Expand Your Knowledge of Power Electronics
As a practicing engineer, your search for knowledge should never end. But with the demands of a full-time job, advanced education can sometimes seem out of reach. At the University of Wisconsin, this is not the case. Earn a respected credential from a top engineering school and expand your technical knowledge of power electronics, drives, and controls. Make the decision to pursue an online Capstone Certificate in Power Conversion and Control today.How Can This Capstone Help Me?
Designed to be completed in one year, you can develop broad technical skills learned under the expertise of senior, highly respected faculty. The certificate also provides a “stepping stone” for students wishing to apply for admission into our online Master of Science: Electrical Engineering—Power master’s degree program. The certificate was developed in response to needs identified by more than 80 corporate sponsors of the Wisconsin Electric Machines and Power Electronics Consortium (WEMPEC). The curriculum is meant to empower practicing engineers and give them the extra edge they need to advance their career. Gainful Employment Act DisclosureLearn more about this program!
Watch the archived Feb. 17 PCC info session:
9 credits
1-2 years
$1600 per credit
Resident and non-resident
April 1/June 1/Nov 1
Summer/fall/spring application deadlines
Justin Kyle Bush Graduate Academic Advisor
Email Justin- Course and Degree Plan
- Learning Online
- Faculty & Staff
- Admission Requirements
- Tuition and Financial Aid
Academics
Top-Notch Education, Completely Online The format of the Power Conversion and Controls Capstone certificate is completely online, making it easy for you to learn without affecting your full-time job. The nine-credit Capstone Certificate in Power Conversion and Control was designed for completion in three consecutive terms of three credits per term. Students can also complete the certificate in two terms by taking two courses in a semester. (Basic courses in electro-mechanical energy conversion [ECE-355] and electronic switching circuits or demonstrated knowledge in these areas are recommended as prerequisites.) Prerequisite (or equivalent) Course Required Courses- Graduate Academic Advisor: Justin Kyle Bush, M.Ed.
- Rich Shiferl
- Giri Venkataramanan, PhD
- Michael Zinn, PhD
Admission Requirements
Admission requirements for the Capstone Certificate in Power Conversion and Control program are listed below.- A B.S. degree from a program accredited by the Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology (ABET) or the equivalent.* Engineering technology degrees do not fulfill this requirement. A B.S. in electrical engineering is recommended. Students who do not have a B.S.E.E. need to have completed fundamental coursework in electrical engineering including circuit theory, fourier analysis, AC circuit analysis using complex impedances, transfer function analysis and evaluation including Bode plots, transformer equivalent circuits, piecewise continuous analysis of nonlinear circuits, and magnetic theory.
- A minimum undergraduate grade-point average (GPA) of 3.00 on the equivalent of the last 60 semester hours (approximately two years of work) or a master’s degree with a minimum cumulative GPA of 3.00. Applicants from an international institution must have a strong academic performance comparable to a 3.00 for an undergraduate or master’s degree. All GPAs are based on a 4.00 scale.
- Applicants whose native language is not English must provide scores from the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). The minimum acceptable score on the TOEFL is 580 on the written version, 243 on the computer version, or 92 on the Internet version.
- International applicants must have a degree comparable to an approved U.S. bachelor’s degree.
- We highly recommend applicants submit scores from the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) though it is not required
- Technology costs for internet course delivery
- Live web-conferencing
- Toll-free telephone line for the audio portion of conference calls
- Library use
- Use of the web-conferencing software for group project work, for program courses
News
Student Spotlight: Hunter Finneran
Hunter Finneran is a graduate of our Power Conversion and Control (PCC) capstone certificate and is now pursuing his Master of Science in Electrical Engineering: Power, which he’ll graduate from in 2023. He currently lives …
Back to the Future: Mastering an Online Degree After a Multi-Year Break
Getting an online Master of Science in Electrical Engineering: Power degree was a bit nerve-wracking for Jeffrey Vasel after many years out of school. “When I graduated from college, online classes didn’t exist,” he says. …
UW–Madison Online Graduate Engineering Programs Ranked 9th by U.S. News & World Report
MADISON, Wis.—UW-Madison’s online master’s degrees in engineering were ranked #9 in the nation by U.S. News & World Report. This is the eleventh year in the row that the online engineering programs, offered by the College of …
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