Georgia Tech’s College of Engineering consistently produces articles, content, and videos highlighting our students, staff, faculty, and research. This includes stories about artificial intelligence, robots, engineering systems, space exploration and rockets, medical advances, and more.

2015 Startups to Watch Award
Chemical Engineering professor Mark Prausnitz's company, Micron Biomedical, will be honored.
Chemical Engineering professor Mark Prausnitz's company, Micron Biomedical, will be honored.

Stan Chia, IE 2005, Focuses on Delivering Value to his Customers

Statistics and Operational Research Number 4 in World Rankings

Southern Company Charitable Foundation Gift to Create Dean’s Chair in College of Engineering

Here's what it takes to get a job building SpaceX rockets that will go to Mars

Unseen Machines

Business Insider names "23 of the most powerful women engineers in the world"
Georgia Tech faculty member Ayanna Howard, electrical and computer engineering, and alumnus Deb Kilpatrick, CEO of Evidation Health, make the list.
Georgia Tech faculty member Ayanna Howard, electrical and computer engineering, and alumnus Deb Kilpatrick, CEO of Evidation Health, make the list.

Southern Company CEO Honored with Dean’s Appreciation Award

BME's Problem-Solving Studio: New Approaches to Teaching Engineering

Controlling swarms of robots with a finger

Georgia Tech Promotes Engineering to Girls

9 Non-Ivy Colleges That Give Students a Better Bang for Their Buck Than Harvard or Yale

African-American Men: The Other STEM Minority

BME's Ravi Bellamkonda receives $6.5 million grant from The Marcus Foundation for tumor monorail project

HyTech Racing = High Tech Design

Georgia Tech spotlights African-American Men in STEM

ECE professor receives Navy Young Investigator Award

CoE Cares Spotlight- Mark Reese, Mia the Dog, and Ava the Cat
Every animal needs a home. Mia was lucky enough to find ISyE's Mark Reese, while Ava is still looking.
Every animal needs a home. Mia was lucky enough to find ISyE's Mark Reese, while Ava is still looking.

Why diversity matters in STEM

Texas Instruments gives $3.2 million to ECE for Student Plaza and Maker Space
Pagination
- Previous page
- Current page 93
- Next page