University of Texas at Dallas academic programs
The University of Texas at Dallas is a public research university in the University of Texas System. The University of Texas at Dallas main campus is located in Richardson, Texas.
The University of Texas at Dallas offers over 145 academic programs across its eight schools including, 53 baccalaureate programs, 62 masters programs and 30 doctoral programs and hosts more than 50 research centers and institutes. The school also offers 30 undergraduate and graduate certificates. With a number of interdisciplinary degree programs, its curriculum is designed to allow study that crosses traditional disciplinary lines and to enable students to participate in collaborative research labs.
The Erik Jonsson School of Engineering and Computer Science launched the first accredited telecommunications engineering degree in the U.S. and is one of only a handful of institutions offering a degree in software engineering. The Bioengineering department offers MS and PhD degrees in biomedical engineering in conjunction with programs at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas and the University of Texas at Arlington. Dual degrees offered at UTD include M.S. Electrical Engineering degree in combination with an MBA in management, Molecular Biology and Business Administration B.S., and Molecular Biology and Criminology B.S.. Geospatial Information Sciences is jointly offered with the School of Natural Sciences and Mathematics and with the School of Economic, Political and Policy Sciences, which administers the degree. UT Dallas is the fourth university in the nation to have received an accreditation for a Geospatial Intelligence certificate. The Geospatial Intelligence Certificate is backed by the US Geospatial Intelligence Foundation. The university is designated a National Center of Academic Excellence and a National Center of Academic Excellence in Information Assurance Research for the academic years 2008–2013 by the National Security Agency and Department of Homeland Security.
School of Arts and Humanities
The School of Arts and Humanities was established in 1975. Courses are offered in literature, foreign languages, history, philosophy, music, dance, drama, film, and visual arts. With the integration of the arts and humanities and interdisciplinary education the school has no conventional departments. Its curriculum allows study that crosses traditional disciplinary lines.Centers and institutes
- Center for Holocaust Studies
- Center for the Interdisciplinary Study of Museums
- Center for Translation Studies
- Center for Values in Medicine, Science and Technology
- Confucius Institute
- CentralTrak, Artist Residency Program
School of Arts, Technology, and Emerging Communication
Housed in the Edith O’Donnell Arts and Technology building, ATEC fosters connections that encourage students to try, learn, and grow. The 155,000-square-foot building was designed by STUDIOS Architecture – the same firm that designed Google’s headquarters in Mountain View, Calif.
The footprint of the building is designed around cluster concepts allowing thinkers to gather and work. ATEC classrooms, research labs, and makerspace studios support new ways of collaboration for a community immersed in innovative practices.
ATEC appointed the inaugural dean in . Balsamo is a scholar, educator, entrepreneur, and designer of new media whose research and interactive projects explore the cultural possibilities of emergent technologies. Under Balsamo’s leadership, ATEC is a multidisciplinary academic research school that inspires students, faculty, staff, colleagues, and the public to think critically and creatively about the relationship between technology and culture. ATEC’s leading-edge draw inspiration from the creative disciplines of science, technology, art, engineering, and management. ATEC faculty and students in their imagination, research, and creative practice.
Academics
At the undergraduate level, ATEC students choose an of study in one of the following areas: Animation, Design and Creative Production, Game Design, and Critical Media Studies. At the graduate level ATEC offers a program, a program, and a program.Rankings
ATEC continues to rank among the nation’s top programs for both at the graduate and undergraduate level. ATEC at UT Dallas ranked 18th in the 2020 ' Top 50 Game Design Schools and Colleges in the US. ATEC’s graduate program in Game Design was ranked 13th and the undergraduate program in Game Design ranked 19th in ' 2020 list of Top Game Design Schools in the US. The ATEC program ranked No. 2 in Texas, No. 3 in the Southwest, and No. 12 among US public schools for animation by the in 2020.Research Labs and Creative Practice Studios
ATEC’s foster collaboration across disciplines. Faculty and students are encouraged to identify new horizons of research and creativity.- 3D Studio
- Animation Research Lab
- AntÈ Institute
- ArtSciLab
- Creative Automata Lab
- Cultural Science Lab
- Emerging Gizmology Lab
- Fashioning Circuits
- Games Research Lab
- LabSynthE
- Narrative Systems Research Lab
- Public Interactives Research Lab
- SP&CE Media
- The Studio for Mediating Play
School of Behavioral and Brain Sciences
Centers and institutes
- Callier Center for Communication Disorders
- Center for BrainHealth
- Center for Children and Families
- The Center for Vital Longevity
School of Economic, Political and Policy Sciences
Centers and institutes
- Center for Crime and Justice Studies
- Center for Global Collective Action
- Center for the Study of Texas Politics
- Institute for Public Affairs
- Institute for Urban Policy Research
- The Negotiations Center
Erik Jonsson School of Engineering and Computer Science
Centers and institutes
- Center for Advanced Telecommunications Systems and Services
- Center for Integrated Circuits and Systems
- Center for Systems, Communications and Signal Processing
- Cybersecurity Research Center
- Embedded Software Center
- Emergency Preparedness Center
- Global Information Assurance Center
- Photonic Technology and Engineering Center
- Texas Analog Center of Excellence
- CyberSecurity and Emergency Preparedness Institute
- Human Language Technology Research Institute
- Center for Basic Research in Natural Language Processing
- Center for Emerging Natural Language Applications
- Center for Machine Learning and Language Processing
- Center for Robust Speech Systems
- Center for Search Engines and Web Technologies
- Center for Text Mining
- CyberSecurity Research Center
- Embedded Software Center
- Emergency Preparedness Center
- Global Information Assurance Center
- InterVoice Center for Conversational Technologies
School of Interdisciplinary Studies
Naveen Jindal School of Management
opened in 1975 and was renamed to the Naveen Jindal School of Management on October 7, 2011, after alumnus Naveen Jindal donated $15 million to the business school. The school is accredited by the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business. UTD's undergraduate business programs ranked 81st overall and 39th among public university business schools in the U.S. according to BusinessWeek's 2010 rankings and ranked 30th in overall student satisfaction The Bloomberg BusinessWeek public universities rankings of undergraduate programs by specialty placed the UTD school of management 10th in both accounting and business law, 1st in teaching of quantitative methods, 3rd in teaching of calculus and sustainability concepts, 6th in financial management, 7th in ethics and 9th in corporate strategy course work. The 2010 U.S. News and World Report ranks the Full-Time MBA program among the top 50 in the nation, 24th among the nation’s public universities and 3rd for public school programs in the state of Texas. Bloomberg BusinessWeek, 2009, ranked the UTD Executive MBA program "top ranked" at 22 globally and the Professional Part-Time MBA program in the top 25 nationally. The Wall Street Journal ranked UTD's Executive MBA program 6th in the nation by ROI and the 2009 Financial Times rankings placed UTD's Executive MBA program 1st for public universities in Texas and 51 globally. In 2015 the Full-Time MBA and Professional MBA programs at the UT Dallas Naveen Jindal School of Management have been ranked at number 42 by Bloomberg BusinessWeek. In the 2018 Best B-School by Bloomberg, The Jindal School sits at number 43Centers and institutes
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School of Natural Sciences and Mathematics
Centers and institutes
- Center for Space Sciences
- Center for STEM Education and Research
UTeach Dallas
GEMS Center
Gateways to Excellence in Math and Science Center is part of the Office of Student Success and Assessment and portal to educational enhancement and educational success.Honors
Collegium V is the selective honors and enrichment program of the University of Texas at Dallas.CentralTrak: The UT Dallas Artist Residency (Closed)
CentralTrak closed in June 2017 due to a lease cancellation. A new permanent home for the Artist Residency has not been announced.The CentralTrak residency program for artists in the city of Dallas was founded in 2002, by former McDermott Director of the Dallas Museum of Art and current University of Texas at Dallas faculty member Dr. Richard Brettell. Originally the South Side Artist Residency, co-founded by developer Jack Matthews, CentralTrak is now a program connected to and supported by the University of Texas at Dallas Arts and Humanities department.
CentralTrak is located in Exposition Park in the old Fair Park post office building in Dallas, Texas near the historical Dallas arts and music neighborhood, Deep Ellum. It offers living work spaces for eight artists and contains a gallery which regularly hosts solo and group exhibitions, lectures, and performances. CentralTrak is known for showcasing contemporary visual art, but also is used as a space for experimental music and other art forms. It was recently listed as one of the best contemporary art galleries in Dallas by Glasstire. It will be host for the Texas Biennial in the fall of 2013.
Past directors have been Karen Weiner, Charissa Terranova, and Kate Sheerin. Heyd Fontenot is the current director, taking over for Kate Sheerin in 2011.
Before becoming the current Director of CentralTrak, Heyd Fontenot co-curated the Gun and Knife Show in 2011. This exhibition focused on violence in America and the fetishization of weapons.
On January 18, 2013, CentralTrak opened the two-person exhibition "Painting of All Excuses", featuring Cuban artists Raul Cordero and Michael "El Pollo" Pérez. Both artists were represented in the 2012 Havana Bienniale.
History
As the precursor to CentralTrak, the SouthSide Artist Residency began as an experiment located in the middle of a burgeoning arts scene; with ten loft-studios reserved for artists in a former Sears distribution center, Jack Matthews transformed the building into a center for creative living and working. His collaboration with the University of Texas at Dallas' School of Arts and Humanities provided national and international artists with a residency fellowship funded by small grants, as well as the participation of the artists themselves, most of whom transported themselves to Texas from Argentina, France, and Austria, among others. With inspiration from critically acclaimed programs such as the Chinati Foundation in Marfa, Texas and the CORE Program at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, the residency lasted for a little over two years, ending over a disagreement between Matthews and the university. However, the residency reimagined itself as CentralTrak in early 2008 with support from the university and Dr. Terranova as its inaugural director.Notable exhibits
- February 13 – June 13, 2015; Who's Afraid of Chuck and George?
- August 3 – 24, 2013: Take by David Witherspoon
- July 6–27, 2013: Between Here and Cool – The photographs of Diane Durant
- May 11 – June 29, 2013: That Mortal Coil: Rebuking the Ideal in Contemporary Figurative Art
- March 9 – April 27, 2013: Failing Flat: Sculptural Tendencies in Painting curated by Nathan Green.
- Jan 19 – March 2, 2013: Painting of all Excuses Raul Cordero and Michel Pérez.
- Nov 17, 2012 – Jan 5, 2013: Co- Re-Creating Spaces: a group exhibition curated by Carolyn Sortor & Michael A. Morris.
- Nov. 10, 2012: Tiny Thumbs curated by Bobby Frye and Kyle Kondas. This exhibit was a pop-up arcade with five experimental games created for one night only.
- August 25 – September 22, 2012: The Skin I Live In Ari Richter
- July 14 – August 18, 2012: SHEET/ROCK Cassandra Emswiler and Sally Glass.
- May 26 – Jun 30, 2012: Go Cowboys Larissa Aharoni.
- April 21 – May 19, 1012: HARAKIRI: To Die For Performances
Notable alumni
- Aziz Sancar
- Naveen Jindal
- Gary Farrelly
- Christeene Vale
- PJ Raval
- Gabriel Dawe
- Phyllida Barlow
- Kelli Connell
- Brian Fridge
- Stephen Lapthisophon
- Dadara