Introductory Course in Nuclear Engineering Receives Funding, Scheduled for Fall 2009

Faculty specialist spent five years with Naval Nuclear Propulsion Program

hb?0496-a-ervin.jpg

Elizabeth Ervin

OXFORD,
Miss. – With global efforts intensifying to find alternatives to fossil
fuels, the University of Mississippi is pointing students toward career
opportunities in nuclear engineering.

With funds from a Nuclear
Regulatory Commission education grant, UM’s Department of Civil
Engineering has created the course Introduction to Nuclear Engineering.
The multidisciplinary technical course is to be offered as an elective
to seniors and first-year graduate students beginning fall 2009.

“The
world’s energy crisis is deepening as population grows and oil prices
skyrocket,” said Elizabeth Ervin, a civil engineering professor who
authored the proposal and created the class. “As more and more
countries turn to nuclear plants to ease their power grids, the demand
for qualified graduates in nuclear-related industries increases. The
University of Mississippi needs to provide future engineers the
opportunity to choose their careers in the nuclear industry.”


Ervin’s impetus for the course was a mixture of her own professional experience, a desire to expand engineering curricula and established collaboration with both Entergy and Southern Nuclear Operating Co.

“When I came to the university in 2006, I brought with me five years of experience with the Naval Nuclear Propulsion Program,” Ervin said. “While I don’t have a commercial nuclear background, I have proficiency and can rapidly develop expertise in this area.”

While lecturing on nuclear engineering for the spring 2008 course Global Warming, organized by chemical engineering professor Wei-Yin Chin, Ervin said she learned that student demand for this new course existed in all areas of engineering. She anticipates that enrollment for the inaugural class will range from 25 to 99 students.

“Due to public fears and mishaps, nuclear energy has been demonized in the media,” she said. “However, public attitudes are changing with increased rolling blackouts and energy costs.”

Students taking the course will learn facts – not fiction – regarding the nuclear industry and be able to make informed decisions, Ervin said. Among those facts: careers in nuclear-related industry can be quite lucrative, especially for engineers.

“U.S. Department of Labor statistics show that engineers in the nuclear industry command the third-highest salaries of all engineers,” Ervin said. “Nuclear engineer salaries range from $90,000 to $124,000 annually.”

Students will be trained for introductory positions at the 32 U.S. nuclear operating companies and four manufacturing companies. Potential jobs vary from plant design and operation to environmental-effect research.

The new academic offering has already received strong support from university administrators, as well as School of Engineering faculty and staff.

“This project satisfies several of the civil engineering department’s long-range goals, most specifically, improving and maintaining an effective, state-of-the-art undergraduate curriculum,” said Alexander H.D. Cheng, chair and professor of civil engineering. “This project is sustainable for future offerings, which will most certainly aid in maintaining accreditation with the Accreditation Board of Engineering and Technology.”

For more information about civil engineering at UM, call 662-915-5362 or visit http://www.olemiss.edu/depts/civil?eng .