UCLA Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science explained

UCLA Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science
Established:1945
Parent:University of California, Los Angeles
Dean:Ah-Hyung “Alissa” Park
Students:6,584 (2021)[1]
Undergrad:4,081 (2021)
Postgrad:2,503 (2021)
Doctoral:1,117 (2021)
City:Los Angeles, California
Country:U.S.
Faculty:191 (2022)

The UCLA Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science, informally known as UCLA Samueli School of Engineering or UCLA Engineering,[2] is the school of engineering at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). It opened as the College of Engineering in 1945 and was renamed the School of Engineering in 1969.[3] Since its initial enrollment of 379 students, the school has grown to approximately 6,500 students. The school offers 28 degree programs and is home to eight externally funded interdisciplinary research centers, including those in space exploration, wireless sensor systems, and nanotechnology.

History

The school was renamed for its alumnus and professor Henry Samueli, who received his B.S. (1975), M.S. (1976), and Ph.D. (1980) in Electrical Engineering there.[4] Samueli is co-founder, chairman, and chief technology officer of Broadcom Corporation and a philanthropist in the Orange County community. He and his wife Susan donated $30 million to the school in 1999.[4] It was at UCLA that Dr. Henry Nicholas and Dr. Henry Samueli met and later formed Broadcom.

The main building is Boelter Hall (Engineering II and III), named after Llewellyn M. K. Boelter, a Mechanical Engineering professor at UC Berkeley who became the first Dean of the school. He "often took an active role in the lives of the school's students, and his approach to engineering impacted many of their careers," according to the school.[5] He retired in 1965 and was succeeded by Chauncey Starr, a pioneer in nuclear power development.

HSSEAS is housed in two other buildings: Engineering IV, and Engineering V, which houses the Department of Bioengineering and the Department of Materials Science and Engineering.[6] Engineering I was demolished in August 2011, to be replaced by Engineering VI, which houses the Western Institute of Nanotechnology on Green Engineering and Metrology (WIN-GEM) in 2014.[7] The ground breaking ceremony for Engineering VI building was held October 26, 2012 with Congressman Henry A. Waxman and Henry Samueli. On March 19, 2015, Engineering VI phase I was dedicated and phase II broke ground with the help of James L. Easton, class of '59 alumnus.[8] Engineering VI was completed and opened in 2018.[9]

The school is credited as the birthplace of the Internet,[10] where the first message was sent to a computer at Stanford University on October 29, 1969, by Professor Leonard Kleinrock and his research team at UCLA.[11] [12] On September 29, 2008, President George W. Bush presented the 2007 National Medal of Science to Kleinrock for "his fundamental contributions to the mathematical theory of modern data networks, and for the functional specification of packet switching, which is the foundation of Internet technology. His mentoring of generations of students has led to the commercialization of technologies that have transformed the world."[13] Room 3420 at Boelter Hall, where the first message was sent, has been converted into The Kleinrock Internet Heritage Site and Archive (renamed KIHC – The Kleinrock Internet History Center at UCLA).[14]

UCLA conferred its first Bachelor of Science degree in engineering in 1947, its first Master of Science degree in 1948, and its first Doctor of Philosophy degree in 1950. Annual Engineering commencement ceremonies are held in June at Pauley Pavilion.

Departments and programs

The Samueli School of Engineering has seven departments and one interdepartmental program, which are accredited by the Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology (ABET). The school offers the following degrees:

Program B.S. M.S. Ph.D. Other
Aerospace Engineering
Bioengineering
Chemical Engineering
Computer Engineering
Civil Engineering
Computer Science
Computer Science and Engineering
Electrical Engineering
Engineering 1
Engineering and Applied Science 2
Manufacturing Engineering
Materials Engineering
Materials Science and Engineering
Mechanical Engineering
  1. Online M.S. Degree
  2. Graduate Certificate of Specialization

Undergraduate admissions

For Fall 2019, UCLA Engineering received 25,804 freshman applications and admitted 2,505 for an admission rate of 9.7%.[15]

For Fall 2015 admitted students had a median weighted grade point average (GPA) of 4.5 and a median SAT score of 2190.[16]

The breakdown of SAT scores by subject is as follows:[16]

Subject Score Percentile
Mathematics 770 98[17]
Critical Reading 690 95
Writing 730 98
Composite 2190 98[18]

Median SAT Mathematics II score: 790[16]

For Fall 2020, UCLA Engineering received 24,039 freshman applications and admitted 2,640 for an admission rate of 11.0%.[19]

Admitted students had a median unweighted grade point average (GPA) of 4.00, a median weighted GPA of 4.59, and a median SAT score of 1540.[20]

Undergraduate Enrollment (2022)

Undergraduate Major Enrollment
Aerospace Engineering 230
Bioengineering 303
Chemical Engineering 298
Computer Engineering 132
Civil Engineering 357
Computer Science 1,057
Computer Science & Engineering 202
Electrical Engineering 532
Materials Engineering 142
Mechanical Engineering 647
Undeclared Engineering 145
Total 4,045

Graduate Enrollment: 2,503[21]

Total HSSEAS Enrollment: 6,584[1]

Alumni

Winners of the UCLA Engineering Alumni of the Year award [22]
Name Degrees Distinctions
Ahmadreza Rofougaran[23] [24] B.S. '86, M.S. '88, Ph.D. ’98 Pioneering RF CMOS & mmWave Radios, Co-founder of Movandi Corporation and Innovent System Inc
M.S. ’59 Internet Pioneer (1926 - 2011)[25]
’58 Vice Chairman and Founder, National Technical Systems
M.S. '81, Ph.D. '84 Awarded for "distinguishing herself in both academia and in integrated circuits and systems."[26] (Former Provost and Vice Chancellor of UIUC, Former Chancellor of UC Davis)
Ph.D. '98
Asad M. Madni M.S. '72
M.S. '57, Ph.D. '70 Google Internet Evangelist, creator of TCP/IP
Dwight Streit Ph.D. '86
Ph.D. '80 Co-founder of Broadcom Corporation
Jack S. Gordon M.E. '76
Ronald D. Sugar Ph.D. '71 Former Chairman and CEO of Northrop Grumman
Robert F. Graham B.S. '55
Richard S. Simonsen B.S. '55
Peter Staudhammer (?) '55, Ph.D. '57 NASA Distinguished Public Service Medalist, 2002 (1935 - 2008)
B.S. '63 Co-founder of AMD and Maxim Integrated Products (1941 - 2009)[27]
Gerald A. Johnston M.S. '72
James L. Easton B.S. '59 Chairman and CEO of Jas. D. Easton Inc., now merged into Easton-Bell Sports
Edsel D. Dunford M.E. '73
Eugene C. Gritton Ph.D. '66
John F. Cashen Ph.D. '71
Edward P. Smith B.S. '57
Russell R. O'Neill Ph.D. '56 Dean Emeritus (1916 - 2007)
Ben Rich M.S. '50
Brien D. Ward Ph.D. '67
Sam F. Iacobellis M.S. '63
Gary E. MacDougal B.S. '58
John B. Slaughter Ph.D. '71
Robert N. Parker M.S. '56
Leonard F. Buchanan Ph.D. '68
Jacob B. Frankel Ph.D. '51
Paul D. Castenholz M.S. '58
Norman E. Friedmann Ph.D. '57
Ph.D. '49
Robert Bromberg Ph.D. '51
Ralph E. Crump B.S. '50
Raymond M. Hill B.S. '55
Trude C. Taylor B.S. '49 (? - 2008)
Armond Hairapetian B.S. '87, M.S. '88, Ph.D. '93
Josephine M. Cheng B.S. '75, M.S. '77
B. John Garrick MS '62, PhD '68
MS ’78 Former executive Vice President of Lockheed Martin Space Systems between 2006 and 2013
Ms '92 Former Chief Executive Officer, Silicon Labs, 2012 to 2022
Other notable alumni

Deans

Faculty

Faculty members: 164[29]

National Academy of Engineering members: 28[29]

Faculty distinctions:

Name Department Distinctions
Electrical Engineering CMOS RF circuits, National Academy of Engineering
Civil and Environmental Engineering First woman to receive the Villum Kann Rasmussen Award
Electrical Engineering Semiconductor materials, RF circuits, National Academy of Engineering
Thomas Connolly (1923 – 2006) Nuclear Engineering American Nuclear Society
Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering National Academy of Engineering
Computer Science National Academy of Engineering
Computer Science Women in Technology International's Hall of Fame
Computer Science Greibach normal form
Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering National Academy of Engineering
Electrical Engineering National Academy of Engineering
Computer Science Internet pioneer, 2007 National Medal of Science
Computer Science 2003 Turing Award
Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering National Academy of Engineering
Tung Hua Lin (1911 – 2007) Civil and Environmental Engineering
David Okrent (1922 – 2012) Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Nuclear Reactor Safety, National Academy of Engineering
Henry John Orchard (1922 – 2004) Electrical Engineering Filter design
Computer Science Bayesian network, 2012 Turing Award, National Academy of Sciences, National Academy of Engineering
Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering National Academy of Engineering
Computer Science 2006 Academy Award, Royal Society of London, Royal Society of Canada, European Academy of Sciences

Research centers

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Washington. James. Report to the University-Wide Council on Engineering Education (UCEE). UCLA Engineering Office of Academic and Student Affairs. UCLA. 12 October 2021.
  2. Web site: Style Guide. UCLA Samueli School of Engineering. 2022-11-03.
  3. http://www.engineer.ucla.edu/history/timeline41_54.html UCLA Engineering School Timeline
  4. Web site: UCLA Engineering News . 2008-05-11 . 1999 . UCLA . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20060906110213/http://www.engineer.ucla.edu/news/1999/samueli_gift.html . September 6, 2006 .
  5. http://www.engineer.ucla.edu/magazine/UEf99.pdf Remembering Dean Boelter, UCLA Engineer, Fall 1999
  6. Web site: Engineering IV: UCLA Engineering Introduction 2007 . Youtube.com . 2008-08-18 . 2011-12-17.
  7. Web site: Engineering VI: New Anchor for Innovation . Engineer.ucla.edu . 2011-12-17.
  8. Bill Kisliuk, UCLA Engineering Celebrates Opening of Engineering VI, UCLA Engineering, March 20, 2015
  9. Web site: Engineering VI Grand Opening: new building heralds new era of growth for UCLA Samueli . Engineer.ucla.edu . 2022-02-04.
  10. Web site: 2020-09-28 . UCLA: Birthplace of the Internet . 2022-08-10 . UCLA Conferences & Catering . en-US.
  11. http://www.engineer.ucla.edu/history/timeline65_74.html 1969 -- First On the 'Net
  12. Web site: 35th Anniversary of the Internet . Internetanniversary.cs.ucla.edu . 2004-10-29 . 2011-12-17.
  13. White House News Sept. 29, 2008
  14. http://www.scpr.org/programs/madeleine-brand/2011/07/19/19933/beginning-of-the-internet-commemorated-in-new-ucla Beginning of the Internet commemorated in new UCLA museum
  15. Web site: Corpuz. Erkki. Report to the University-Wide Council on Engineering Education (UCEE). UCLA Engineering Office of Academic and Student Affairs. UCLA. 15 December 2019.
  16. Web site: About The Students. UCLA Engineering. UCLA. 22 November 2015.
  17. Web site: SAT® Percentile Ranks. The College Board. 22 November 2015.
  18. Web site: SAT® Percentile Ranks for Males, Females, and Total Group. The College Board. 22 November 2015.
  19. Web site: 2020 UCEE Report.
  20. Web site: Incoming freshmen share why they are #uclabound2022. UCLA Samueli School of Engineering. UCLA. 15 December 2018.
  21. Web site: Washington. James. Report to the University-Wide Council on Engineering Education (UCEE). UCLA Engineering Office of Academic and Student Affairs. UCLA. 15 December 2018.
  22. Web site: Past Engineering Award Recipients. 2014-11-04.
  23. Web site: UCLA Samueli honors alumni, faculty, and students at 2018 awards dinner UCLA Samueli School Of Engineering. 2020-07-28. en-US.
  24. Web site: 2018 Alumnus of the Year: Reza Rofougaran - YouTube. 2020-07-28. www.youtube.com. 7 March 2018 .
  25. Web site: In Memoriam: Paul Baran MS '59 . UCLA Engineering web site . March 28, 2011 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110611033319/http://www.engineer.ucla.edu/newsroom/featured-news/archive/2011/in-memoriam-paul-baran-ms-201959 . June 11, 2011 .
  26. Web site: UCLA Engineering Celebrates Accomplishments at Annual Awards Dinner. 2014-11-04. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20110716201249/http://www.engineer.ucla.edu/newsroom/featured-news/archive/2006/november/ucla-engineering-celebrates-accomplishments-at-annual-awards-dinner. 2011-07-16.
  27. http://www.uclabruins.com/sports/m-basebl/spec-rel/011609aaa.html Former UCLA Baseball Player Jack Gifford Passes Away
  28. http://www.engineer.ucla.edu/explore/history/engineering-deans Engineering Deans
  29. Web site: About the Faculty — UCLA Engineering . UCLA . 2014-08-30.