Engineering Enrollment Report (b2a73e44-88d1-41c2-b265-9bab1d06ae16)

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 2
- File Size:
- 140 KB
- Publication Date:
- Apr 1, 1956
Abstract
Mineral engineering student enrollment in U. S. and Canadian schools for 1955-1956 is 11,408, an increase of 11 pct more than last year. The undergraduate and graduate engineering students in both countries number 251,765, or 13 pct more than last year. These figures have been released by the American Society for Engineering Education. The largest increase in the undergraduate mineral engineering group in the U. S. is in ceramic engineering, with 676 students, or 31 pct more than last year. The next largest increase is in mining which shows a gain of 13.5 pct, compared with a gain of 13.1 pct in the total undergraduate enrollment in all engineering schools approved by the Engineers' Council for Professional Development. This figure is 190,355, which approaches the prewar figure. Metallurgical undergraduates increased 13 pct; geological, 5 pct; and petroleum, 2.5 pct. This year the figures for geophysics are combined with those for geological engineering, making a total of 1610 undergraduates, of which the geophysicists comprise about one seventh.
Citation
APA:
(1956) Engineering Enrollment Report (b2a73e44-88d1-41c2-b265-9bab1d06ae16)MLA: Engineering Enrollment Report (b2a73e44-88d1-41c2-b265-9bab1d06ae16). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1956.