Within a major, you can have a specialty e.g. batteries, robotics, or more
  • Strong math and science core
  • Rigorous liberal arts curriculum through SEARCH

 

Learn More

For more information about ÃÄÄïÖ±²¥'s Engineering Programs, please contact the Admissions Office at 1-888-ALVERNIA or 610-796-8269 or admissions@alvernia.edu.

Engineering Programs

Explore our Engineering Degrees

Engineering
Electrical Engineering
ÃÄÄïÖ±²¥ students in one of the school's engineering labs.
Industrial Engineering
ÃÄÄïÖ±²¥ students in one of the school's engineering labs.
Mechanical Engineering