The main focus area for this major is General Engineering. For more details on this concentration, visit its profile page.
General Engineering is a major offered under the engineering program of study at University of California - Berkeley. We’ve pulled together some essential information you should know about the doctor’s degree program in engineering, including how many students graduate each year, the ethnic diversity of these students, whether or not the degree is offered online, and more.
If there’s something special you’re looking for, you can use one of the links below to find it:
Information about average full-time graduate student tuition and fees is shown in the table below.
In State | Out of State | |
---|---|---|
Tuition | $11,442 | $26,544 |
Fees | $2,803 | $2,803 |
UC Berkeley does not offer an online option for its engineering doctor’s degree program at this time. To see if the school offers distance learning options in other areas, visit the UC Berkeley Online Learning page.
Of the students who received their doctor’s degree in engineering in 2019-2020, 16.7% of them were women. This is less than the nationwide number of 24.0%.
None of the engineering doctor’s degree recipients at UC Berkeley in 2019-2020 were awarded to racial-ethnic minorities*.
Race/Ethnicity | Number of Students |
---|---|
Asian | 0 |
Black or African American | 0 |
Hispanic or Latino | 0 |
Native American or Alaska Native | 0 |
Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander | 0 |
White | 2 |
International Students | 3 |
Other Races/Ethnicities | 1 |
General Engineering students may decide to major in one of the following focus areas.
Focus Area | Annual Graduates |
---|---|
General Engineering | 6 |
You may also be interested in one of these majors related to general engineering.
Related Major | Annual Graduates |
---|---|
Biomedical Engineering | 13 |
Chemical Engineering | 22 |
Civil Engineering | 26 |
Electrical Engineering | 38 |
Mechanical Engineering | 43 |
*The racial-ethnic minorities count is calculated by taking the total number of students and subtracting white students, international students, and students whose race/ethnicity was unknown. This number is then divided by the total number of students at the school to obtain the racial-ethnic minorities percentage.
More about our data sources and methodologies.