Temple University College of Science and Technology

Temple University's College of Science and Technology houses the departments of Biology, Chemistry, Computer & Information Sciences, Earth & Environmental Science, Mathematics, and Physics. It is one of the largest schools or colleges of its kind in the Philadelphia region with more than 200 faculty and 4000 undergraduate and graduate students.[1] Michael L. Klein is dean of the college and Laura H. Carnell Professor.

Founded in 1998 from the science departments in what was then the College of Arts and Sciences, the College of Science and Technology offers bachelor's, master's, and doctoral degrees in all six departments as well as science with teaching bachelor's degrees through the TUteach program, based on the UTeach program.

Undergraduate Research Program

The College of Science and Technology offers the CST Undergraduate Research Program (URP). Students selected to participate work with a faculty sponsor to perform research in the faculty member's lab. It may also be possible for students to earn a stipend for additional work performed in the lab in excess of the required research course requirements. Students may be asked to participate in conferences, author papers or to showcase their research work in the department or at the URP Research Symposium.

Centers and Institutes for Advanced Research & Education

  • Center for Advanced Photonics Research
  • Center for Biophysics and Computational Biology
  • Center for Computational Genetics and Genomics
  • Center for Data Analytics and Biomedical Informatics
  • Center for Materials Theory
  • Institute for Computational Molecular Science
  • Sbarro Health Research Organization

Research Support Facilities

  • Research and Instructional Support Facility (RISF)
  • Solid Phase Peptide Synthesis and Analysis (SPPS)
  • Materials Research Facility

Notable Faculty

Notable alumni

gollark: That can't go wrong, I'm pretty sure, I stuck the three laws of robotics in as a comment above the core reasoning logic and that definitely counts.
gollark: There's actually going to be an experimental AI system hooked up to it with authority to execute remote debugging commands based on incoming incident reports.
gollark: SPUDNET went from managing access to potatOS remote debugging services to controlling laser systems and handling high-volume incident report data.
gollark: The power of scope creep is unlimited.
gollark: Many orbital lasers are managed by the PotatOS™ THOR/SPUDNET target designation system, you see.

References

  1. Temple University Public Information Archived 2009-07-05 at the Portuguese Web Archive
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