The College of Sciences at the Georgia Institute of Technology is one of the six colleges at the institute.
Type | Public |
---|---|
Established | 1885/1990[1] |
Dean | Susan Lozier |
Undergraduates | 2,106[2] |
Postgraduates | 884[2] |
Location | , , |
Website | cos.gatech.edu |
History
Until 1990, there was no independent college for the sciences. Before then, there had been three colleges: the College of Engineering, the College of Management, and College of Science and Liberal Studies (COSALS). As part of his restructuring plan, John Patrick Crecine reorganized the institute; he split COSALS into the College of Sciences and combined the liberal arts and management programs into the Ivan Allen College of Management and Liberal Arts.[3] The latter would be split by G. Wayne Clough in 1998.
Schools
Degrees
Undergraduate
Almost all of the undergraduate degrees offered by the College of Sciences have concentration options and/or a "business plan."[4]
- B.S. in Biology
- B.S. in Chemistry
- B.S. in Earth and Atmospheric Science
- B.S. in Applied Mathematics
- B.S. in Discrete Mathematics
- B.S. in Applied Physics
- B.S. in Physics
Master’s
- M.S. in Prosthetics and Orthotics
- M.S. in Biology
- M.S. in Bioinformatics
- M.S. in Chemistry
- M.S. in Paper Science and Engineering
- M.S. in Earth and Atmospheric Science
- M.S. with a Major in Earth and Atmospheric Sciences
- 5-year B.S. M.S. in Earth and Atmospheric Science
- M.S. in Mathematics
- M.S. in Statistics
- M.S. in Quantitative and Computational Finance
- M.S. in Applied Physics
- M.S. in Physics
- M.S. in Applied Psychology
- M.S. in Human Computer Interaction
Doctoral
- Ph.D. in Applied Physiology
- Ph.D. in Biology
- Ph.D. in Bioinformatics
- Ph.D. in Chemistry
- Ph.D. in Paper Science and Engineering
- Ph.D. in Earth and Atmospheric Science
- Ph.D. in Algorithms, Combinatorics, Optimization
- Ph.D. in Mathematics
- Ph.D. in Physics
- Ph.D. in Engineering Psychology
- Ph.D. in Experimental Psychology
- Ph.D. in Industrial/Organizational Psychology