Mechanical Engineer's Degree
Overview
The Mechanical Engineer’s degree provides an opportunity for further study beyond the Master’s level. This degree emphasizes breadth of knowledge in mechanical engineering and its economic and social implications; it is not a stepping-stone toward the PhD. There is no direct admission process to the Mechanical Engineer’s degree; students admitted to the MechE SM and PhD programs are eligible to pursue this degree.
The overall course of study and thesis must comprise a coherent program in Mechanical Engineering. The candidate is required to prepare a plan of study and to submit it to the MechE Graduate Office for approval by the Engineer’s Degree Coordinator, Professor Jung-Hoon Chun. The student will be considered a Mechanical Engineer’s Degree candidate when this plan is approved.
Funding
The Mechanical Engineer’s degree is expected to be fully-funded.
Requirements
Students must successfully fulfill the MechE Department’s writing ability requirement.
- 162 graduate-level credit units (including credited units taken during the Master’s degree program and no more than 12 units of credit received for thesis work done under 2.999 (see below)). No credit will be awarded for subjects taken on P/D/F basis. Credit for classes taken under the special grading policy announced for the Spring or Fall of 2020 will be awarded in accordance with Institute regulations. At least one subject from six of the following eleven areas:
- Mechanics of Solids
- Materials
- Fluid Mechanics
- Thermodynamics/HeatTransfer
- System Dynamics & Control
- Dynamics
- Design
- Manufacturing
- Nanotechnology
- Energy
- Bioengineering
- One subject on management/economics as approved by the Mechanical Engineer’s Degree Coordinator.
Students entering MIT’s Graduate School with a Master’s degree are permitted to transfer no more than 24 units of graduate credit from another school to the MIT record. No thesis units may be transferred. Subjects being transferred to MIT records should have a grade of B or higher.
Candidates must make an oral presentation of their Mechanical Engineer’s degree thesis work during their final semester of residence. These presentations are usually scheduled in January and May. The students typically make a ~twenty-minute presentation on the technical aspects of the thesis work including its usefulness in engineering applications in general. The Mechanical Engineering Degree Coordinator should be contacted in order to schedule this. S/he will invite additional faculty members to attend the presentation. Typically there will be 3 faculty members at the presentation not including the advisor. Completion of the degree requires a satisfactory presentation.
All incoming graduate students are encouraged to take the seminar subject 2.991 Introduction to Graduate Study in Mechanical Engineering that introduces students to various aspects of graduate student life in the MechE Department, MIT, and the Boston area. It meets for 1 hour each week during the Fall term. Students who do not have a confirmed research advisor by Registration Day, and students whose research advisors are based outside the MIT campus (e.g. a hospital or Draper Labs), are required to take this seminar class.