Skip to main content

ECE Grad Programs Make Getting Started Even Easier

Facing furloughs? Worried about layoffs? Want to make yourself recession-proof? It isn't too late to sign up for fall classes. Brush up your skills or completely retool by enrolling in graduate programs at Boise State.  

The Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering wants to help local employees get back to school. For a limited time, application fees are waived for anyone using promo code STRONGERIDAHO. We've also suspended the requirement for GRE scores and extended our application deadline to July 15.  It has never been even easier to get started! 

HOW TO APPLY
  1. Submit an online application for admission to the Graduate College. Remember, your application fee is waived with promo code STRONGERIDAHO, a savings of up to $95.
  2. Request official transcripts from each educational institution (excluding Boise State) attended beyond high school.
  3. Refer to our online application guide for info on required admissions documents.


Popular posts from this blog

ECE Seminar October 7: Printed Electronics for Air Force Applications

 The Electrical and Computer Engineering Department at Boise State University invites you to attend a free public seminar hosted on Zoom. This week's seminar features  Dr. Emily Heckman, a Senior Research Engineer at Air Force Research Laboratory. October 7 @ 10:30 am  https://boisestate.zoom.us/j/92994002201 ABSTRACT |    This talk will provide an overview of the field of printed electronics and ongoing research efforts in this area at the Air Force Research Laboratory Sensors Directorate. Printed electronics is a subset of additive manufacturing that uses technologies such as inkjet and aerosol jet printing and various other direct-write tools to additively print electronic devices on flexible, conformal and traditional substrate platforms. The AFRL Sensors Directorate is currently exploring this technology for application areas such as RF circuits and antennas, optoelectronic devices, sensors, and rapid prototyping. Challenges such as post-processing, repeat...

Electrical Engineering Research Team Develops New Transistor

The American Chemical Society (ACS) launched its new journal Applied Electronic Materials this year. One of Boise State’s own research teams landed a spot in the very first issue thanks to their novel work on a new type of transistor. “The new transistor opens up an exciting avenue of research,” says Dr. Kris Campbell, an associate professor in the Electrical and Computer Engineering Department. The featured work describes an optically-gated transistor developed in the Non-Volatile Memory research lab at Boise State University. Campbell’s research team includes undergraduate electrical engineering students Randall Bassine and Jeremy Astle and electrical and computer engineering doctoral student Faisal Kabir. Their unique work has led to a patent for Boise State University and has already been licensed by a company hoping to use the technology in their products. In this work, Dr. Campbell and her team demonstrate that a device comprised of alternating layers of sputtered amorphous c...

Dr. Maria Mitkova Honored by International Association for Advanced Materials

Maria Mitkova, a professor in the Electrical and Computer Engineering Department at Boise State University recently attended the 25th assembly of the Silver Jubilee Advanced Materials Congress held in Stockholm, Sweden. Mitkova was honored at the event, receiving the International Association for Advanced Materials (IAAM) medal. Dr. Maria Mitkova (left) Receives IAAM Medal Ea ch year IAAM recognizes high-impact research and innovations which promote the advancement of materials. Recognized by the IAAM for her outstanding contributions to the advancement of materials, Mitkova says she is proud to have received the award.   “I have great opportunities to develop my research in a college known for its innovation, inclusion, and integrity,” Mitkova says, “where I am surrounded by a wonderful team of faculty and students.” Dr. Mitkova’s current research interests are in the area of chalcogenide glasses and thin film microstructures.  Learn more about ongoing work onl...