Contact:
Natarajan Gautam, Professor, 3-171 Center for Science and Technology, 315-443-2046
Faculty
EECS Department Faculty: Biao Chen, Sara Eftekharnejad, Makan Fardad, Ferdinando Fioretto, Venkata S.S. Gandikota, Natarajan Gautam, Mustafa Cenk Gursoy, Can Isik, Garrett Ethan Katz, Chilukuri K. Mohan, Vir Phoha, Qinru Qiu, Asif Salekin, J. Cole Smith, Sucheta Soundarajan, Pramod K. Varshney, Senem Velipasalar, Reza Zafarani.
MAE Department Faculty: Jackie Anderson, Bing Dong, Xiyuan Liu, Young B. Moon, Utpal Roy
CEE Department Faculty: Min Liu, Baris Salman
The M.S. in Operations Research and System Analytics is a 30-credit program that comprises 15 credits of core coursework, 12 credits of relevant electives, and 3 credits of a capstone project. The core ensures that all graduates of the program have the necessary skills in mathematics, operations research, engineering, and computing to formulate and solve engineering problems. Students apply their skills and knowledge, gained throughout the program, to develop and carry out a capstone project that focuses on solving real-world and industry-inspired problems.
Program Description
There is a growing need from both the industry and government for employees with combined skills in optimization, data analysis, programming, systems thinking, and managing uncertainty. To redress this need, Syracuse Uniersity has developed a masters program that uniquely covers topics in mathematics, analytics, computation, and engineering. Students graduating from the program will be well-suited to take on roles that require advanced degrees, such as data engineer, operations research analyst, systems analyst, management engineer, applied scientist, industrial engineer, and analytics engineer.
Admissions
Applicants will have completed a B.S. degree in a STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Mathematics) area with a 3.0 or better grade point average (GPA) and have completed prior coursework in:
- Introduction to programming
- Multivariate calculus
- Linear algebra
- Elementary probability and statistics
The course work requirements can be waived for applicants who demonstrate equivalent knowledge obtained through work or other experience.