University of New Mexico

Like this school?

Quick Stats

MSC 01 1140, 1 University of New Mexico
Albuquerque, NM 87131

Students
620
enrolled (full-time)
0
enrolled (part-time)
Tuition
$5,991
per year (full-time)
$19,157
per year (full-time)
$252
per credit (part-time)
$800
per credit (part-time)

More Information

Engineering School Overview

U.S. News Rankings

Ranking score and category
Rank Category Name
#85 Best Engineering Schools

Specialties

Engineering School Overview

The School of Engineering at University of New Mexico has an application deadline of July 15. The application fee is $50 for U.S. residents and $50 for international students. Its tuition is full-time: $5,991 per year (in-state); full-time: $19,157 per year (out-of-state); part-time: $252 per credit (in-state); and part-time: $800 per credit (out-of-state). The 2010 Ph.D. student-faculty ratio is 3.4:1. The School of Engineering at University of New Mexico has 93 full-time faculty on staff.

Admissions

Application deadline (U.S. residents) July 15
Application fee (U.S. residents) $50
Application deadline (international students) July 15
Application fee (international students) $50

U.S. News Engineering School Compass

By signing up for a premium subscription, you'd get access to:

  • Expanded Profiles & Advanced Search for 198 Graduate Engineering Schools
  • All Entering Class Stats, Including Average GRE Scores
  • Data on Research Spending Per Faculty Member
  • Average Student Indebtedness Info
  • New "My Home" Feature: Save & Compare Schools and Take Notes
  • Plus: All Graduate School Data (Full Access for 1 Year from Purchase)

Academics

Full-time faculty 93
Ph.D. student/faculty ratio 3.4 - High

U.S. News Engineering School Compass

By signing up for a premium subscription, you'd get access to:

  • Expanded Profiles & Advanced Search for 198 Graduate Engineering Schools
  • All Entering Class Stats, Including Average GRE Scores
  • Data on Research Spending Per Faculty Member
  • Average Student Indebtedness Info
  • New "My Home" Feature: Save & Compare Schools and Take Notes
  • Plus: All Graduate School Data (Full Access for 1 Year from Purchase)

Student Body

Enrollment (full-time) 620
Gender distribution (full-time)
Gender distribution (full-time)

U.S. News Engineering School Compass

By signing up for a premium subscription, you'd get access to:

  • Expanded Profiles & Advanced Search for 198 Graduate Engineering Schools
  • All Entering Class Stats, Including Average GRE Scores
  • Data on Research Spending Per Faculty Member
  • Average Student Indebtedness Info
  • New "My Home" Feature: Save & Compare Schools and Take Notes
  • Plus: All Graduate School Data (Full Access for 1 Year from Purchase)

Cost

Tuition

Full-time: $5,991 per year (in-state)
Full-time: $19,157 per year (out-of-state)
Part-time: $252 per credit (in-state)
Part-time: $800 per credit (out-of-state)

Required fees $50 per year

U.S. News Engineering School Compass

By signing up for a premium subscription, you'd get access to:

  • Expanded Profiles & Advanced Search for 198 Graduate Engineering Schools
  • All Entering Class Stats, Including Average GRE Scores
  • Data on Research Spending Per Faculty Member
  • Average Student Indebtedness Info
  • New "My Home" Feature: Save & Compare Schools and Take Notes
  • Plus: All Graduate School Data (Full Access for 1 Year from Purchase)

* Engineering School Overview details based on 2010 data

Grad School Search
Advertisement
U.S. News Engineering School Compass

Expanded Profiles for 198 Schools

Average GRE Scores

Research Spending Info

Morse Code: Inside the College Rankings by Bob Morse
Morse Code RSS More Rankings News
Rise in Endowments May Impact Best Colleges Rankings
If a school's endowment shrinks, it may have less money to spend on its students.
Knowledge Centers

Looking at grad schools? Find out what you need to know.

Studying in the United States
Applying to Grad School
Paying for Grad School
About the GRE
The GRE® Tests: Get the Facts

Find out more about the new types of questions at takethegre.com.

The GRE® revised General Test features antonyms and analogies.

True

False

Submit
Answer: False

There are no antonyms and analogies on the GRE® revised General Test, so there’s no vocabulary out of context. Find out more about the new types of questions.