Stanford engineers are always curious. They continue to learn long after they leave campus. The School of Engineering offers several resources to help sustain the learning process.
The award-winning SCPD collaborates with Stanford faculty to offer graduate degrees, credit courses, certificates, and professional development short courses in engineering, including computer science, engineering management, and related areas. Courses are delivered via the Internet and local area TV broadcasts as well as on campus.
Ten complete Stanford Engineering courses, including video lectures, exams, homework and handouts, are available here at no charge under a Creative Commons license. Topics include introductory computer science, artificial inelligence, and optimization.
Listen for free to a wide variety of events on campus, from lectures and talks to music to sports events. This service requires installing Apple's free iTunes software.
The Stanford Technology Ventures Program hosts an Educator's Corner, a free archive of high-technology entrepreneurship teaching resources, such as podcasts, video clips, case studies, course outlines.
Stanford's engineering library, located in the Jen-Hsun Huang Engineering Center, is open to all engineering alumni free of charge.
This intensive 10-day program for senior executives has been described as "High-tech's most renowned executive experience." Co-sponsored by the American Electronics Association, the Department of Management Science and Engineering, and the Graduate School of Business, the institute gives participants a unique understanding of the business issues facing technology companies.
The Graduate School of Business provides research-based, globally relevant curricula to help senior executives manage the challenges of an evolving world economy.
This community-oriented program offers an extensive schedule of courses, workshops, and events covering a vast range of topics.
Join fellow alumni and expert faculty guides on a travel adventure anywhere in the world.
Twenty-three libraries and collections across the campus hold more than 8 million volumes, and millions more documents and records.
If you need a copy of a transcript, contact the university registrar's office.