ÐÔÊӽ紫ý

Electrical Engineering Concentration

Connect Ideas to Create Tomorrow’s Innovations

At A Glance

## Description
## Description

Program Type

Concentration of the engineering major (BS)

Accreditation

Northwest Commission on Colleges and Universities (NWCCU), Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology (ABET)

Recognition

U.S. News and World Report “Best Undergraduate” engineering program

On this page:

Students mess with some machinery

We’re already moving into a world where AI, electric cars, robotics and virtual reality are advancing at a rapid pace. These technologies will only continue to transform our daily lives and society as a whole.

That’s where you come in.

As an electrical engineer, you may specialize in communication systems, digital signal processing, wireless devices, integrated circuits, electric power, automatic controls, and optoelectronics. The possibilities are endless! And a ÐÔÊӽ紫ý engineering major with a concentration in electrical engineering can help you get started.

100% of our engineering graduates have a job or are in graduate school within the first six months after graduation.

Connect Conceptual Design to Practical Application

As a student in our electrical engineering concentration, you will engage in a rigorous hands-on learning environment that connects conceptual design with practical application. Beginning your freshman year, you’ll work with state-of-the-art equipment and newly renovated facilities that enable you to develop your ideas into tangible prototypes.

A Wide Range of Career Possibilities

A rising profession, electrical engineering offers a diverse range of career possibilities ranging from development of electrical microchips for hospital patients, to design of hybrid vehicle electronic systems, to design of consumer electronics, or the development of large relays and generators for power stations.

Often overlapping with computer engineering, a degree in electrical engineering can open doors to a technical career in most any industry.

servant engineering students work in a home

Servant Engineering: Creative Solutions for the Underserved

We take Christ's call to use our God-given gifts and abilities to serve others. To put that into practice, the Servant Engineering program is a core curricular requirement. In it, you will team up with industry professionals to research, design and deliver engineering solutions to address humanitarian needs.

All our third-year students work on interdisciplinary teams, creating solutions to significant technical challenges through a human-centered design approach.

Among our recent projects:

  • Clean cook-stove technologies for meeting the basic needs of refugees, impoverished people and communities in the developing world
  • Augmentative communication and physical therapy devices for patients and staff at the Providence Center for Medically Fragile Children in Portland
  • Design of a bridge at a ranch for fatherless youth in Yamhill, Oregon
  • An auto-resistive enhancement to an exercise bicycle for use in focused physical therapy
  • Rugged wheelchair designs for individuals suffering with cerebral palsy in the slums of Nairobi, Kenya
  • Creation of a prosthetic device to assist one of our own – an engineering student born with symbrachydactyly, a condition characterized by limb abnormalities
  • Design of “The Bouncinator 3000,” a custom-made device that gives a young girl with physical disabilities newfound freedom

Mentorship Opportunities

Students in the engineering program have the opportunity to engage in industry mentorship through the Ignite program. As an Ignite member, you are matched with Christians in the industry. You’ll meet monthly to discover opportunities, develop connections, address career gaps, and ask questions. 

Program Distinctives Why Study Electrical Engineering at ÐÔÊӽ紫ý?

Courses / Curriculum What Will I Study?

Students in the Maker Hub

Our spaces/Where Will I Learn?

Maker Space: Where Innovative Ideas Come to Life

The facility includes:

  • A 24-station computing lab
  • Eight meeting rooms with 48-inch monitors
  • A wood shop with a large computer numerical control (CNC) router
  • A metal shop with a CNC milling machine
  • And so much more 

These spaces surround an open configurable collaboration space known as "the Hub," a 6,000-square-foot area used by students representing a wide range of majors. The computer labs have the processors and computer systems needed to accommodate the demands of our major.

Career Outlook What’s After ÐÔÊӽ紫ý

Job growth for engineers is expected to rise, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, due to an infrastructure that continues to age (civil engineering), the ever-increasing demand for highly skilled computer scientists, and the ability of electrical and mechanical engineers to develop and apply new technologies. 

“Job prospects may be best for those who stay abreast of the most recent advances in technology,” notes the BLS.

  • Electrical Failure Analysis Engineer, Intel
  • Embedded Software Design Engineer, Tektronix
  • Semiconductor Design Engineer, Teradyne
  • Reliability Engineer, Lattice Semiconductor
  • Various engineering positions, Daimler Trucks North America
  • Mechanical Engineer, Puget Sound Naval Shipyard
  • Applications Engineer, MCAD Technologies
  • Development Engineer, Contech Engineered Solutions
  • Project Engineer, Anderson Construction
  • Civil Design Engineer, KPFF Consulting Engineers
  • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • California Institute of Technology
  • University of Washington
  • Oregon State University
  • University of Georgia
  • Purdue University
  • USC
  • Texas A&M
  • A-dec, Newberg, Ore.
  • Teradyne, Portland, Ore. 
  • CUI, Portland, Ore.
  • Intel, Beaverton, Ore.
  • Lattice Semiconductor, Portland, Ore.
  • HP, Boise, Idaho
  • 3D Systems, Wilsonville, Ore.
  • Tektronix, Beaverton, Ore.
  • Climax, Newberg, Ore.
  • Cascade Steel, McMinnville, Ore.
  • Biotronik, Beaverton, Ore.
Student in graduation cap and gown

Engineering with a Heart 

“Arrhythmias just don’t present themselves when doctors want them to,” explains 2006 ÐÔÊӽ紫ý graduate John Moore. “You can take vitals, order an ECG – but the whole process can take two or three hours and turn up nothing.”

Moore is not a doctor or a nurse. He doesn’t work in a hospital. He’s an electrical engineer at TZ Medical in Portland. In 2009, he helped begin the design process for an in-home cardiac monitor called the Aera CT.

Read More

Portrait of Zach

Zack Lyda

Class of 2022

What I’ll remember most about ÐÔÊӽ紫ý is the community. The engineering faculty I had classes with were top-notch, and all knew me by name. They pushed me to find the peak of my performance as a student and helped me learn how to learn more efficiently.

In the fall semester of 2021, I got baptized in my statistics class. We made concrete canoes and floated them in a large tub to find correlations between design parameters and performance. Our professor, Pete Rusaw, offered to baptize anyone who would want to be baptized, and God put it heavily on my heart to do so, and so despite being fully dressed for work later that afternoon, I got baptized.

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