

The Occupational Outlook Handbook reports that employment opportunities
in all areas of engineering --- mechanical, electrical, civil, chemical,
biomedical, aerospace, environmental, industrial, and others ---
are expected to remain strong through the year 2010. Competitive
pressures and advances in technology will fuel improvements and updates
to product design, manufacturing processes, and productivity. With
the use of new computer and communications systems, engineers are
better able to produce and analyze product designs rapidly and in
collaboration with other engineers throughout the world. The A.S.
Engineering Science degree program at Finger Lakes provides a core
mathematics and science education and prepares you to pursue a bachelor’s
degree in any engineering specialty.


The Associate in Science (A.S.) degree in Engineering Science is
broad enough to accommodate individual interests and career plans
within the engineering discipline. Students who successfully complete
the program may transfer as juniors into engineering and related
fields at four-year colleges and universities.
A computer lab dedicated to Engineering and Science is a key feature
of the program at Finger Lakes, which offers courses in calculus,
physics, chemistry, engineering graphics, computer programming,
mechanics, thermal science, and discrete mathematics structures.
In addition, the College offers honors courses that provide enhanced
educational experiences for students who have demonstrated outstanding
academic ability.
Enrollment in honors courses is open to qualified students enrolled
in this degree program, as well as all other qualified FLCC students.
Successful completion of honors courses or an Honors Certificate
may increase student transfer options to four-year institutions.
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Field trips to the Rochester Gas and Electric Power Plant are scheduled
to expose you to a solid fuel operated power plant to discover how
steam is generated and its thermal energy is converted into mechanical
energy in turbines and to electrical energy in generators.
The Engineering Science program is a member of the State University
of New York-Two Year Engineering Science Association (SUNY-TYESA),
allowing for the exchange of ideas between similar programs to maintain
an up-to-date, transferable engineering curriculum.

Graduates
of the program have successfully transferred to four-year institutions
including the Rochester Institute of Technology, Clarkson University,
SUNY University Centers at Buffalo and Binghamton, the University
of Rochester, and Alfred University, among others* and have majored
in mechanical, electrical, civil, ceramic, chemical, aerospace,
biomedical, environmental, and agricultural engineering.
Those graduates who obtained a baccalaureate degree have become
engineers performing research and development, design, and testing
in a variety of settings. It is also possible to attend law school
after obtaining a bachelor's degree in engineering and to work toward
a degree in patent law.
* This
is a sampling of some of the four-year colleges and universities
to which our students have transferred. Please consult your advisor
or the Center for Advisement and Personal Development for a complete
listing of transfer agreements between Finger Lakes Community College
and four-year institutions.

Students
meeting specific criteria may apply for the Bill Parham Memorial
Scholarship. For details, contact a member of the Engineering faculty
or the Financial
Aid Office.
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