Amount of math covered in a typical undergraduate engineering program?

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SUMMARY

A typical undergraduate engineering program covers a comprehensive range of mathematical topics essential for various engineering disciplines. Key subjects include Calculus I-IV, Ordinary Differential Equations (ODE), Linear Algebra, and basic Statistics. Biomedical Engineering (BME) and Chemical Engineering (ChemE) students generally complete six math classes over two years, while Electrical Engineering (EE) students also study Discrete Mathematics. Programs emphasize applied mathematics, often utilizing tools like MATLAB and Mathematica, with minimal focus on proofs.

PREREQUISITES
  • Calculus I-IV
  • Ordinary Differential Equations (ODE)
  • Linear Algebra
  • Discrete Mathematics
NEXT STEPS
  • Explore MATLAB for engineering applications
  • Study Numerical Methods for practical problem-solving
  • Learn about Fourier and Laplace Transforms in engineering contexts
  • Investigate the role of Statistics in engineering decision-making
USEFUL FOR

Students in engineering disciplines, particularly those in Biomedical Engineering, Electrical Engineering, and Chemical Engineering, as well as educators and curriculum developers focused on mathematics in engineering education.

Superman1271
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Hi, I've just completed my first year in biomedical engineering, and I was wandering what is the amount of math covered in a typical undergraduate engineering program?
 
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All of calculus (including ODE's, PDE's, Fourier and Laplace Transforms); also, it usually includes Numerical Methods and basic Statistics. In EE they usually do Discrete Math as well.
 
As an EE I took math classes on Calculus (I-III), ODE, Prob/Stat, and a bit of numerical methods (taught by engineer).

In actual engineering classes I've learned bits and pieces of transforms (laplace, fourier, Z), linear algebra, vector analysis. Hard to remember what stuff i learned where since I'm also a math major.
 
Depends on what engineering and what school.

At my UG school BMEs and ChemEs take just Calc 1-4 (quarter system), Linear Algebra and ODEs. 6 math classes total, 2 years of continuous math. Not that math intensive. My school actually has an ABET accredited BME program which is pretty rare.

All engineers also take a programming class that teaches you how to use Matlab and Mathematica.
 
Math for Engineers is more applied and almost no proofs.
 
In computer engineering I did the standard single/multivariable calculus sequence, linear algebra, linear analysis, statistics and probability, numerical analysis and discrete mathematics. All of those were applied/computational except for discrete mathematics which also served as an introduction to proofs and algebra.
 
For biomedical engineering, you will most likely take the following:

Single variable calc, multivariable calc, ODE, statistics

Can't think of any others. The CS/EE guys generally take linear algebra as well.
 

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