The George R. Brown School of Engineering is an academic school at
Rice University in
Houston,
Texas. It contains the departments of Bioengineering, Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, Civil and Environmental Engineering, Computational Applied Mathematics and Operations Research, Computer Science, Electrical Engineering and Computer Engineering, Materials Science and Nanoengineering, Mechanical Engineering, and Statistics. Engineering has been part of Rice's curriculum since the university's founding in 1912, but the school was not established as its own unit until 1975.
History
In its earliest days, Rice offered courses in chemical, civil, mechanical and electrical engineering. Over the years, the engineering program grew, and in 1975 the George R. Brown School of Engineering was established and named after
George R. Brown, a major donor and leader of
Brown & Root Inc. Presently, the school comprises nine academic departments and includes
22 engineering-related research institutes and centers. One third of Rice's students are engineering majors.
Teaching
Among the more than 136 engineering faculty are 9 members of the
National Academy of Engineering, 3 members of the
National Academy of Sciences and 2 members of the
National Academy of Medicine. Students work closely with professors, often working in labs and research projects. More than 60 percent of undergraduates have had significant research experience by the time they graduate. Research expenditures in FY 2018-19 exceeded $76 million. Departments and centers within the school of engineering take advantage of Houston's role as a center for the energy industry, medical research, space exploration, and the city's rapidly growing high-technology sector. Several departments have active industrial affiliates programs, and many research projects are undertaken with local companies. Students benefit from these relationships through collaborative research projects, summer internships, and making contacts for employment before graduation.
Faculty in National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine
C. Sidney Burrus (BA '57, BS '58, MS '60) - American electrical engineer widely known for his contributions to digital signal processing, especially FFT algorithms, IIR filter design, and wavelets
Charles Duncan Jr. (BS '47) - American entrepreneur, administrator, and politician best known for serving as U.S. Secretary of Energy on the Cabinet of
President Jimmy Carter from 1979 to 1981
Lynn Elsenhans (BA '78) - former Chairperson, Chief Executive Officer and President of
Sunoco
Kevin Harvey (BS '87) - venture capitalist, founding member of and general partner at Benchmark
Jeffrey A. Hoffman (MMS '88) - American former
NASA astronaut, made five flights as a Space Shuttle astronaut, including the first mission to repair the
Hubble Space Telescope in 1993