

Program Description
Software Engineering is focused on the application
of systematic, disciplined, and quantifiable approaches to the
development, operation, and maintenance of software systems. Inclusive
of computer programming but going well beyond, Software Engineering
is concerned with methodologies, techniques, and tools to manage
the entire software life cycle, including development of requirements,
specifications, design, testing, maintenance, and project management.
The advent of Software Engineering is a natural result of the
continuous quest for software quality and reusability, and the
maturing of the software development industry.
The Department of Computer Science offers a Graduate Certificate,
M.S., and Ph.D. in Software Engineering. The programs are designed
to appeal to both full-time students and software professionals
who are employed and wish to pursue a program part time. Minimum
qualifications for admission are the same as those specified for
advanced degrees in Computer Science. For additional information,
see www.cs.ndsu.nodak.edu or contact the Director of Software Engineering (701)
231-8189. For a complete listing of courses and faculty, please
refer to the Computer Science section.
Admissions Requirements
Certificate
- B.S. or equivalent degree from
an accredited university;
- Twelve semester hours or equivalent of
Computer Science or Software Engineering courses from an accredited
university, or at least one year full-time professional software
engineering experience;
- Programming skill in a modern higher
level programming language, preferably C++, C#, or Java.
Master of Science
- B.S. or equivalent degree from
an accredited university with at least a 3.0 grade point average
on a 4.0 scale. Full-time professional experience may offset this GPA requirement at the rate of 0.1 in GPA for each eighteen months of such experience to a maximum of 0.4 in GPA;
- Eighteen semester hours or equivalent in Computer Science from an accredited institution, or at least two years of full-time professional software engineering experience;
- Programming skill with one modern higher
level programming language, preferably C++, C#, or Java.
Doctor of Philosophy
- B.S. or equivalent degree from
an accredited university with at least a 3.25 grade point average
on a 4.0 scale. Significant full-time software development professional experience may offset this GPA requirement at the rate of 0.1 in GPA for each two years of such experience to a maximum of 0.4 in GPA;
- Eighteen semester hours or equivalent in Computer Science from an accredited institution, or at least three years of full-time professional software engineering experience;
- Programming skill in at least one higher level programming language, preferably C++, C#, or Java.
Degree Requirements
Graduate Certificate
Requires 10 semester credit hours consisting
of CSCI 713 Software Development Processes
Any two of the following five courses:
Computer Science 714, Software Project
Planning and Estimation
CSCI 715 Software Requirements Definition and Analysis
CSCI 716 Software Design
CSCI 717 Software Construction
CSCI 718 Software Testing and Debugging
One CSCI 790 seminar in an appropriate
area as approved by the student's adviser. Examples include
a. Database Systems
b. Extreme Programming
c. Formal Methods in Software Engineering
d. Intelligent Agents
An extensive project of approximately one
third of a semester incorporated into whichever of the above courses
the student and her (his) adviser selected. The project may be
job related. This project serves as the capstone experience for
the student.
Sample Certificate Combinations:
Software Design: CSCI 713, 715, 716 + Seminar
with project in 716
Software Testing: CSCI 713, 714, 718 + Seminar with project in
718.
Software Project Management: CSCI 713, 714, 715 + Seminar with
project in 715.
Software Construction: CSCI 713, 716, 717 + Seminar with project
in 716 or 717.
Other arrangements could be done as well.
Master of Science in Software Engineering
Program Requirements (33 semester hours)
- The Software Engineering Core (12
credits):
Students must complete the core within five semesters of their entering the program.
- CSCI 713: Software Development Processes
- CSCI 765: Introduction to Database Systems
- CSCI 716: Software Design
- Either CSCI 715: Software Requirements Definition, or CSCI 718: Software Testing and Debugging. Each student selects one of these two courses.
- The Software Engineering Comprehensive Examination. This examination shall include integrative questions on the four courses which make up the software engineering core (see 1 above). The exam must be passed within the first seven semesters of their program. Each student is allowed a maximum of two attempts to pass this examination. Students are encouraged to complete the comprehensive examination early in their program.
- Six credits (not part of the core) from:
- CSCI 714 Software Project Planning and
Estimation
- CSCI 715 Software Requirements Definition
- CSCI 717 Software Construction
- CSCI 718 Software Testing and Debugging
- CSCI 747 Software Complexity Metrics
- CSCI 745 Formal Methods for Software Development
- CSCI 746 Development of Distributed Applications
- Nine credits of other Computer Science or Computer Engineering courses selected with and approved by the student's graduate advisory committee.
- Three CSCI 790 graduate seminars in software engineering areas (1 credit each). These seminars must be approved in advance by the student's graduate adviser (a form is provided for this purpose).
- A comprehensive study option (3 credits) paper based on a significant software development project undertaken by the student, perhaps as a member of a team, either at the University or as part of a job. This project will require design, implementation, and testing of a significant piece of computer software.
- A Final Oral Examination on the paper and course work. This examination shall include questions on design choices, implementation methods, and testing choices for the student project.
Ph.D. in Software Engineering
Program Requirements (90 semester hours)
- All M.S. course requirements (items 1,3,4, and 5 above) or their equivalent in transfer or examination credits.
- CSCI 793 Software Development Project (6 semester hours). This course will require the design, implementation, and testing of a significant piece of computer software. This course must be completed successfully before the Qualifying Examination may be attempted. If a student successfully passed the M.S. in Software Engineering Comprehensive Examination at the Ph.D. qualifying level while earlier completing an M.S. at North Dakota State University, the student shall not need to take the Qualifying Examination, but this course must be completed successfully within the first two years of the Ph.D. program.
- Satisfactory completion of the Ph.D. Qualifying Examination. This examination will consist of integrative questions on the four core courses described in (1) under the M.S. above. Students must complete this requirement within their first seven semesters of participation in the program.
- Twelve hours of course work chosen from the courses listed below and not duplicating any items used to satisfy 1:
- CSCI 714 Software Project Planning and Estimation
- CSCI 715 Software Requirements Definition
- CSCI 716 Software Design
- CSCI 717 Software Construction
- CSCI 718 Software Testing and Debugging
- CSCI 747 Software Complexity Metrics
- CSCI 745 Formal Methods for Software Development
- CSCI 746 Development of Distributed Applications
- Six hours of additional course work in Computer Science or Computer Engineering chosen by the student and his advisor and approved by the Student's Advisory Committee.
- Thirty-six semester credit hours for research, preparation, and defense of a dissertation in Software Engineering. These hours will be graded on a Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory basis.
Additional course work requirements:
- Beyond the M.S. degree, a maximum
of 9 credits of course work can be transferred.
- The 90 credits may include a maximum
of 15 credits of non-didactic courses (independent studies and
seminar hours). Seminars are limited to four of those credits.
- The student's advisory committee,
the department chair, and the graduate dean all must approve
the course work on the plan of study at least two semesters
before graduation.