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Clemson University Reviews
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10 Reviews Found
The course curriculum is up to date and is par with the industry standards. The course is designed such that it makes the student industry ready by the time they graduate bout of the program. Especially, the automotive engineering department is one of the best. The department pays special focus on industry relevant internships and research. The student are given first hand experience on SOTA technology and tools
Around $65000
There are 33 credits currently for the MS program. The Deep Orange project focuses on work with sponsors and industry to address a vehicle prototype and its requirements that the sponsor of the projects sets up. This program focuses on end-to-end implementation and development of a prototype vehicle from the ground up. Refer to the Deep Orange website for more details. The faculty to student ratio is approximately 1:4 to 1:7, due to Covid.
Fees: (without funding or scholarship) 18k/semester. Online mode of payment, bank transfer, e-checks. Funding opportunities: Tata Fellowship (no more exists), JTEKT fellowship, ACS fellowship, Ford fellowship, BMW fellowship, Graduate teaching and research assistanship.
Clemson University offers a wide variety of courses for all specializations in mechanical engineering. My specialization is Design and Manufacturing. The courses offered at Clemson are essential for a design and manufacturing engineer to learn. For courses such as additive manufacturing and experimental methods in thermal sciences, lab access is provided to make students understand the processes physically. Some professors do plan an industry visit as a part of their course curriculum. For courses such as Advanced Design Methodology, Manufacturing Optimization, and Engineering Optimization, real-world problems or projects are taken as a course curriculum.
The fee for the graduate program of Mechanical Engineering is $12500 per semester (9 or more credits). However, assistantships are available for students choosing the MS Thesis option. These assistantships are provided each semester based on the thesis advisor's recommendation. The living expenses are quite low in Clemson and cost around $400-$500.
Everything is Brilliant. Be ready for 2 years of sleepless nights but it is worth it if you are ready to work hard.
Around 16000 dollars per semester.
Typical in-state tuition is $13,000 per semester. Discover Loans is a partner with the financial aid department and is the easiest to utilize. As an in-state student, I have the South Carolina Life Scholarship as my only form of financial aid. This requires I take 30 credits a year and keep a GPA of 3.0.
I live very close to the university and always wanted to attend since I can remember. This is the only college I applied to partly because I was 26th in a class of 300 and had a 26 on the ACT so I felt confident in my chances to get accepted. I had many friends in the grades above me apply to Clemson so they showed me what was best to do and once accepted gave tips.
The Biochem curriculum is very applicable to the major. A lot of students are planning on going to some type of graduate school and these classes prepare students well. For example, I am planning on pharmacy school and the classes I am required to take are what will be tested on the PCAT.
My tuition was around $40,000 for out of state. However, this does include food and housing. After scholarships and financial aid, it's significantly lower.
It's a tough one. It definitely takes a lot of time. The homework is minimum for my major but the study time is crucial to do well. Labs are also most of my schedule so if you don't like labs then you're in the wrong major.
For a full-time student, fees are like $1,000 on top of tuition which really isn't that cheap either even if you are in-state. Meal plans are expensive, living on campus is expensive, and parking is outrageously expensive. Parking passes for the year are like $350. Stupid when we pay so much for stuff anyway.
I thought the political science curriculum encompasses the various facets of political science well. It was an interesting time to be a political science major considering the 2016 election and we talked at length about that.
You paid tuition, room, and board if you stayed on campus, different levels of meal plans based on your needs. There were lab fees and library fees and of course you had to buy or rent all of your own textbooks for your classes. I'm sure there were lots of other charges but I didn't pay attention to all of it.
From what I know, the course curriculum and difficulty varies by major. Most of the courses I have taken are challenging and require the right amount of organization, studying and preparation, but if you put in the work, you will get the results you want (most of the time).
There is tuition and paying for books. Housing costs depend on where you live and if you live on campus.
The course curriculum was well designed for most of the courses I took, and the material seems to be relevant for the industry. I worked on research for a few of those courses, and had prior experience with research papers during my undergraduate studies.
The tuition when I started was around $15000 a semester (international student), and this included health insurance.
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