Penn State Opens First Online Bachelor's in Engineering
        
        
        
			- By Dian Schaffhauser
- 02/15/17

Pennsylvania  State University has added a software engineering degree to World  Campus offerings.  The online division of the institution has already begun accepting applications  for the bachelor's degree program, which  starts in August. The  university already offers a master's degree in software engineering.
Courses  that make up the degree cover discrete mathematics, probability and statistics,  computer programming, object-oriented methodology, software design, software  validation and verification, software security and computer networks. In their  senior year students will finish a capstone project that includes working with  fellow students in designing, planning, managing and implementing a software  system for an industry partner.
The online  classes will be taught by the faculty from the university's school of engineering, which also offers a face-to-face  version at the campus in Erie and is accredited by the Accreditation  Board for Engineering and Technology.
Program planners  anticipate that students earning their degrees will go after such jobs as  software developers, computer systems analysts or video game designers.
For  students who have 59 or fewer credits, the cost is $542 per credit hour if  they're taking fewer than 12 credits during the semester. If they're taking 12  or more credits, the tuition is a flat $6,587. The price is slightly higher for  students who already have 60 or more credits. Every semester they'll also pay  an IT fee of between $86 and $252, depending on how many credits they're  pursuing.
"For  adult learners who want a Penn State engineering degree but don't live near one  of our campuses, they now have an option that can help them advance their  careers," said Sonya Leitzell, director of academic affairs at Penn  State's World Campus, in a prepared statement.
"Software  has tremendously reshaped our world and our everyday lives," added Xiaocong  Fan, associate professor of computer science and software engineering and lead faculty  member of the program. "Whether it's small devices or gigantic spaceships,  office automation or social networking, online education or e-commerce, software  engineers empower things with intangible but innovative applications to make them  smarter, faster and better."
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.