Branches

When people say they want to be an engineer, we say, “Great, which kind?” Do you want to launch satellites, create new health care technologies, design graphics for 3-D gaming, build components for wind turbines or invent nanoscale devices for detecting biological hazards? Engineering encompasses almost every aspect of our lives, so your choices, as you’ll see from the list below, are vast and varied. We encourage you to explore them all.

  • Electronics and communication engineering course give enormous job opportunities in electronics and software companies. All electronic devices need software interface to run and come with one or other device controlling programs designed and developed by electronics and communication engineering. It also gives great opportunities for research and development, as everyday consumer need new devices to support them in daily life.
  • Mechanical engineering combines physics, manufacturing, and electrical and biomedical engineering. Specializing in areas like robotics and clean energy, mechanical engineers design and create medical devices, heating and cooling systems, and the engines of cars, boats and jets. In addition to offering a full suite of graduate degrees, the program allows mechanical engineering undergraduates to specify a career track by adding a concentration in aerospace engineering or manufacturing engineering.
  • Civil engineering is a professional engineering discipline that deals with the design, construction, and maintenance of the physical and naturally built environment, including works like bridges, roads, canals, dams, and buildings. Civil engineering takes place on all levels: in the public sector from municipal through to national governments, and in the private sector from individual homeowners through to international companies.
  • The computer science and engineering degree program encourages you to pursue your own hands-on research, while preparing you for a career in an evolving field that controls the future of communication. Today's computers link people, places and resources from around the world and manage communications systems, manufacturing systems, automobiles, and medical instrumentation. A multidisciplinary faculty addresses the design of state-of-the-art devices that directly impact future computational systems.
  • IT is the area of managing technology and spans wide variety of areas that include but are not limited to things such as processes, computer software, information systems, computer hardware, programming languages, and data constructs. In short, anything that renders data, information or perceived knowledge in any visual format whatsoever, via any multimedia distribution mechanism, is considered part of the domain space known as Information Technology (IT).