College of Engineering and Computer Science
Industrial Technology Management Program
Professor Ed McMahon, Acting Director
The industrial technology management program is an interdisciplinary program leading to a Bachelor of Science (B.S.) degree. The purpose of the program is to provide quantitative and qualitative engineering and business skills for problem solving. The program is intended as advanced preparation for the engineering technologist to serve a leadership role in a technical organization.
2305 - Industrial Technology Management (B.S.)
- General Education (see for list of approved courses)
- Rhetoric and Composition: English 121, 122 (6 hours)
- Mathematics: Mathematics 151/152 (4 hours)
- Statistics: Engineering 222 (3 hours)
- Natural Sciences: Two approved natural science courses, at least one including a laboratory component (7-8 hours)
- Humanities and Fine Arts: One approved fine arts course and one approved humanities course (6 hours)
- Cultures and Civilizations: One approved Non-Western Cultures and Civilizations course (3 hours)
- Behavioral and Social Sciences: Economics 101 and 102 (6 hours)
Major and Related Courses
- Accounting 201, 202
- Chemistry 121/123
- Economics 101 and 102
- Finance 302
- Management 315, 330, 332
- Marketing 313
- Mathematics 145, 151/152, 161/162, 212
- Physics 231/281
- Psychology 406
- Engineering Fundamentals: 103, 104, 113, 185, 222, 352
- Industrial Specialty: ENIE 350, 351, 354, 441, 453, 457, 458
- Technical Electives (23 hours): May come from 100 and 200 level engineering or physics courses. They may also come from an engineering technology curriculum. Advisement should be sought from program faculty as early as possible.
- 127 hours
- Minimum 39 hours at the 300-400 level.
- 2.0 average in all engineering, accounting, finance, management, marketing and technical elective courses.
Note: No more than 30 hours may be taken in the College of Business Administration and credited toward the degree.
