Ph.D Program in Infrastructure and Environmental
Systems
The PhD program in Infrastructure and Environmental Systems offers
interdisciplinary study into the interaction of the natural world and the
built environment. PhD candidates develop the analytical and conceptual
skills necessary to manage that complex interface. The PhD program in
Infrastructure and Environmental Systems emphasizes the application of an
understanding of the underlying environmental science to the design and
management of infrastructure. In the PhD program in INES, students take
core courses, focus area elective courses, directed studies and
dissertation credits.
INES Core Courses (15
credits minimum)
All students will be required to
take courses in the core of the program for a minimum of 15
credits(2 required courses,1 of 3 prescribed courses,1 case study course
and a seminar course). The INES core will focus on basic and advanced
level understanding of the engineering principles of infrastructure and scientific principles of
environmental analysis, as well as
development and management issues.
Courses in this core will emphasize analysis and assessment of
environmental effects on infrastructure as well as the development and
management of infrastructure and its
impact on the environment. Throughout the core, students will study the
configuration, dynamics and operational
issues relevant to the management of a variety of earth, civil, and
industrial systems.
INES Ph.D. students
will participate in interdisciplinary activities throughout their program
of study. Students will begin with a set of interdisciplinary core
courses that teaches them about fundamental aspects of the infrastructure
and the environmental systems present in all applications of INES. Then,
at midpoint, students will participate in an interdisciplinary case-study
course. Finally, throughout the program, students will participate in
interdisciplinary seminar courses.
Specialized (Focus Area)
Elective Courses (15 credits minimum)
Beyond the core requirements, a
student needs to support doctoral research with enrollment in particular
courses related to his/her research. For this reason, 15 credit hours have
been reserved for specialized electives. The objective of these
specialized electives is to provide an opportunity for students, their
advisers, and the doctoral program committee to select a complementary set
of specialized courses intended to focus the student’s area of interest
and research. A student may also take all directed studies as focus area
courses, thereby raising the focus area credits to 39. These specialized
elective courses can be organized into three focus areas:
·
Focus Area 1: Infrastructure
and Environmental Systems Design (INESD).
The design of infrastructure and environmental
systems requires expertise in subject matter areas related to design
methodologies including plan formulation, dimensioning of systems that
could be structural and/or control systems, selection of material
properties, and configuration of monitoring methodologies and approaches.
Also, some basic knowledge of the functional requirements of the
facilities concerned needs to be provided to the student. It is
anticipated that this area will be of interest primarily to engineering
(civil) students.
·
Focus Area 2: Infrastructure
and Environmental Systems Science (INESS).
Successful development and operation
of infrastructure, including methods and approaches to managing the
associated environmental and socio-economic impacts require baseline
spatial and temporal information on the
nature of the ambient environment . This implies that the INES student who
has been exposed to critical issues and techniques in the central core and
is interested in environmental systems and their response to and impact
upon the operation of infrastructure needs to deepen his/her knowledge in
the methods of geological, hydrological,
physical, chemical and biological
characterization of processes, materials
and life support systems within the context of environmental
systems. This focus area is expected to draw the
interest of students with science backgrounds.
-
Focus Area 3:
Infrastructure and Environmental Systems Management (INESM).
To be able to efficiently and
effectively plan and manage infrastructure systems or environmental
system operations, INES students need to obtain, integrate, and utilize
the knowledge in operations efficiency, effective policy development and
deployment, legal issues and government regulations, intelligent support
systems for decision making, effective environmental and/or
socio-economic impact control measures, efficient systems project
management, comprehensive evaluation of system performance, and smart
systems implementation and management that includes the consideration of
facility, people, policy, technology, economics, and procedures. The
students who choose to focus in this area of INES will obtain the
expertise in effective systems management and implementation in
infrastructure system and/or environmental system areas and will work as
senior managers and/or researchers in the above areas. This focus area
will interest students from all academic backgrounds.
Directed Studies (24 credits minimum):
In recognition of varying backgrounds, preparation, interests, and goals,
each student may complete additional credits through directed studies
(courses, research, or individual study), with the consent of his/her
adviser and doctoral committee. As a part of directed studies, at
any time during the INES program, and with approval by the student’s
doctoral program committee, a student may enroll in an independent study
to pursue topics of interest to the student and the faculty. The number of
independent study credit hours taken each semester must be approved by the
student’s doctoral program committee, and the total number of independent
study hours taken during the Ph.D. program cannot exceed 9 credit hours.
Dissertation (18 credits minimum):
The INES doctoral program includes a minimum of 18 hours of
dissertation credit. Each student must complete and defend a dissertation
based on a research program approved by the student’s doctoral adviser
with concurrence by the INES Program Committee (IPC). The dissertation
must be of high quality and represent an original piece of research that
advances the body of knowledge in infrastructure and environmental
systems.
For more
information about this program contact
Dr.David Young
or Dr.John Diemer
INES
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