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Electrical Engineering Program at Mississippi College Earns Accreditation


President Blake Thompson joins students and professor Chris Maggio excited about Mississippi College's electrical engineering program gaining ABET accreditation.
President Blake Thompson joins students and professor Chris Maggio excited about Mississippi College's electrical engineering program gaining ABET accreditation.

Mississippi College’s electrical engineering program reached a significant milestone by becoming accredited.

Based in Baltimore, Maryland, ABET is a nonprofit organization accrediting 4,005 programs at more than 793 colleges and universities in 32 countries. ±«Óătvelectrical engineering recently earned the ABET seal of approval.

±«Óătvlaunched its electrical engineering program five years ago and now enrolls about three dozen students.

Getting the ABET seal of approval represents a major achievement, the culmination of much hard work on the Clinton campus.

ABET accreditation “demonstrates that a program meets standards of quality, which makes its graduates more attractive to employers” says Chris Maggio, chair of MC’s Department of Engineering, Computer Science and Physics.

“Graduating from an ABET accredited program is also often a requirement for professional engineering licensure,” Maggio added.

Excellent electrical engineering professors worked well with university leaders, a knowledgeable team of advisors and a determined group of students to make it happen.

President Blake Thompson is thrilled to spread the news about electrical engineering as he begins his second year as MC’s chief executive. It’s another sign that MC’s academic programs are achieving national and international prominence as the school begins its 194th year.

Originally the Accreditation Board of Engineering and Technology, the group is simply known as ABET. It remains the global accreditor of university programs in applied and natural science, computing, engineering along with engineering technology.

±«Óătvgraduates like Michael Washam are delighted to hear about the outstanding news for the bachelor’s program at his alma mater. He was among MC’s first electrical engineering graduates in 2018. Michael is employed as a distribution design engineer by Leidos, an electrical engineering consulting company in Orlando, Florida.

“Now that the program is accredited, I can take qualification tests such as the PE (professional engineering),” Washam said. “It also opens up a plethora of possible new job opportunities for me as well as past and future electrical engineering graduates at MC.”

±«Óătvprofessors helped get Washam on the right career path. “I have found that I was as well or better prepared as graduates from other universities when I began work.”

He’s the son of Chris and Missy Washam of Clinton. His father chairs the university’s Kinesiology Department. And his mom serves as president, coach and trainer with Teams of Tomorrow. The group helps people reach their full potential.

Certainly, MC’s electrical engineering program has taken giant steps to reach its potential, while continuing to excel.

Getting ABET accreditation isn’t easy. “Programs seeking accreditation must demonstrate that they are in compliance with ABET’s criteria, policies and procedures,” Maggio said. He views accreditation as a terrific way to boost student and faculty recruitment at the Baptist-affiliated university.

MC’s electrical engineering classes in Hederman Science Hall include theory, logic design, electronics, microprocessors, signals and systems, along with energy and power.

Students in the program come from Mississippi, across the South, and states as far away as Colorado, Pennsylvania and Hawaii. There’s one international student enrolled from Egypt. A number of the undergrads compete on Choctaws sports teams and stay involved in other campus organizations.

Job prospects look bright. The median annual wage for the USA’s electrical engineers in 2018 was $96,640, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Whether the company is Continental Tire two miles west of Clinton, Nissan in Canton or at Army Corps of Engineers operations in Vicksburg, ±«Óătvgrads will discover employment opportunities in the Magnolia State for years to come. They’re needed in industries such as IT, manufacturing, telecommunications and aerospace. People in the field often work at companies manufacturing electrical components such as medical equipment.

±«Óătvprofessors will promote the newly accredited electrical engineering program to prospective students at the first Fall Preview Day on the Clinton campus September 14.

For additional information contact Chris Maggio at 601-925-3213 or maggio@mc.edu.