(Not offered) Double Master's Degree in Industrial Engineering and Electrical Energy Systems
Double Master's Degree in Industrial Engineering (MII) and Electrical Energy Systems (MSEE)
A curricular itinerary is proposed to jointly study the Master's Degrees in Industrial Engineering and Electrical Energy Systems, based on the complementarity between both degrees.
Current legislation considers the profession of Industrial Engineer a regulated profession whose exercise requires possession of the corresponding official Master's degree.
The Master's degree in Industrial Engineering includes all the skills necessary to acquire the professional powers of the regulated profession of Industrial Engineer, complying with all the precepts of Ministerial Order CIN/311/2009 (BOE of February 18, 2009) by which The requirements are established for the verification of official university degrees that qualify for the exercise of the profession of Industrial Engineer, powers that are included in the Decree of September 18, 1935, published in the Madrid Gazette of September 20, 1935. Additionally, it is necessary to take into account that the Master in Industrial Engineering includes a Leveling Block, composed of subjects intended for all students of the Industrial Engineering program (composed of the Degree in Industrial Technology Engineering plus the Master in Industrial Engineering . ) acquire the same skills, regardless of the degree with which they access the Master. These subjects, which are within the optional module of the Master in Industrial Engineering, must be taken, if the Academic Committee of the master deems it necessary, in addition to the 147 credits of the double Master as training complements.
The proposed Master's Degree in Electrical Energy Systems is one more step in the training process of engineers with the highest level of scientific and technical qualifications, whose contribution and role in the production system and the academic world are fundamental.
In this sense, the master's degree follows the directives of the European Higher Education Area (EHEA), which has led to a rethinking of the organization of university teaching and created a new access route to the Doctorate, through the University Master's Degree. This master's degree covers the traditional lack of specialization training at the master's and doctoral level in the field of Electrical Power Systems in Spain. In this sense, the master's proposal covers the usual contents in master's programs similar to those studied in the US and Canada.