What is EECS? As the largest department at MIT, Electrical Engineering & Computer Science (EECS) is everywhere. Each year, EECS prepares hundreds of undergraduate and graduate students to become leaders in diverse career fields such as academia, biomedical technology, finance, consulting, law, nanotechnology and more.

EECS may refer to: Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Electrical engineering Computer science European Energy Certificate System

The School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science (EECS) was created in the spring of 2015 to allow greater access to courses offered by the Departments of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science and Engineering. The partnership between the departments allows EECS undergraduate and graduate students to easily engage in exciting collaborative research fields. We offer undergraduate ...

EECS 10. Computational Methods in Electrical and Computer Engineering. 4 Units. An introduction to computers and structured programming. Binary Data Representation. Hands-on experience with a high-level structured programming language. Introduction to algorithm efficiency. Applications of structured programming in solving engineering problems.

EECS offers undergraduate degrees in Electrical Engineering, Computer Engineering, and Computer Science. These programs include concentrations in big data, business applications, bio-engineering, and a K-12 endorsement and cybersecurity certificate.

Covering the full range of computer, information, and energy systems, the MIT Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science (EECS/Course 6) brings the world’s most brilliant faculty and students together to innovate and explore.