Ask to Study - Ask your questions about online degrees

Engineering-Drafting - Central Community College

Ask your questions about this Campus Associate program from Central Community College




Engineering-Drafting Associate from Central Community College details


Program Format: Campus Program Level: Associate

Engineering-Drafting from Central Community College is a Campus Associate Engineering Design degree that prepares you for a Engineering career. The associate of applied science degree in engineering drafting is available for students wanting to find employment in drafting or related areas. DRAF 1410 - Basic Drafting I DRAF 1430 - Basic Drafting II DRAF 1500 - Dimensioning ? G,D, & T DRAF 1520 - Threads, Fasteners & Springs DRAF 1540 - Overview of Manufacturing Processes DRAF 1590 - Basic CAD Operations DRAF 2410 - Intersections & Developments DRAF 2430 - Production Drawing DRAF 2590 - Intermediate CAD Applications DRAF Electives Required Engineering Drafting Course Student Electives General Education Courses GEN ED Group A: Communications GEN ED Group B: Math/Science required MATH (w/adviser approval) GEN ED Group C: Personal Dev/Humanities GEN ED Group D: Social & Behavioral Science GEN ED Group A, B, C, or D Career Opportunities Employment opportunities in drafting can be found in manufacturing, engineering firms, construction companies, and governmental agencies. Career and employment services are provided by the college. View more details on Central Community College . Ask your questions and apply online for this program or find other related Engineering Design courses.

If you are interested in appling online for this Engineering-Drafting degree, this Google search for Central Community College might help.
More Resources:

Here you have more valuable resources related to this Central Community College program. You can discover more about Engineering-Drafting or other closely related Engineering Design topics on the next external pages :

Ups, we didn't find any question about Engineering-Drafting on our external sources. Why don't you ask one yourself?