ACS Committee On Professional Training 1996 Annual Report

submitted from two ACS-approved programs. b Report forms were sent to 146 schools; only 141 departments responded. 36 FEBRUARY 2, 1998 ...
2 downloads 14 Views 65KB Size
acs news

ACS Committee On Professional Training 1996 Annual Report he number of bachelor’s degree graduates in chemistry from colleges and universities whose undergraduate chemistry programs are approved by the American Chemical Society increased 9.6% in the 1995–96 academic year. The 10,902 bachelor’s degrees that were reported is a record high since ACS began publishing these data in 1945. The number of master’s degrees from these departments increased by 12%, and the number of Ph.D. degrees granted in chemistry was the same as in the 1994–95 academic year. The percentage of ACS certified baccalaureate graduates for 1995–96 was 40%, the same as in 1994–95. (Certified graduates are those who have completed a curriculum that meets the guidelines specified by ACS and who are eligible for full membership in ACS; noncertified graduates may become associate members of ACS upon graduation and full members after three years of professional experience or a higher degree in a chemical science.) Total numbers of bachelor’s degrees (certified and noncertified), master’s degrees, and Ph.D. degrees awarded for the 1995–96 academic year by departments whose undergraduate chemistry programs are ACS approved are listed by institution in the large table at the end of this report and are summarized in the two smaller tables. These tables also include numbers of chemical engineering graduates from institutions whose programs are accredited by the American Institute of Chemical Engineers (AIChE) and the Accreditation Board for Engineering & Technology (ABET). (These departments are not required to report their data to the ACS Committee on Professional Training, so the number of departments included varies each year.) Also accompanying this report is a table with information on graduate-student enrollment in chemistry

T

Summary of data from departments offering an ACS-approved program, 1992–96 Bachelor’s

Master’s

Graduates (totals)

Certified graduatesb

Noncertified graduates

Number of schools

10,902 9,947 9,443 8,800 8,435

4,309 3,971 3,912 3,605 3,604

6,593 5,976 5,531 5,195 4,831

CHEMICAL ENGINEERINGc 1996 141 6,229 6,229 1995 134 5,749 5,749 1994 123 4,516 4,516 1993 104 3,164 3,164 1992 112 3,060 3,060

— — — — —

Number of schoolsa

CHEMISTRY 1996 616 1995 614 1994 608 1993 603 1992 601

Doctorates

Graduates

Number of schools

Graduates

315 317 317 313 314

2,098 1,878 1,803 1,683 1,617

190 190 188 191 192

2,127 2,127 2,202 2,140 2,202

133 127 116 96 107

1,157 1,040 910 705 769

116 112 101 84 92

690 584 612 435 539

a Data not submitted from two ACS-approved programs. b Includes graduates certified in approved options. c Chemical engineering departments are not required to report their data to CPT, so the number of departments included in this category varies from year to year.

Graduate student enrollments in departments whose undergraduate chemistry programs are ACS approved Number of departments

First-year graduate students Full time

Part time

All graduate students Full time

Part time

a

M.S. DEPARTMENTS Fall 1995 Fall 1994 Fall 1993 Fall 1992 Fall 1991

127 127 127 124 124

411 501 515 524 511

333 267 249 246 262

1,405 1,525 1,247 1,447 1,424

806 876 855 858 909

Ph.D. DEPARTMENTS Fall 1995 Fall 1994 Fall 1993 Fall 1992 Fall 1991

189 190 188 191 192

3,933 3,708 3,636 3,649 3,736

232 219 206 170 267

17,421 16,982 16,289 15,926 16,864

1,405 1,199 1,167 995 1,170

a Departments whose highest offering is the master’s degree in chemistry.

Reprinted with permission from C&EN. Copyright 1998, American Chemical Society

FEBRUARY 2,1998 C&EN

35

acs news

in chemistry or in one of the ACS-approved opSummary of totals from 1996 reports tions in biochemistry, from departments offering chemical physics, cheman ACS-approved program istry education, environmental chemistry, mateSchools rials, or polymers. By the reporting Men Women Total end of the 1996–97 acaCHEMISTRYa demic year, the commitBachelor’s, total 616 6,260 4,642 10,902 tee had approved 84 proCertified — 2,563 1,746 4,309 grams with a biochemisNoncertified — 3,698 2,895 6,593 try option, three with a Master’s 315 1,186 912 2,098 chemical physics option, Doctorates 190 1,475 652 2,127 five in chemistry education, eight in environCHEMICAL ENGINEERINGb mental chemistry, one in Bachelor’s, certified 141 4,187 2,042 6,229 Master’s 133 892 265 1,157 materials, and 12 with a Doctorates 116 563 127 690 polymers option. The committee coma Data not submitted from two ACS-approved programs. b Report forms were sent to 146 schools; only 141 departments pleted the revision of the responded. sixth edition of “Planning for Graduate Work in Chemistry.” CPT also departments with ACS-approved under- approved the newly revised topical supgraduate programs. plements to the ACS guidelines. The supThe number of bachelor’s degrees in plements provide advice on appropriate chemical engineering granted by the 141 content for a variety of curricular matters AIChE/ABET-accredited departments that but are not intended to be prescriptive. reported in 1996 increased 8.3%. The Both the graduate study brochure and the number of chemical engineering master’s supplements were distributed to all ACSdegrees increased 11%, and Ph.D. degrees approved programs. Additional copies are increased 18%. Seven more chemical engi- available free from the ACS Office of Proneering departments reported data to ACS fessional Training, phone (800) 227-5558 in 1996 than in 1995. ext. 4589. The chemistry programs at ACSThe final report of the CPT survey of approved schools are reevaluated at five- doctoral programs was published as a year intervals. There were 617 colleges special insert in the spring 1997 CPT and universities on the approved list at Newsletter and in the November 1997 the end of calendar-year 1996. During issue of the Journal of Chemical Edu1996, the committee studied the reports cation. The report is also available on of 281 chemistry programs at approved the World Wide Web (http://www.acs. schools, and 13 reports from schools org/cpt/b1.htm). The final report of the applying for ACS approval. Each evalua- survey of master’s degree programs has tion involved a review of extensive doc- been written and will be published earumentation submitted by the depart- ly in 1998. After extensive discussions, ment chair describing the current status the committee voted to require bioof the program. chemistry for ACS approval and for stuTwo schools were added to the ACS- dent certification. Details of the new bioapproved list by CPT, seven additional chemistry requirement are being disprograms were placed on probation, and cussed by CPT and will be published in one was removed from probationary sta- the winter 1998 CPT Newsletter for tus. No schools were removed from the comment by the chemistry community approved list. Visiting associates of the before a final plan of implementation is committee made on-site visits to seven adopted. schools. The committee would like to acStudents may receive certified degrees knowledge and thank the visiting associ36 FEBRUARY 2, 1998 C&EN

Committee members, 1996 Sally Chapman committee chair Barnard College, New York City Dennis H. Evans University of Delaware, Newark Slayton A. Evans Jr. University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Gordon A. Hamilton Pennsylvania State University, University Park Michael Jaffe Hoechst Celanese Corp. Edward N. Kresge Exxon Chemical Co. Mitsuru Kubota Harvey Mudd College, Claremont, Calif. Dale W. Margerum Purdue University, West Lafayette, Ind. Jerry R. Mohrig Carleton College, Northfield, Minn. C. Bradley Moore University of California, Berkeley Jeanne E. Pemberton University of Arizona, Tucson C. Dale Poulter University of Utah, Salt Lake City Walter S. Trahanovsky Iowa State University, Ames Norman C. Craig, consultant Oberlin College, Oberlin, Ohio C. David Gutsche, consultant Texas Christian University, Forth Worth Herbert D. Kaesz, consultant University of California, Los Angeles Cathy A. Nelson, committee secretary American Chemical Society

ates of the committee who conducted on-site visits in 1996: Philip J. Chenier, University of Wisconsin, Eau Claire; Alice Cunningham, Agnes Scott College (retired), Decatur, Ga.; Franklin P. DeHaan, Occidental College, Los Angeles; David M. Lemal, Dartmouth College; Manfred G. Reinecke, Texas Christian University, Fort Worth; James E. Swartz, Grinnell College, Grinnell, Iowa; and David W. Thompson, College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, Va.b

Chemistry and chemical engineering degrees awarded by schools offering an ACS-approved program, 1995–96 CHEMISTRY

CHEMISTRY

Bachelor’s certified Yes

No

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING M.S. Ph.D.

B.S. M.S. Ph.D.

A Abilene Christian U Adelphi U Agnes Scott C Akron, U of Alabama, U of Birmingham Huntsville Tuscaloosa Alaska Fairbanks, U of Albion C Albright C Alfred U Allegheny C Alma C American U Amherst C Andrews U Appalachian State U Arizona State U Arizona, U of Arkansas State U Arkansas Tech U Arkansas, U of Fayetteville Little Rock Ashland U Auburn U Augsburg C Augustana C Illinois South Dakota Austin C Austin Peay State U

5 0 0 12

2 5 0 3

— 3 — 0

— — — 10

3 4 0 6 2 9 3 0 3 3 8 3 5 25 13 1 2

6 1 10 2 15 8 1 10 14 0 2 1 10 14 21 6 2

3 2 6 4 — — — — — 3 — — 1 12 15 5 —

3 — 11 2 — — — — — 3 — — — 17 10 — —

8 2 2 19 15

8 7 0 0 12

4 4 — 4 —

6 — — 5 —

1 3 2 0

5 5 9 14

— — — —

— — — —

1 13 4 5 3 2 0 3 15 3 4 1 10 27 0 7 1 0 4 16 0 8 10 4

30 10 7 15 21 6 22 11 4 4 1 6 8 4 32 11 10 10 16 56 42 0 18 13

— 6 — — 3 — — — — — — — 1 7 — 7 0 7 1 8 6 1 6 2

— — — — 1 — — — — — — — 12 4 — 2 — 11 — 10 9 2 — —

16 11 7

3 51 11

3 — 7

36 — —

1 0 4 8

11 6 2 23

— — — 2

— — — —

(a) 27 38

45 24

3 5

9 6

— 0

3 2

59

8

3

72

9

8

B Baldwin-Wallace C Ball State U Barnard C Bates C Baylor U Beaver C Beloit C Bemidji State U Benedictine U Birmingham-Southern C Bloomsburg U Boise State U Boston C Boston U Bowdoin C Bowling Green State U Bradley U Brandeis U Bridgewater State C Brigham Young U Brown U Bryn Mawr C Bucknell U Butler U

42 8

5 0

1 2

16

0



8

12

16

C California Institute of Tech California Polytech State U California State Polytech U California State U Bakersfield Chico Dominguez Hills Fresno

Bachelor’s certified

(a)

Yes

Fullerton Hayward Long Beach Los Angeles Northridge Sacramento San Bernardino Stanislaus California, U of Berkeley Davis Irvine Los Angeles Riverside San Diego Santa Barbara Santa Cruz Calvin C Canisius C Capital U Carleton C Carnegie Mellon U Carroll C Carthage C Case Western Reserve U Catholic U of America Centenary C of Louisiana Central Arkansas, U of Central C Central Connecticut State U Central Florida, U of Central Michigan U Central Missouri State U Central Oklahoma, U of Central State U Centre C Charleston, C of Chatham C Chestnut Hill C Chicago State U Chicago, U of Christian Brothers Cb Cincinnati, U of Citadel, The City U of New York Graduate Center Brooklyn C City C Herbert H. Lehman C Hunter C Queens C Clarion U Clark U Clarkson U Clemson U Cleveland State U Coe C Colby C Colgate U Colorado C Colorado School of Mines Colorado State U Colorado, U of Boulder Colorado Springs Denver Columbia U Concordia C Connecticut C

5 8 4 10 8 3 3 1

No

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING M.S. Ph.D.

25 16 46 9 20 24 8 5

6 2 6 7 3 6 — —

— — — — — — — —

43 37 29 7 12 64 8 222 16 0 86 16 13 6 13 23 7 12 8 5 2 0 9 25 19 3 2 3 4 3 5 18 1 3 2 1 0 10 1 8 4 4 15 7 7 14 0 3 5 17 0 3 5 0 18 26 6 0 2 6 0 13 43 10

11 6 12 13 9 17 10 5 — — — — 4 — — 17 5 — — — 2 7 5 — — — — — — — — 32

64 19 17 26 4 30 13 10 — — — — 8 — — 11 2 — — — — — — — — — — — — — — 24

28 1

0 1

17 —

19 —

0 1 8 4 0 3 10 7 16 11 1 1 14 7 8 12

16 20 2 5 15 5 12 3 3 0 4 16 5 19 0 8

2 14 — — 8 — 4 9 2 14 — — — — 3 7

14 — — — — — — 3 5 8 7 — — — — 5 17

5 7 8 10 1 1

67 3 5 3 6 4

7 — 6 33 — —

27 — — 24 — —

B.S. M.S. Ph.D.

49

5



95 39

6 3

13 2

43

8

4

26 26

4 3

1 7

58

7

18

39

16

6

2 61

— 12

— 3

18

14

3

67 55 13

3 9 16

7 3 0

81 28

14 9

5 3

52

16

4

67

20

8

FEBRUARY 2, 1998 C&EN 37

acs news CHEMISTRY

CHEMISTRY

Bachelor’s certified Yes

Connecticut, U of Cooper Unionb Cornell C Cornell U Creighton U

No

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING M.S. Ph.D.

10

3

9

10

1 15 30

9 57 6

— 11 —

— 38 —

0 3 3 3 2 15 24 1 6 0 1 0 1 2 4 3 3 9 14 11

53 10 9 18 4 0 37 14 3 7 16 10 6 4 2 2 6 0 35 0

2 — — — 3 — 5 — — 6 6 — 10 — — — — 17 3 12

6 — — — — — 19 — — 3 — — 0 — — — — 5 16 3

1 14 2 4 3 3 5 4 0 2 2 4 5 5 1

6 6 12 9 4 18 30 2 19 2 3 13 43 9 6

— 5 0 5 8 1 11 4 — — — — 9 3 —

— — — — — — — — — — — — 14 — —

6

3





8 5 1 4

0 4 4 11

5 2 2 2

— — — —

B.S. M.S. Ph.D.

11 24

15 10

3 —

66

3

13

D Dartmouth C David Lipscomb U Davidson C Dayton, U of Delaware State U Delaware Valley C Delaware, U of Delta State U Denison U Denver, U of DePaul U DePauw U Detroit Mercy, U of Dickinson C District of Columbia, U of the Drake U Drew U Drexel U Duke U Duquesne U

37

7



38

5

18

6

10

0

82

5

1

13 1 11 1 12 5 0 2 1 10 25

8 1 11 64 46 3 15 0 10 4 1

12 1 4 4 9 — — — — — 2

— 2 — 6 28 — — — — — —

3 13 4 9 43 7 4

10 4 8 7 0 11 6

— 3 2 4 20 — 11

— — 3 9 10 — 2

35

2

0

12

11

0

38 FEBRUARY 2, 1998 C&EN

M.S. Ph.D.

6 4 8 1 6 5 3

16 6 2 4 7 9 22

2 — — — — — —

19 — — — — — —

2 2 6 10 4 3 50 20 13 14 11 2 2 7 0 25 20 17 3 2

2 3 1 0 2 4 4 0 1 9 6 3 2 0 3 9 23 2 23 3

— — — 5 0 — 19 — — 2 — — — — — — — 5 2 —

— — — — — — 24 — — 4 — — — — — — — 13 4 —

7 6 3 31 5

4 6 0 1 6

3 5 9 12 —

— 10 2 — —

7 4 123 5

35 0 43 7

17 — 17 4

12 — 7 —

2 8

8 18

2 14

— 2

21 8 2 0 9 0

91 0 0 1 4 6

15 — — — 7 —

24 — — — — —

14 10 5

4 7 10

8 7 —

26 12 —

2 4 6 14 4

8 17 16 0 4

5 — 3 17 —

— — — 10 —

4 3 8 5 2 7 15 3 6 13

9 5 24 2 12 3 21 8 2 0

— 7 3 — — 1 5 — — —

— 6 11 — — 5 11 — — —

B.S. M.S. Ph.D.

Hamilton C Hamline U Hampden-Sydney C Hampton U Hartford, U of Hartwick C Harvard U Harvey Mudd C Haverford C Hawaii, U of Hendrix C Hiram C Hobart & William Smith C Hofstra U Hollins C Holy Cross, C of the Hope C Houston, U of Howard U Humboldt State U

38 (a)

9

14

Idaho State U Idaho, U of Illinois Institute of Tech Illinois State U Illinois Wesleyan U Illinois, U of Chicago Springfield Urbana-Champaign Indiana State U Indiana U-Purdue U Fort Wayne Indianapolis Indiana U Bloomington Northwest South Bend Southeast Indiana U of Pennsylvania Interamerican U of Puerto Rico Iowa State U Iowa, U of Ithaca C

34 37

13 15

0 3

53

4

3

73

21

11

73 21

9 4

2 6

22

5

5

37 36

1 10

6 1

43

6

5

J 43

6

2

Jackson State U James Madison U John Carroll U Johns Hopkins U Juniata C

K

G Geneva C George Mason U George Washington U Georgetown U Georgia Institute of Tech Georgia Southern U Georgia State U

Georgia, U of Gettysburg C Gonzaga U Goucher C Grand Valley State U Grinnell C Gustavus Adolphus C

No

I

F Fairfield U Fairleigh Dickinson U Madison Teaneck Fisk U Florida A&M U Florida A&M U/ Florida State Ub Florida Atlantic U Florida Institute of Tech Florida International U Florida State U Florida, U of Fordham U Fort Lewis C Framingham State C Francis Marion U Franklin & Marshall C Furman U

Yes

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING

H

E Earlham C East Carolina U East Stroudsburg U East Tennessee State U Eastern Illinois U Eastern Kentucky U Eastern Michigan U Eastern New Mexico U Eastern Washington U Eckerd C Elizabethtown C Elmhurst C Emory U Emporia State U Evansville, U of

Bachelor’s certified

164

18

18

Kalamazoo C Kansas State U Kansas, U of Kean C of New Jersey Kennesaw State U Kent State U Kentucky, U of Kenyon C King’s C Knox C

CHEMISTRY

CHEMISTRY

Bachelor’s certified Yes

No

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING M.S. Ph.D.

B.S. M.S. Ph.D.

L La Salle U Lafayette C Lake Forest C Lamar U Lawrence Technological U Lawrence U LeMoyne C Lebanon Valley C Lehigh U Lewis & Clark C Lincoln U Long Island U Brooklyn Campus C. W. Post Campus Loras C Louisiana State U Baton Rouge Shreveport Louisiana Tech U Louisville, U of Loyola C in Maryland Loyola Marymount U Loyola U New Orleans Chicago Luther C Lycoming C

5 6 6 5 7 2 2 8 11 2 0

0 14 9 1 0 7 2 6 11 7 12

— — — 9 — — — — 13 — —

— — — — — — — — 5 — —

2 2 1

8 0 1

3 — —

— — —

9 6 8 7 2 2

11 8 0 4 1 9

0 — 5 3 — —

14 — — 2 — —

1 19 1 2

7 0 11 2

— 1 — —

— 6 — —

7 3 5 4 2 7 0 2

4 0 6 9 6 0 3 24

— 3 — 1 — — 8 2

— 1 — — — — 3 —

5 22 35

44 49 0

8 2 9

10 8 43

24 49 103

8 6 44

3 10 27

4 6 1 2 0 0 4 9 3

5 8 7 4 4 9 1 3 30

11 2 2 7 2 4 — — —

10 — — 25 — 8 — — —

28

3

8

18

8



18 3 20 17

27 8 25 0

7 1 8 6

4 1 23 3

66 8 1 1 1 1 4 15 2

7 15 8 17 15 6 6 0 11

25 — — 7 — — — — —

6 76 3 1

8 0 10 5

7 11 — 6

24





9

12

1

42

13

9

57

15

2

45 —

5 16

0 5

Yes

Mississippi, U of Missouri Western State C Missouri, U of Columbia Kansas City Rolla St. Louis Monmouth U Montana State U Montana Tech of the U of Montana Montana, U of Montclair State U Moorhead State U Moravian C Morehouse C Morgan State U Mount Holyoke C Mount Saint Vincent, C ofc Muhlenberg C Murray State U Muskingum C

No

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING M.S. Ph.D.

B.S. M.S. Ph.D.

2 5

8 8

6 —

2 —

4

2

0

10 4 6 9 3 2 2

3 17 0 11 0 7 3

5 7 6 13 — 3 1

10 2 11 4 — 5 —

48

7

3

71

10

3

36

10

2

4 6 4 4 14 6 9 0 5 4 3

1 18 6 0 0 11 6 2 10 17 2

1 2 — — — — 1 — — 4 —

1 — — — — — — — — — —

3 0

0 2

— —

— —

1 4 7

14 4 1

— 14 —

— 13 —

21

8

1

6 7 11

5 6 4

5 3 9

— 6 8

11 28 49

— 0 11

— 2 6

24 0 5

0 2 0

— 6 5

— — 2

0 3 4 0 1 7 3 8 0 27

21 15 7 61 2 0 18 1 11 50

10 10 13 19 — — — 4 0 5

6 11 4 12 — — — — — 4

22 14

4 4

3 2

37

5



107

5

9

2 63 10 6 14 8 4 3 3 1 0 7 9 8 4 0 0 0 2

3 40 20 6 14 3 3 7 1 8 0 22 9 7 19 7 15 2 2

— 18 5 2 4 7 2 10 6 5 3 6 1 8 3 — 2 — —

— 28 — — — 4 4 5 — — 10 — 0 4 — — — — —

18

7



28

8

3

13 6

16 24

35 8

26 15

56 68

6 2

10 8

N

M Macalester C Maine, U of Manhattan C Mankato State U Marietta C Marist C Marquette U Marshall U Maryland, U of Baltimore County College Park Massachusetts Institute of Tech Massachusetts, U of Amherst Boston Dartmouth Lowell McNeese State U Memphis, U of Mercer U Merrimack C Metropolitan State C of Denver Miami U Miami, U of Michigan State U Michigan Technological U Michigan, U of Ann Arbor Dearborn Flint Middle Tennessee State U Middlebury C Midwestern State U Millersville U Millikin U Millsaps C Minnesota, U of Duluth Twin Cities Mississippi C Mississippi State U

Bachelor’s certified

(a) 25

5 7

7 —

71 115

11 8

6 1

25 — — 1 — — — — —

159

9

18

— 30 — 9

30 133

— 6

— 41

57

6

1

Nazareth C Nebraska Wesleyan U Nebraska, U of Kearney Lincoln Omaha Nevada, U of Las Vegas Reno New Hampshire, U of New Jersey Institute of Techb New Jersey, C of New Mexico Highlands U New Mexico Inst of Mining & Tech New Mexico State U New Mexico, U of New Orleans, U of New York U Niagara U Norfolk State U North Alabama, U of North Carolina A&T State U North Carolina Central U North Carolina State U North Carolina, U of Asheville Chapel Hilld Charlotte Greensboro Wilmington North Dakota State U North Dakota, U of North Texas, U of Northeast Louisiana U Northeastern Illinois U Northeastern U Northern Arizona U Northern Colorado, U of Northern Illinois U Northern Iowa, U of Northern Kentucky U Northern Michigan U Northwest Missouri State U Northwestern State U of Louisiana Northwestern U Notre Dame, U of

FEBRUARY 2, 1998 C&EN 39

acs news CHEMISTRY

CHEMISTRY

Bachelor’s certified Yes

No

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING M.S. Ph.D.

B.S. M.S. Ph.D.

O Oakland U Oberlin C Occidental C Ohio Northern U Ohio State U Ohio U Ohio Wesleyan U Oklahoma State U Oklahoma, U of Old Dominion U Oregon State U Oregon, U of Otterbein C P Pace U New York Pleasantville Pacific Lutheran U Pacific, U of the Pennsylvania State U Pennsylvania, U of Philadelphia C of Pharmacy & Science Philadelphia C of Textiles & Science Pittsburg State U Pittsburgh, U of Polytechnic U Pomona C Portland State U Portland, U of Princeton U Providence C Puerto Rico, U of Mayaguez Rio Piedras Puget Sound, U of Purdue U Purdue U Calumet

Yes

No

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING M.S. Ph.D.

B.S. M.S. Ph.D.

S 0 5 0 5 29 13 2 3 7 3 12 1 1

3 15 27 3 18 33 8 7 27 12 0 24 11

2 — — — 21 2 — 6 19 4 3 14 —

0 — — — 18 6 — 4 12 — 10 11 —

1 3 2 2 8 21 5

3 1 8 11 30 6 0

— — — 0 14 4 1

— — — 0 26 36 2

7

0





3 15 3 3 0 3 21 2

3 41 0 21 20 2 12 11

0 7 3 — 6 — 24 —

— 16 11 — — — 22 —

16 11 9 25 0

36 29 3 18 4

13 3 — 17 —

— 2 — 37 —

1 1 2

3 3 2

— — —

— — —

2 5 15

3 9 0

— — 7

— — 13

2 5 2 4 9

7 3 5 9 7

— 2 — 10 —

— 2 — 11 —

0 7 2 3 7 7 (a) 4 2 3 3 3

20 4 1 0 15 11

— — — — 2 20

— — — — — 22

0 1 0 4 1

— 4 — — —

— — — — —

40

3 14 1

4 40 12

— 11 7

— 18 4

64

50 32

17 8

7 0

53 48

11 7

1 4

29

11

2

140 32

7 12

11 6

52 15

15 13

11 5

25

2

12

105

15



186

13

20

R Ramapo C of New Jersey Randolph Macon C Randolph Macon Woman’s C Redlands, U of Reed C Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Rhode Island C Rhode Island, U of Rhodes C Rice U Richard Stockton C of New Jersey Richmond, U of Rider U Ripon C Roanoke C Rochester Institute of Tech Rochester, U of Rockhurst C Rollins C Roosevelt U Rose-Hulman Inst. of Tech Rowan C of New Jersey Russell Sage C Rutgers U Camden New Brunswick Newark

Bachelor’s certified

40 FEBRUARY 2, 1998 C&EN

81

4

11

19

2

1

34

4

7

48

8

4

8

8



12

Saginaw Valley State U St. Anselm C St. Benedict, C of/St. John’s U St. Catherine, C of St. Cloud State U St. John Fisher C St. John’s U St. Joseph C St. Joseph’s U St. Lawrence U St. Louis U St. Mary’s C St. Michael’s C St. Olaf C St. Peter’s C St. Thomas, U of St. Vincent Ce Salem State C Salisbury State U Sam Houston State U San Diego State U San Diego, U of San Francisco State U San Francisco, U of San Jose State U Santa Clara U Scranton, U of Seattle U Seton Hall U Seton Hill Ce Shippensburg U Siena C Simmons C Skidmore C Smith C Sonoma State U South Alabama, U of South Carolina, U of South Dakota School of Mines & Tech South Dakota State U South Dakota, U of South Florida, U of Southeast Missouri State U Southeastern Louisiana U Southern California, U of Southern Colorado, U of Southern Connecticut State U Southern Illinois U Carbondale Edwardsville Southern Methodist U Southern Mississippi, U of Southern Oregon State C Southern U and A&M C Southwest Missouri State U Southwest State U Southwest Texas State U Southwestern Louisiana, U of Southwestern Oklahoma State U Stanford U State U of New York Albany Binghamton Buffalo Stony Brook C at Brockport C at Buffalo C at Cortland C at Fredonia

4 2 3 0 5 0 4 0 7 3 6 4 2 2 2 3 8 0 4 0 9 6 2 1 5 0 7 7 9 4 5 3 2 0 3 0 1 6 4

12 5 12 3 10 5 0 3 4 3 32 4 0 37 6 8 4 0 0 6 6 10 22 4 34 8 12 12 6 0 2 2 9 14 21 15 5 22 0

— — — — — — 1 4 9 — 3 — — — — — — — — 2 8 — 7 4 28 — 12 — 13 — 3 — — — — — — 3 4

— — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — 1 — — — — — — — 2 — — — — — — — — 17 —

1 2 8 5 8 9 1 2

12 10 93 9 0 2 6 6

3 5 8 — — 3 2 0

4 — 6 — — 17 — —

2 8 3 1 6 11 3 0 12 2 2

19 20 3 15 1 2 19 4 0 2 7

7 9 0 3 — 8 1 — 3 2 —

7 — — 2 — — — — — — —

8

12

4

36

8 11 10 11 3 4 2 6

0 47 8 22 5 5 5 1

3 3 7 11 — 3 — 0

5 9 25 18 — — — —

(a)

26 29 28

1 8 6

— 2 —

32

8

3

26

14

1

11

3



24

15

8

61

12

9

CHEMISTRY

CHEMISTRY

Bachelor’s certified Yes

C at Geneseo C at New Paltz C at Old Westbury C at Oneonta C at Oswego C at Plattsburgh C at Potsdam C at Purchase State U of West Georgia Stephen F. Austin State U Stetson U Stevens Institute of Tech Suffolk U Susquehanna U Swarthmore C Syracuse U

No

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING M.S. Ph.D.

10 1 0 0 11 4 2 3 2 2 2 20 3 2 8 7

22 3 8 9 12 14 4 3 3 4 5 0 1 7 6 0

— 0 — — 5 — — — — 1 — 8 — — — 4

— — — — — — — — — — — 0 — — — 7

Temple U 3 Tennessee Technological U 3 Tennessee, U of Knoxville 5 Chattanooga 18 Martin 6 Texas A&M U College Station 20 Commerce 3 Kingsville 1 Texas Christian U 4 Texas Southern U 5 Texas Tech U 17 Texas, U of Arlington 8 Austin 109 Dallas 10 El Paso 0 San Antonio 11 Texas Woman’s U 0 Thiel C 1 Toledo, U of 12 Towson State U 4 Tri-State Ub Trinity C 6 Trinity U 24 Truman State U 19 Tufts U 0 Tulane U 0 Tulsa, U of 11 Tuskegee U 3

11 23

8 6

7 —

22 27 11

3 — —

22 9 0 3 4 10

B.S. M.S. Ph.D.

34

14

5

15

9

1

36

5

1

16 — —

39

9

3

9 3 3 1 2 12

46 — — 3 — 11

135

17

14

23

11



10 0 0 0 0 6 1 11 3

4 17 6 9 2 3 — 6 —

6 38 4 0 — — — 12 —

96

16

27

33

11

1

12





11 2 0 14 17 3 8

0 — — 4 5 — 2

— — — 7 4 — —

26 34 50 11

8 6 12 —

1 1 4 —

30

3

3

31

4

4

(a)

U 7 16 12 (a) 8 8

5 11 1

— — —

— — —

14 27

4 3

5 25

4 2 6 9 8 9 1 23

27 36 3 4 0 30 0 32

— 17 0 1 13 2 — 13

— 6 — 5 1 10 — 18

12 1

55 2

5 —

17 —

V Valparaiso U Vanderbilt U Vassar C Vermont, U of Villanova U Virginia Commonwealth U Virginia Military Institute Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State U Virginia, U of Viterbo C

Yes

No

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING M.S. Ph.D.

B.S. M.S. Ph.D.

W

T

Union C Ursinus C U.S. Air Force Academy U.S. Naval Academy Utah State U Utah, U of

Bachelor’s certified

Wabash C Wagner C Wake Forest U Washburn U of Topeka Washington C Washington State U Washington U Washington & Jefferson C Washington & Lee U Washington, U of Wayne State U Waynesburg C Weber State U Wellesley C Wesleyan U West Chester U West Florida, U of West Virginia U Institute of Techb West Virginia State C West Virginia U Western Carolina U Western Connecticut State U Western Illinois U Western Kentucky U Western Maryland C Western Michigan U Western Washington U Westminster C Wheaton C Illinois Massachusetts Whitman C Whittier C Wichita State U Widener U Wilkes U Willamette U William & Mary, C of Williams C Winona State U Wisconsin, U of Eau Claire Green Bay La Crosse Madison Milwaukee Oshkosh Parkside Platteville River Falls Stevens Point Superior Wittenberg U Wooster, C of Worcester Polytechnic Inst Wright State U Wyoming, U of

3 10 4 0 8 3 2 8 2 3 4 0 3 9 1 12 0 13 22 101 15 18 3 4 5 5 9 24 5 3 7 19 8 1

— — 3 — — 25 18 — — 26 8 — — — 2 5 —

— — 6 — — 6 10 — — 21 18 — — — 3 — —

1 6 3 1

8 25 10 3

— 10 6 —

— 6 — —

2 1 0 14 14 1

6 44 5 14 19 1

2 3 — 2 1 —

— — — — — —

5 1 1 2 5 0 0 3 63 0 3

7 6 14 12 13 3 7 4 6 38 1

— — — — 2 — — — 6 — —

— — — — 1 — — — — — —

7 0 5 34 2 7 8 1 6 5 1 1 4 4 15 5

30 6 13 0 16 9 0 3 9 11 1 7 13 14 11 4

— — — 26 5 — — — — — — — — 3 14 5

— — — 30 10 — — — — — — — — 0 — 7

6 5

4 48

— —

— —

0 9

20 53

22 8

14 —

20 50

18 9

0 7

66 33

2 17

10 3

22





35

11

3

14

1



79

10

20

54

11

2

22

5

1

5 9

1 —

3 —

6,229 1,157

690

X 34

10



85

5

5

56

22

6

Xavier U Xavier U of Louisiana

Y Yale U Youngstown State U TOTALS

4,309 6,593 2,098 2,127

Note For brevity, “B.S.” and “M.S.” are used to denote all bachelor’s and master’s degrees, respectively, in each column. a Data not submitted. b Listed on basis of accreditation by AIChE/ABET. c The chemistry programs at Mount Saint Vincent and Manhattan C are integrated into a combined department with instruction in chemistry located at Manhattan C. d UNC Curriculum in Applied Sciences degrees are combined with the chemistry department degrees. e St. Vincent C and Seton Hill C are integrated into a combined department.

FEBRUARY 2, 1998 C&EN 41