Phi Alpha Epsilon
Phi Alpha Epsilon (ΦΑΕ) is an academic, discipline-specific honor society for architectural engineering in the United States. The honor society was founded at Kansas State University in the 1980s by Prof. Charles R. Bissey, P.E. (January 9, 1934 - November 18, 2006).[1]
Membership Qualifications
Some qualifications include:
- Must be seeking a degree in architectural engineering
- Must have completed a certain number of courses toward the degree
- Must have a minimum grade point average
- Must be in the top quarter of the Junior class, or top third of the Senior class
Chapters
- Alpha - Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS.
- Beta - The University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS. November 3, 1984.
- Gamma
- Delta - The University of Texas, Austin, TX. 1988.
- Epsilon
- Zeta - North Carolina A&T State University, Greensboro, NC. April 30, 1995.
- Eta - Tennessee State University, Nashville, TN.
- Theta - Lawrence Technological University, Southfield Michigan - Spring 2012.[2]
- Iota - University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH.
- Kappa
- Lambda
- Mu
- Nu
gollark: It can somewhat, but it's nontrivial.
gollark: People respond to economic incentives better than vague "improving mankind" ones.
gollark: Central planning problematic, markets fairly good with management of some sort.
gollark: Yes, greed with actual longtermism instead of just short-sightedness is fine.
gollark: Phosphorus problem?
See also
- Tau Beta Pi - The honor society for all engineering disciplines
References
- Kansas Technical Professions, Apr.-Jun. 2007, Kansas State Board of Technical Professions, Topeka, KS
- AE Insider -PAE
- University of Miami Fall 2009 Fact Book
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.