This is an archived copy of the 2014-2015 catalog. To access the most recent version of the catalog, please visit http://catalog.uta.edu/.

Civil Engineering - Graduate Programs

Objective

The objective of the graduate program in civil engineering is to prepare students for continued professional and scholarly development consistent with their technical interests. Students, with the assistance of a faculty advisor in their area of interest, plan their programs of study in one of the technical areas in civil engineering. Typical program and research areas are:

  1. Environmental (water and air quality control, and solid and hazardous materials control);
  2. Geotechnical (soil mechanics and foundations);
  3. Infrastructure Systems Engineering and Management;
  4. Structures and Applied Mechanics;
  5. Transportation (traffic planning, highways, airports and transit);
  6. Water Resources (hydrology and hydraulics);
  7. Construction Engineering and Management

The department provides the student an opportunity to study advanced and special topics that are on the forefront of technology. These courses carry CE 5300 TOPICS IN CIVIL ENGINEERING or CE 6300 ADVANCED TOPICS IN CIVIL ENGINEERING numbers and are identified on a student’s academic record by both number and course title. Examples of topics offered in the typical program areas are:

Construction Engineering and Management-Engineering, Technical, and Managerial Aspects of Construction Projects; Productivity of Construction Operations; Cost Estimating, Project Scheduling, Job Costing, Contracts, Specifications and Legal Aspects of Construction; Equipment Utilizations and Field Operations; Design of Construction Operations; Environmental and Sustainability Aspects of Construction Projects; Computer Applications.

Environmental - Advanced Physical/ Chemical Processes

Geotechnical- Expansive Clays, Soil Chemical Stabilization;

Infrastructure Systems Engineering and Management - Civil Engineering Infrastructure Systems to Transport People, Goods, Water, Waste Water, Solid Waste, Energy and Information;

Structures and Applied Mechanics - Earthquake Engineering, Finite Elements and Mechanics, Bridge Design, Advanced Design with Timber, Masonry, Steel and Concrete;

Transportation - Intelligent Transportation Systems, Network Modeling, Urban Operations Research, Vehicular Energy Consumption and Emissions, Transit and Paratransit, Intermodal Systems;

Water Resources - Kinematic Wave Theory, Urban Hydrology, Distributed Modeling, Physical Modeling, and Boundary Layer Theory.

Masters (M.S. and M.Engr.) Student Learning Outcomes

  1. Fundamental Knowledge: Graduates will have extensive basic and applied knowledge in their selected Civil Engineering Program (CEP) interest area.
  2. Independent Abilities: Graduates will have the ability to conduct independent and original study ranging from gathering of information to application, analysis, creation, documentation of the study, and its resolution.
  3. Critical Thinking: Graduates will have extensive breadth and ability to critique and synthesize literature, review results and to apply this knowledge in developing new ideas, in designing and evaluating scientific investigations, and in assessing, interpreting and understanding data relating to their selected CEP interest area.
  4. Advanced Knowledge: Graduates will demonstrate extensive mastery of the subject matter at a deeper theoretical and applied level beyond the fundamental knowledge gained in his/her undergraduate course sequence.
  5. Effective Communication: Graduates will have the ability to present scientific results in both written and oral format in various forums including thesis defense, master’s defense, project reports, manuscripts, professional society meetings, journals, and performing class lectures, presentations, and reports.
  6. Professional Development: A student graduating with a master’s degree in civil engineering is expected to demonstrate interest in pursuing lifelong learning by attaining professional licenses, and obtaining professional development hours by attendance at conferences, higher educational classes, short courses and seminars, conducting classes, and publishing.

Ph.D. Student Learning Outcomes

  1. Fundamental Knowledge: Graduates will command profound basic and applied knowledge in their specialty area within their Civil Engineering Program (CEP) interest area.
  2. Independent Abilities: Graduates will have the ability to conduct a major independent and original research study that includes gathering of information, gaining an understanding of the process of academic or commercial exploitation of research results, demonstrating an understanding of contemporary research issues, effective project management, synthesis and evaluation, and appropriate dissemination of research findings.
  3. Critical Thinking: Graduates will have a profound ability to critique and synthesize literature, review results and to apply knowledge gained from literature to develop new ideas, to design and evaluate scientific investigations, and to assess, interpret and understand data related to their specialty area within their CEP interest area.
  4. Advanced Knowledge: Graduates will demonstrate profound mastery of the subject matter at a deeper theoretical and applied level well beyond fundamental knowledge gained in the undergraduate course sequence and the higher-level knowledge gained in the master’s level course sequence.
  5. Effective Communication: Graduates will have the ability to construct coherent arguments and articulate ideas clearly to an audience, through a variety of techniques, constructively defend research outcomes, justify their research to the profession and promote the public understanding of their research fields.
  6. Professional Development:A student graduating with a doctoral degree in civil engineering is expected to demonstrate interest in pursuing life long learning by attaining professional licenses, and obtaining professional development hours by attendance at conferences, higher educational classes, short courses and seminars, conducting classes, and publishing.

Grade Requirements and Continuation

The Civil Engineering Graduate Program has established rules, regulations, policies, and procedures for continuation in the graduate program and fulfilling graduation requirements. These can be found in the Civil Engineering Graduate Handbook available in the Civil Engineering Office. In addition to the requirements of the Graduate Studies listed elsewhere, to continue in the program each civil engineering graduate student must:

  • For the M.S. program maintain an overall GPA 3.00 or higher.
  • For the M.E. program maintain an overall GPA for 3.00 or higher and GPA of 3.00 or higher in core courses.
  • A Ph.D. or a BS- Ph.D. student must maintain a minimum GPA of 3.50 or higher in their Ph.D. Civil Engineering coursework  and a 3.25 GPA outside of the CE average to take the comprehensive examination and to graduate form the Civil Engineering Ph.D. program BS- Ph.D. program.

No organized course in which a grade of P is received can be used to satisfy course requirements for a graduate degree in civil engineering.

Degree Requirements

The responsibility rests with each student for knowing the rules, regulations, and filing deadlines of the Graduate School and the Civil Engineering Committee on Graduate Studies (see Civil Engineering Graduate Handbook available in Civil Engineering Office). Requirements of the Graduate Studies and the Civil Engineering Committee on Graduate Studies must be met. The degrees offered and minimum course requirements are identified in the Master's and Doctoral tabs in the Civil Engineering section of this catalog.

Undergraduate Coursework Credit

A limited number (not to exceed a total of nine semester hours) of the following courses may be applicable toward a graduate degree if approved in advance by the Civil Engineering Graduate Advisor.

CE 4305TRENCHLESS TECHNOLOGY METHODS3
CE 4306INFRASTRUCTURE ASSET MANAGEMENT3
CE 4311URBAN TRANSPORTATION INFRASTRUCTURE PLANNING3
CE 4312STREET AND HIGHWAY DESIGN3
CE 4313TRAFFIC ENGINEERING3
CE 4320EARTH STRUCTURES DESIGN3
CE 4321FOUNDATION ENGINEERING3
CE 4322APPLICATIONS WITH GEOSYNTHETICS3
CE 4323LANDFILL DESIGN3
CE 4324MECHANICS OF MATERIALS II3
CE 4325FUNDAMENTALS OF FINITE ELEMENT METHOD3
CE 4332CONSTRUCTION EQUIPMENT, METHODS, & MANAGEMENT3
CE 4330HYDRAULIC DESIGN3
CE 4336HOT MIX ASPHALT DESIGN & CONSTRUCTION3
CE 4337PORTLAND CEMENT CONCRETE PAVEMENTS3
CE 4348STRUCTURAL DESIGN IN STEEL3
CE 4350INTRODUCTION TO AIR POLLUTION3
CE 4351PHYSICAL UNIT PROCESSES3
CE 4353WATER CHEMISTRY3
CE 4354INTRODUCTION TO SOLID AND HAZARDOUS WASTE MANAGEMENT3
CE 4355DESIGN OF WATER AND WASTEWATER TREATMENT FACILITIES3
CE 4358OPEN CONDUIT SYSTEM3
CE 4360DESIGN OF STRUCTURAL MASONRY3
CE 4361ADVANCED REINFORCED CONCRETE DESIGN3
CE 4363FUNDAMENTALS OF PRESTRESSED CONCRETE3
CE 4365STRUCTURAL WOOD DESIGN3
CE 4366FUNDAMENTALS OF FIBER REINFORCED COMPOSITES3
CE 4368ADVANCED STRUCTURAL ANALYSIS3
CE 4369LOADS ON STRUCTURES3

Admission Requirements

Performance on the GRE will not be the sole criterion for admitting applicants or the primary criterion to deny admission to either the Master’s or Ph.D. program. In cases where GRE performance is relatively poor all other qualifications presented by the applicant will be carefully evaluated for evidence of potential for success.

Unconditional Admission

A student must meet the following requirements for unconditional admission:

  1. A Bachelor’s Degree in Civil Engineering (Applicant with an appropriate Bachelor’s Degree in another discipline is considered, subject to satisfactory completion of deficiency courses for area of interest.)
  2. An undergraduate GPA of 3.0 on a 4.0 scale, as calculated by the Graduate School, is typical of a successful applicant.
  3. A Graduate Record Exam (GRE) Quantitative score of 700 (old score system) or 155 (new score system) or higher is typical of a successful applicant.
  4. A Graduate Record Exam Verbal score of 390 (old score system) or 146 (new score system) or higher is typical of a successful applicant.
  5. For applicants whose native language is not English, a minimum score of 550 on the written Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213 on the computer TOEFL, 79 on TOEFL iBT, 40 on the TSE-A, 50 on the SPEAK, 400 on Verbal GRE, 85 on METLAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), or 6.5 on the IELTS (International English Language Testing System). (METLAB and IELTS are used only when other tests are not available in the applicant’s country.)
  6. Optional - Recommended if seeking financial aid.

Probationary Admission

If applicants do not meet a majority of standards for unconditional admission outlined above, they may be considered for probationary admission after careful examination of their application materials. Probationary admission may require that the applicant receive a B or better in at least their first 9 hours of graduate coursework applicable to their degree being sought at UT Arlington, take additional English courses, and/or deficiency courses as required.

Provisional Admission

An applicant unable to supply all required documentation prior to the admission deadline, but whom otherwise appears to meet admission requirements may be granted provisional admission.

Deferred Admission

A deferred application decision may be granted when a file is incomplete or when a denied decision is not appropriate.

Denial of Admission

A candidate may be denied admission if they have less than satisfactory performance on a majority of the admission criteria described above.

Waiver of GRE Admission

A waiver of the GRE may be considered for a UT Arlington graduate who has completed an undergraduate degree within the past 3 years from normal undergraduate feeder program for CE degree. Students must complete the last 60 hours of study and in all undergraduate coursework completed at UT Arlington. The student must comply with all other requirements for admission to the Graduate School , i.e., submitting application, paying fees, providing required transcripts, letters of reference, etc. The applicant’s record will be assessed for evidence of strengths relevant to success in the Civil Engineering graduate program. Meeting the minimum GPA requirement shall not be the sole determinant or the primary criterion for granting a waiver.

Facilitated Admission of Outstanding UT Arlington Undergraduates

Facilitated Admission may be considered for a student who has graduated from UT Arlington no more than one academic year prior to proposed entrance to the graduate program. Students must complete the last 60 hours of study at UT Arlington. The student’s UT Arlington GPA must equal or exceed 3.5 in the last 60 hours of undergraduate study and all undergraduate coursework completed at UT Arlington. The applicant’s record will be assessed for evidence of strengths relevant to success in the Civil Engineering graduate program. Meeting the minimum GPA requirement shall not be the sole determinant or the primary criterion for granting facilitated admission.

Fast Track Program for Master’s Degree in Civil Engineering

The Fast Track Program enables outstanding senior undergraduate Civil Engineering students to receive undergraduate and graduate credit for up to six hours of coursework. Technical electives which are dual-listed as graduate courses will satisfy both bachelor’s and master’s degree requirements. Students pursuing an MECE degree may take up to two courses for dual credit.

Interested undergraduate Civil Engineering students should apply to the Graduate School for admission to the Fast Track Program when they are within 30 hours of completing their bachelor’s degree (and before graduation). For admission consideration, they must have completed at least 30 hours at UT Arlington and have an overall and College of Engineering GPA of at least 3.0 (in both). Additionally, they must have completed a set of three basic undergraduate foundation courses with a grade of B or higher in each course and a GPA of at least 3.30 in these three courses. The specific foundation courses vary according to the student’s desired specialty area for the master’s degree.

In their final semester as an undergraduate, Fast Track students in good standing will be automatically admitted to graduate school with consent of the Graduate Advisor. No fees, transcripts, or test scores will be required. For further information about this program, contact an undergraduate advisor or the Graduate Advisor in Civil Engineering.

Departmental Scholarships

Students that are unconditionally admitted will be eligible for available scholarships. Award of scholarships will be based on consideration of the same criteria utilized in admission decisions. To be eligible, candidates must have a GPA of 3.0 in their last 60 undergraduate credit hours (if entering Graduate School within one year of being granted a Bachelor Degree) plus any graduate credit hours as calculated by the Graduate School. Recipients must maintain at least a 3.0 overall GPA, and must be enrolled in a minimum of 9 hours of coursework in both long semesters to retain their scholarship. Additional requirements may be imposed by the department selection committee.

Master's Degree Requirements

The Master of Science degree is a research-oriented program in which completion of a thesis is mandatory. The program consists of a minimum of 24 credit hours of coursework and an acceptable thesis (six credit hours). The Master of Engineering degree is an engineering practice-oriented program requiring a minimum of 36 credit hours. A maximum of six hours may be a special project. A final program examination is required of all master’s degree candidates. Thesis degree candidates will be required to present an oral defense of the thesis.

Dual Program Degree

Students in the Civil Engineering program may participate in a dual degree program whereby they can earn a Master’s Degree in Civil Engineering and a Master of City and Regional Planning. By participating in a dual degree program, students can apply a number of semester hours jointly to meet the requirements of both degrees, thus reducing the total number of hours required to earn both degrees separately. The number of hours that may be jointly applied ranges from six to 18 hours, subject to the approval of each program’s Committee on Graduate Studies and Graduate Advisor. Those interested in the dual degree program should consult the appropriate graduate programs for further information on course requirements, including information regarding which courses are suitable for joint application of credit hours.

To participate in the dual degree program, students must make a separate application to each program, be accepted by each program, and must submit separate Programs of Work for each degree showing only courses that meet requirements for the specified degree, including those joint courses that meet requirements for both degrees. A student must be admitted to the second program before completing more than 15 semester hours in the first, exclusive of leveling, deficiency, or foundation courses, and must complete the second degree within one academic year following completion of the first. See also the statement on "Dual Degree Programs" in the general admission section of this catalog.

Admissions Requirements

Performance on the GRE will not be the sole criterion for admitting applicants or the primary criterion to deny admission to either the Master’s or Ph.D. program. In cases where GRE performance is relatively poor all other qualifications presented by the applicant will be carefully evaluated for evidence of potential for success.

Unconditional Admission

A student must meet the following requirements for unconditional admission:

  1. A Master’s Degree or at least 30 hours of graduate coursework in Civil Engineering. (Applicant with a Master’s Degree in another discipline is considered, subject to satisfactory completion of deficiency courses for the CE area of interest.)
  2. No specific GPA requirement (application considered as a whole). However, a graduate coursework GPA of 3.5 on a 4.0 scale, as calculated by the Graduate School, is typical of a successful applicant.
  3. A Graduate Record Exam (GRE) Quantitative score of 740 (old score system) or 158 (new score system) or higher is typical of a successful applicant.
  4. A competitive Graduate Record Examination Verbal score. A successful applicant typically has a Verbal score of 420 (old score system) or 148 (new score system).
  5. For applicants whose native language is not English, a minimum score of 550on the written Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 213on the computer TOEFL, 79on TOEFL iBT, 40 on the TSE-A, 50 on the SPEAK, 425 on Verbal GRE, 86 on METLAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), or 6.5on the IELTS (International English Language Testing System). (METLAB and IELTS are used only when other tests are not available in the applicant’s country.)
  6. Favorable letters of recommendation from people familiar with the applicant’s academic work and/or professional work.

Probationary Admission

If applicants do not meet a majority of standards for unconditional admission outlined above, they may be considered for probationary admission after careful examination of their application materials. Probationary admission may require that the applicant receive a B or better in at least their first 9 hours of graduate coursework applicable to their degree being sought at UT Arlington, take additional English courses, and/or deficiency courses as required.

Provisional Admission

An applicant unable to supply all required documentation prior to the admission deadline, but whom otherwise appears to meet admission requirements may be granted provisional admission.

Deferred Admission

A deferred application decision may be granted when a file is incomplete or when a denied decision is not appropriate.

Denial of Admission

A candidate may be denied admission if they have less than satisfactory performance on a majority of the admission criteria described above.

Departmental Scholarships and Fellowships

Students that are unconditionally admitted will be eligible for available scholarship and/or fellowship support. Award of scholarships or fellowships will be based on consideration of the same criteria utilized in admission decisions. To be eligible for a departmental scholarship, candidates must have a GPA of 3.5 in their graduate credit hours. Recipients must maintain at least a 3.5 overall graduate GPA in courses taken as a doctoral student and enroll in a minimum of 9 hours of coursework in both long semesters to retain their scholarship. To be eligible for fellowship consideration, candidates must be first-year doctoral or PhD-bound student, must hold an assistantship of at least 25% time, must have a GPA of 3.25 in their last 60 undergraduate credit hours plus a GPA of 3.25 in any graduate credit hours. Recipients must maintain at least a 3.25 overall graduate GPA in courses taken as a doctoral student and enroll in a minimum of 6 hours of coursework in both long semesters to retain their fellowship. Students who hold a 50% assistantship must maintain full-time enrollment of at least 9 hours. Additional requirements may be imposed by the department selection committee.

CE BS-Ph.D. Program

Unconditional Admission

A student must meet the following requirements for unconditional admission:

  1. No Specific GPA requirement (application considered as a whole). However, an undergraduate coursework GPA of 3.5 on a 4.0 scale, as calculated by the Graduate School, is typical of a successful applicant.
  2. A Graduate Record Exam (GRE) Quantitative score of 740 (old score system) or 158 (new score system) or higher is typical of a successful applicant.
  3. A competitve Graduate Record Examination Verbal score. A successful applicant typically has a Verbal score of 420 (old score system) or 148 (new score system).
  4. For applicants whose native language is not English, a minimum score of 550on the written Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) 213 on the computer TOEFL, 79 on the TOEFL iBT, 40 on the TSE-A, 50 on the SPEAK, 86 on METLAB (Michigan English Language Assessment Battery), or 6.5 on the IELTS (International English Language Testing System). (METLAB and IELTS are used only when other tests are not available in the applicant’s country.)
  5. Favorable letters of recommendation from people familiar with the applicant’s academic work and/or professional work.

Probationary Admission

If applicants do not meet a majority of standards for unconditional admission outlined above, they may be considered for probationary admission after careful examination of their application materials. Probationary admission may require that the applicant receive a B or better in at least their first 9 hours or graduate coursework applicable to their degree being sought at UT Arlington, take additional English courses, and/or deficiency courses as required.

Doctoral Degree Requirements

The Ph.D. degree is a research degree and, as such, requires the candidate to successfully carry out original, independent research in an area acceptable to the civil engineering faculty. Normally, a minimum of one year of advanced coursework beyond the master’s degree is required. The student must pass diagnostic comprehensive, and dissertation defense exams administered by his/her committee. 

The BS-Ph.D. degree is a research degree and, as such, requires the candidate to successfully carry out original, independent research in an area acceptable to the civil engineering faculty. Normally, a minimum of 48 credits of coursework beyond the bachelor’s degree is required.