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An undergraduate (4-year BA/BS level) or graduate degree in construction management, architecture, engineering or construction science. A 2-year undergraduate degree (AA/AS level) or certificate in construction management, architecture, engineering or construction science plus 4 years' experience in general design/construction.
NCCER is recognized across the United States for its breadth of trade curricula, which span over 40 trades, [4] and its workforce development system, which includes accreditation, training, assessment, certification and career development solutions for the construction and maintenance industries. After becoming NCCER-accredited, organizations ...
Originally the second of three degrees in sequence – Legum Baccalaureus (LL.B., last conferred by an American law school in 1970); LL.M.; and Legum Doctor (LL.D.) or Doctor of Laws, which has only been conferred in the United States as an honorary degree but is an earned degree in other countries. In American legal academia, the LL.M. was ...
Construction Management education comes in a variety of formats: formal degree programs (two-year associate degree; four-year baccalaureate degree, master's degree, project management, operations management engineer degree, doctor of philosophy degree, postdoctoral researcher); on-the-job-training; and continuing education and professional ...
Professionals in real estate often hold degrees in related fields such as city planning, construction management, accounting, property management, architecture or law. One of the most common programs continues to be a Master of City Planning, regional planning, or urban planning degree with a real estate emphasis. Planning programs tend to ...
The College of Built Environments is the architecture and urban planning school of the University of Washington, a public research university in Seattle, Washington. [2]The College offers programs in architecture, construction management, landscape architecture, real estate, and urban planning. [3]
A typical construction engineering curriculum is a mixture of engineering mechanics, engineering design, construction management and general science and mathematics. This usually leads to a Bachelor of Science degree. The B.S. degree along with some design or construction experience is sufficient for most entry-level positions.
The School of Construction Management accepts the top 60 students each fall and spring semester for undergraduate studies, based on grade point average. [3] The Rinker School has over 6500 graduates (5700 BS, 870 MS, and 45 PhD), 250 upper division students, 120 Master's students, 30 PhD students, 21 faculty, and 13 support staff.