[ES_JOBS_NET] Environmental Engineering Graduate Program at Texas A&M
    Wang, Yuzhou 
    yuzhouw at tamu.edu
       
    Fri Oct 24 09:14:16 MDT 2025
    
    
  
The Environmental Engineering faculty invite students to apply to the graduate program in the Zachry Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering at Texas A&M University. Program offerings include a Master of Engineering (M.Eng.), Master of Science (M.S.) with or without a thesis, and a doctoral degree. Students in the program have multiple opportunities for networking and collaboration with their peers and faculty. The program boasts a large and diverse graduate student population.
Texas A&M University is located in College Station, Texas, a peaceful and safe college town with convenient access to major Texas cities: 1.5 hours by car to Houston and Austin, and 3 hours to Dallas. More about life in College Station can be found at https://visit.cstx.gov/.
About the program
The College of Engineering at Texas A&M University (https://engineering.tamu.edu/) is ranked in the top 10 in the nation among public universities for its graduate engineering program according to U.S. News & World Report. Additionally, the Student Engineering Council (SEC) Career Fair, held annually on Texas A&M's campus, is one of the largest in the nation, drawing over 10,000 engineering students and 500+ companies (https://careerfair.sec.tamu.edu/career-fair/students/fair-information/about-the-fair).
Program courses include traditional areas of focus such as environmental chemistry, microbiology, and water and wastewater treatment, as well as emerging areas of interest including nanotechnology, air quality and policy, and multiscale modeling of contaminant fate and transport. MS or MEng students (without thesis) are required to take 30 credit hours (10, 3-unit courses), while MS students pursuing thesis research complete 24 credit hours of courses plus 6 credit hours of thesis research. The Ph.D. program includes 15 credit hours of courses beyond a MS degree.
Faculty conduct both fundamental and applied research projects funded by federal and state agencies, private donors, and industry. A list of program faculty can be found at https://engineering.tamu.edu/civil/research/ResearchSpecialtyArea.html#EE.
Research areas include:
  *   Electrochemical water treatment
  *   Nanotechnology
  *   Treatment of emerging contaminants
  *   Environmental biotechnology
  *   Water and wastewater treatment
  *   Air quality modeling and policy
  *   Environmental photochemistry
  *   Fate and transport of emerging contaminants (e.g., microplastics, PFAS, tire additives)
  *   Multiscale modeling of contaminant fate and transport
  *   Fluid mechanics in water and wastewater treatment
  *   Machine learning
More information
Webinars: Two webinars about the program will be held prior to the December 15 deadline (October 31, 2–3 pm and November 20, 9–10 pm, Central Standard Time). Interested students should register at https://forms.gle/rkriARd2no81euG77.
Highly qualified domestic students will be considered for the iGrad program, which provides 3-years of guaranteed funding. Please see the following link for iGrad information and requirements https://engineering.tamu.edu/civil/admissions-and-aid/scholarships-aid/igrad-fellow-program.html.
Interested students are encouraged to contact the Environmental Engineering graduate coordinator, Dr. Garrett McKay (gmckay at tamu.edu<mailto:gmckay at tamu.edu>), for information about the program and application procedures. To be eligible for teaching and research assistantships, applications must be received by December 15.
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