Departments • Applied Physics • Biomedical Engineering • Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering • Civil and Urban Engineering • Computer Science and Engineering • Electrical and Computer Engineering • Finance and Risk Engineering • Mathematics (merged into the
Courant Department of Mathematics) • Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering • Technology, Culture and Society • Technology Management and Innovation (affiliated with
Leonard N. Stern School of Business)
Accreditation All undergraduate and graduate programs at the engineering school are accredited by the
Middle States Association. Undergraduate chemistry students have the option to pursue a degree approved by the American Chemical Society (ACS). The
Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology (ABET), the Computer Science Accreditation Board (CSAB),
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE),
American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE),
International Association of Financial Engineers (IAFE),
Institute of Industrial Engineers (IIE),
American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME),
Construction Management Association of America (CMAA),
American Institute of Chemical Engineers (AIChE),
American Society for Metals,
Society of Manufacturing Engineers (SME),
American Academy of Environmental Engineers (AAEE),
Biomedical Engineering Society (BMES),
American Chemical Society (ACS),
American Physical Society (APS) and the
Joint Policy Board for Mathematics (JPBM) have recognized the school's undergraduate and graduate programs in engineering, computer science and physics, chemistry and mathematics.
Admissions Tandon's incoming classes typically consist of about 700 students, with a total academic population of over 5,000. For Fall 2019, the average SAT scores for incoming freshmen was 1448. The acceptance rate for graduate programs in 2016 was 28%. The PhD student-faculty ratio in 2018 was 3.6:1. The students are 28.8% women and 71.2% men.
Rankings • Ranked #2 by
U.S. News & World Report Best Online Graduate Computer Information Technology Program in 2019 • Ranked #20 by
U.S. News & World Report Best Online Graduate Engineering Programs in 2019 • Ranked #1 by The Princeton Review Top Graduate Schools for Video Game Design in 2019 • Ranked #5 by Risk.net's Top 25 quant finance master's programmes in the world • Ranked #25 in 2020
U.S. News Best Global Universities for Electrical and Electronic Engineering • Ranked #21 in
Construction Week Online – The world's top 25 universities for civil engineering in 2019 • Ranked #38 in
U.S. News Best Engineering Schools Ranked in 2021. • Ranked #66 in
U.S. News 2019 undergraduate engineering programs. • Ranked #65 in 2020
Times Higher Education World University Rankings by subject: engineering and technology • Ranked #81 in 2020
U.S. News Best Global Universities for Engineering ==Research== In 2023, the school reported $59 million in research expenditures. The Microwave Research Institute developed electromagnetic and microwave defense and communication systems and later renamed itself the
Weber Research Institute. Other notable research centers of the institute include NSF-sponsored
Wireless Internet Center for Advanced Technology (WICAT), which ranked #1 among
technology research centers in funding and #2 in the number of industry participants according to the United States
National Science Foundation, Center for Advanced Technologies in Telecommunications (CATT), a New York State and NSF sponsored research center that is also affiliated with
Columbia University, NSF-funded Internet Security and Information Systems Lab, a U.S.
National Security Agency (NSA) designated Center of Excellence in Information Assurance, Information Assurance Education and a Center of Excellence in Research, and the New York State Resiliency Institute for Storms & Emergencies (NYS RISE), which is housed jointly at NYU's Brooklyn campus, and
Stony Brook University. Over the years the school has been a key center of research in the development of microwave physics, radar, polymers and the space program. the
Brooklyn Bridge cables; cable-lift elevators; cordless phones;
ATMs; bar codes; laser; radar;
penicillin;
polymers; elevator brakes; lightweight, ultra durable automotive brake rotor; light beer; cardiac defibrillator; artificial cardiac pacemaker; RFID;
contact lenses; zoom lens; first telephone handset; commercial television; non-stick coating as an application of
Teflon; suspension system for the largest radio telescope; microwave technology;
Apollo Lunar Module, the first, and to date only, crewed spacecraft to operate exclusively in the airless vacuum of space;
X-ray crystallography; development of the artificial sweetener aspartame; development of nontoxic processes to create food colorings and remove caffeine from coffee; the quasi-complementary (transistor) amplifier circuit; lateral transistor; the wireless microphone; as well as
Eugene Kleiner's first semiconductor (and much of the
Silicon Valley), and
Spencer Trask's investing and supporting of
Thomas Edison's invention of the electric light bulb.
Academic labs Academic labs and research centers include: • Computational Mechanics Laboratory • Dynamical Systems Laboratory • Brooklyn Experimental Media Center (formerly Integrated Digital Media Institute) • Wireless Implementation Testbed Laboratory • Bio-interfacial Engineering and Diagnostics Lab • Control and Telecommunications Research Laboratory • High-Speed Networking Lab • Power and Power Electronics Engineering Laboratory • CITE Game Innovation Lab • Protein Engineering and Molecular Design Laboratory • Translational Neuroengineering (associated with the NYU Center for Neural Science and the
NYU Langone Medical Center) • Urban Future Lab (founded in partnership with the New York City Economic Development Corporation)
Research centers Research at the engineering school is conducted either through academic departments or through one of many interdisciplinary research centers including: • Center for Advanced Technology in Telecommunications (CATT) • Center for Finance and Technology (CFT) • Institute for Mathematics and Advanced Supercomputing (IMAS) • Polymer Research Institute (PRI) • Urban Intelligent Transportation Systems Center (UITSC) •
Wireless Internet Center for Advanced Technology (WICAT) • CRISSP (Cyber-Security. Includes Tandon School of Engineering, Wagner Graduate School, Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, Stern School of Business, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development) •
Weber Research Institute • Research Center for Risk Engineering • Materials Research Science and Engineering Center • Rehabilitation Engineering Research Center • The Games for Learning Institute • Media and Games Network (MAGNET) • New York State Resiliency Institute for Storms & Emergencies (includes NYU, Stony Brook University, Columbia University, Cornell University, City University of New York and Brookhaven National Laboratory) •
NYU WIRELESS • Biomatrix Research Center (located in Manhattan)
CUSP The
Center for Urban Science and Progress (
CUSP) is a degree-granting research facility of NYU located at
370 Jay Street in
Downtown Brooklyn,
New York and is adjacent to NYU School of Engineering's Rogers Hall. ==Notable faculty and alumni==