Information for MEng Industrial Engineering Students

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The MEng Industrial Engineering is a two year, course based program with the following six options:
  1. Engineering Management
  2. Lean Systems Engineering
  3. Supply Chain Engineering
  4. Industrial Optimization and Systems Analytics
  5. Reliability and Maintenance Engineering
  6. General Stream
The Engineering Management option is different from the other options in that students must do two stages in industry and have a regular, full-time engineering job, which cannot be a student placement like a co-op work term or an internship, at a local company. Only very few students can be accepted. The Engineering Management option is thus not available to international students. All other options have a set of Industrial Engineering core courses, which includes a 2-term (Fall + Winter) Capstone Project course, a set of Area core courses for options II - V, and engineering electives.

Option selection: We are no longer asking students to submit their option selection. Most will follow the General Stream, since Option Core courses are typically offered once every two years and a course may not be available when a student wants to take it. Note that a student who has completed three of the four Option Core courses may ask to add or change to that option. Just email Dr. Gouw, cc. Charlene.

Summer, Fall or Winter entry 

The academic year starts with the Summer term, followed by the Fall and Winter terms. We currently accept new students to start their MEng Industrial Engineering program in each of these terms.

Most students start in the Fall. As shown in the Fall entry course sequence, see below, students take a full course load in Fall and Winter of year 1. They don't have to take any courses in Summer of year 2. There again is a full course load in Fall and Winter of year 2, including the 2-term Capstone project. Winter of year 2 is thus their last term of studies.

Students who start in the Winter term can catch up with the students who started the previous Fall and complete their studies at the same time, Winter of year 2 being their last term. As shown in the Winter entry course sequence, see below, students take a full course load in Winter of year 1. They then take two courses in Summer of year 2. At this point they are one course short compared to students who started the previous Fall. This course can then be taken in either Fall or Winter of year 2 in addition to the regular course load for Fall and Winter of year 2, as shown in the Fall entry course sequence.

Students can also start in the Summer. For Summer entry students Winter of year 2 is their final term of studies. As shown in the Summer entry course sequence, see below, students take one course in the Summer of year 1. They are now one course ahead of the Fall entry students and they effectively follow the Fall entry course sequence from that point on. In other words, starting earlier does, in most cases, not allow you to finish earlier.

In summary, based upon full-time studies:

First term Last term Total # of terms
Fall entry Fall of year 1 Winter of year 2 5 terms
Winter entry Winter of year 1 Winter of year 2 4 terms
Summer entry Summer of year 1 Winter of year 2 6 terms

Course Sequences, Graduation & Convocation

Below are recommended course sequences based on full-time studies. Note that the course sequences for options II - V do not take into account if certain option core courses are not offered in 2025-2026. While Industrial Engineering Core courses are offered every year, most other courses, including Option Core courses, are typically offered only once every two years.
Having to be a full-time student is typcally a requirement for international students. There is no such requirement for Canadians and permanent residents. Our program can easily be done on a part-time basis. Also note that there is no course sequence for the Engineering Management option as that option requires students to have a full-time engineering job at a local company to do their two industrial stages, as required by the program. The Engineering Management option is thus not available to international students. Because of their full-time engineering job, students in Engineering Management typically do their MEng studies on a part-time basis. Only a limited number of students can be accepted in Engineering Management. For more information on the Engineering Management option see here.

Looking at above Fall entry course sequences, students typically take two 4-credit courses and one 1-credit course in Fall, followed by three 4-credit courses in Winter. Fall entry students should register for their Fall and Winter term courses as soon as they have confirmed their acceptance into the program. Fall entry students don't have to take any courses in Summer as they can complete the required 45 credits by taking courses in Fall and Winter of second year. That is a perfect time to learn additional skills or to get Canadian work experience (see below), though they are not part of the MEng program.

Looking at above Winter entry course sequence, students typically take two 4-credit courses and one 1-credit course in Winter, followed by two 4-credit courses in Summer. Winter entry students have at this stage one 4-credit course less than Fall entry students. Winter entry students can complete their studies at the same time as Fall entry students if, in second year, they take one more 4-credit course in Fall or Winter. Alternatively, students can add one course to their first Winter term, such that they will have completed the same number of credits as Fall entry students at the end of the Summer term.

Looking at the Summer entry course seqeunce, students take one course in Summer and thus are one course ahead of the Fall 2024 entry students. There are no other courses one can take in Summer of year 1. That is thus a good opportunity to learn additional skills, see below.

The Fall entry course sequence for General Stream shows that students may take courses in Summer. However, only few courses are offered in Summer and students who have completed the Year 1 Fall and Winter term courses as specified can take all their remaining courses in Year 2 Fall and Winter, so without taking courses in Summer. With no courses to take in Summer, that is a perfect time to do an internship, see below.

Graduation & Convocation
Graduation is the successful completion of your degree. Convocation is the ceremony that celebrates the end of your studies. Students who complete their studies with the Fall 2024 or Winter 2025 term must apply to graduate by January 15, 2025. Spring convocation, for all graduate and undergraduate programs, is June 9 - 11, 2025. Convocation for MEng Industrial Engineering graduates is on one of those days, either morning, afternoon or evening. Students who complete their studies with the Summer 2025 term will have their Fall convocation in October 2025. For more information see https://www.concordia.ca/graduation-convocation.html.

Full-time Status and One-credit Course 

For regular MEng students, full-time status is defined as taking at least 9 credits in Fall and Winter. Registration in less than 9 credits in the Summer or in the last term of study, does not impact full-time status (see https://www.concordia.ca/academics/graduate/calendar/current/classification-of-students-and-registration.html). While students can take any 1-credit course offered by our Gina Cody School or by our School of Graduate studies as part of their MEng program consider taking ENGR 7011 Graduate Seminar for Mechanical and Industrial Engineering.

Elective Courses 

All but one of the elective courses must be selected from list E12, while the remaining elective must be selected from list E12, E01, or MECH courses. Many MECH courses are reserved for MECH and AERO students and are not available to INDU students. Similarly, courses in E01 are often reserved for students from certain programs, and not available to others. Always select electives that are available to INDU students. Further note that the following courses cannot be taken for credit as part of your program: ENCS 6031, ENCS 6041, ENCS 6042, ENCS 6821, CHME 6981. Also, MBA courses are not available as electives in options II - VI.

INDU Course Offerings in 2025-2026, Registration, Term Dates and Deadlines, Academic Calendar Dates 

- Course offerings are based on when they are scheduled to be taken according to the course sequences. Students should follow the course sequence based on their term of entry. Those who do not follow their course sequence are at great risk of having to extend their program and delay graduation.
- Students should register for courses as soon as possible for all terms that are open for registration, as all courses have limited capacity and some fill up quickly. General information on how to register for courses is given at https://www.concordia.ca/students/registration.html. The courses you should register for are given in the course sequence based on your term of entry, see above. The table below shows the class numbers for each INDU course offered in a given term.
- If you get the error message "You do not have a valid enrolment appointment at this time" when trying to register for a course, that means that registration has not yet opened up for you.
- The 2025-2026 Class Schedule came out 1 March 2025. Registration Start Dates for 2025-2026 are available at https://www.concordia.ca/students/registration.html#graduate. Many Summer courses fill up quickly so register as early as possible.
- The link https://www.concordia.ca/students/registration/term-dates-deadlines.html shows Standard Term Dates and Deadlines, Term Dates, Exam Period Dates, and DNE and DISC Deadlines for 2025-2026 as well as for 2024-2025..
- Some courses require permission and you cannot register for those yourself. We have to enrol you. For INDU 6990 we will consider enrolling 2024 Fall entry students in Summer 1, after Winter 2025 grades have been posted, and 2025 Winter entry students in Summer 2, after Summer 1 grades have been posted and after the Summer 2 DNE deadline. Note that INDU 6990 is no longer mandatory and may be replaced by two INDU electives. Make sure you include your ID on the Subject line.
- A listing of all Academic Calendar Dates for 2024-2025 is available at https://www.concordia.ca/academics/graduate/calendar/current/academic-calendar/current-academic-calendar-dates.html.
- The numbers shown in the term columns below are the class numbers, used to register for courses. Courses that do not have a class number are not offered in 2025-2026.


Summer-1 2025
Summer-2 2025
Fall 2025
Winter 2026
Prerequisite(s)
Title
INDU 6111




Theory of Operations Research
INDU 6121


6895 5015
Applied Optimization
INDU 6141



5266 INDU 6121 Logistics Network Models
INDU 6151



2299
Decision Models in Service Sector
INDU 6161


7778
INDU 6121 Design and Operations of Supply Chain Networks
INDU 6211

4594
5615 INDU 6121 Production Systems and Inventory Control
INDU 6221
not offered (replaced by INDU 6151 in Option II) Lean Enterprise
INDU 6231


6941
INDU 6121 Scheduling Theory
INDU 6241


8095

Lean Manufacturing
INDU 6251




Facilities Planning and Warehouse Operations
INDU 6310
4581
6955

Applied Probability and Statistics for Engineers
INDU 6311


2301
Discrete System Simulation
INDU 6321

3093
2302 INDU 6310 Introduction to Six Sigma
INDU 6331
3357

2303
Advanced Quality Control
INDU 6341


2363

Advanced Concepts in Quality Improvement
INDU 6351




System Reliability
INDU 6361



5087 permission
Discrete Optimization
INDU 6371



INDU 6111
Stochastic Optimization
INDU 6381




Applications of Reliability Engineering
INDU 6391



5363
Reliability and Maintenance for Design and Manufacturing
INDU 6411



4378
Human Factors Engineering
INDU 6421




Systems Safety Engineering and Management
INDU 6521



5357 INDU 6121 Quantitative Methods in Healthcare Systems
INDU 6611


7711
INDU 6121, INDU 6310
Applied Industrial Systems Analytics
INDU 6990


1611
16 cr, permission
Industrial Engineering Capstone
INDU 6991



permission
Engineering Management Industrial Stage I
INDU 6992



permission
Engineering Management Industrial Stage II

How to use the Class Schedule 

To find out when above courses are scheduled or what other courses are available, go to the Student Hub and select My Courses. Alternatively, go to the Class Schedule at https://campus.concordia.ca/psc/pscsprd/EMPLOYEE/SA/c/CU_EXT.CU_CLASS_SEARCH.GBL?& and sign in (or, if you get the red ORACLE error page, click the link again to try and get the page without signing in). Select as Term Fall 2025 (or another term or the academic year), then for Select Subject enter INDU (or e.g. MECH to find out about MECH course offerings). To find out when all Fall 2025 INDU (or e.g. MECH) courses are scheduled, for Course Level click 600, finally click Search. You now have a list of INDU 600 level courses offered in the period you specified as well as if there is space (green check named open) or if the course is full (closed means course is full and wait list is full, while Wait list means course is full but there is space on the wait list. Only when space becomes available in the course is there a possibility to be enrolled from Wait list.). Note than many courses are restricted to students from specified programs only. Students from other programs can register but are placed on the wait list, if there is space on the wait list. Further note that a course that is restricted to students from specified programs may never be opened up to students from other programs, even if there appears to be space in that course.

Internships, Learning French and GradProSkills 

Students who started their MEng studies in Fall, and followed the course sequence as specified, don't have to take any courses in Summer of Y. That is a perfect time to learn additional skills or to get Canadian work experience by doing a paid internship or co-op work term, though they are not required for the MEng program.

Summer is also the perfect time to Learn French. Concordia's Département d’études françaises offers a French language intensive program in Summer. Details on this program are available at https://www.concordia.ca/artsci/francais/vie-etudiante/succeeding-in-french/learn.html.

Concordia's Graduate & Professional Skills program offers professional development workshops and resources designed for graduate students. Skill domains include Career development, Communication, Language training, program offers professional development workshops and resources designed for graduate students, such as Leadership & management, Digital, media and information, Graduate academic success, Teaching, Wellness & life balance. GradProSkills workshops are given throughout the year. Some are one day events only while others last several weeks. More information on their workshops and resources is available at https://www.concordia.ca/students/gradproskills.html.

An internship is a period of work experience of limited duration offered to a student. If you are an international student there is a wealth of information about working in Canada at https://www.concordia.ca/students/international/living-working/working-in-canada.html. These internships are self-arranged and students have to find an internship themself. Make sure you have a CV appropriate for an internship. The Co-op Institute has a GRAD CV TEMPLATE at the bottom of this page. Note that international students should always check with the International Students Office (ISO), see https://www.concordia.ca/students/international/how-to-meet-with-your-iso-advisor.html, prior to accepting an offer of employment or when there is a change in their employment conditions.

Sometimes a student has the possibility of doing an 8-months internship in Summer and Fall 2025 combined, or of having an internship in Fall 2025 or Winter 2026 alone. If this is a self-arranged internship, international students are required to be full-time students in Fall 2025 and Winter 2026 and combining full-time work with full-time studies is virtually impossible. Note that there is a limit to how many hours an international student may work off campus during the Fall and Winter terms,  see https://www.concordia.ca/students/international/living-working/working-in-canada.html. Always check with ISO prior to accepting employment and always check with your ISO advisor prior to accepting employment (see https://www.concordia.ca/students/international/how-to-meet-with-your-iso-advisor.html).

MEng with Co-op 

To become a co-op student you must submit an application for graduate co-op to the Institute for Co-operative Education. International students are eligible for graduate co-op. For further details on eligibility, application deadlines and more see https://www.concordia.ca/academics/co-op/internships/graduate.html. Note that there is no guarantee that you will find a co-op placement. 

Job Possibilities 

There are jobs available during your studies or upon graduation in all areas covered by our options. However, you need to keep the following in mind, especially when looking for a full-time job:
  1. Many jobs in Quebec require good knowledge of French. If you don't know French, take the oppotunity to learn it, see above.
  2. Graduates from our 4 year, 120 credit BEng program in industrial engineering have an industrial engineering background appropriate for industrial engineering jobs. If your bachelor's degree is not in industrial engineering completing an MEng in Industrial Engineering does not make you into an industrial engineer. In this case your best job opportunities are in the field of study of your bachelor's degree, which is enhanced by the fundamentals of industrial engineering as well as a number of targeted industrial engineering courses. 
  3. When applying for jobs make sure you use a professional email address. 
  4. When applying for an internship, so work experience during your studies, focus is typically on general knowledge, while a job application is targeted to a specific field, often requiring certain qualifications and experience in the field. More on this can be found at this  indeed website. (Indeed is a large job search site.)
The Student Success Centre has excellent resources for Career Planning and Job Bank & Applying for jobs info. They also have links to various Job search websites.

There are also part-time job possibilities. There are job opportunities within the Department, namely Teaching Assistantships, as Marker, Tutor or Lab Demonstrator, and Exam Invigilator positions, see https://www.concordia.ca/ginacody/mechanical-industrial-aerospace-eng/about/jobs.html. Students who get top grades in their early MENG courses may be able to transfer to the research based MASc or even PhD program. In this case you would need to find a supervisor. Most research students receive financial support.

Many units on campus hire students. To find out more about these see https://www.concordia.ca/students/financial/employment/jobs.html. The Student Success Centre is there to support students. They organize events and have a job bank, see https://www.concordia.ca/students/success/career-planning.html. Several job banks,

Lastly, note that there is a limit to how many hours an international student may work off campus during the Fall and Winter terms,  see https://www.concordia.ca/students/international/living-working/working-in-canada.html. Always check with ISO prior to accepting employment and always check with your ISO advisor prior to accepting employment (see https://www.concordia.ca/students/international/how-to-meet-with-your-iso-advisor.html).

Cost of Living, Tuition and Fees 

Students can get a good idea of cost of living, tuition and fees from https://www.concordia.ca/students/financial/tuition-fees.html and https://www.concordia.ca/students/financial/tuition-fees/rates/grad.html. Tuition related question are handled by the Birks Student Service Centre, see https://www.concordia.ca/students/birks/assistance-requests.html. Deadlines for tuition and fee payments are given at https://www.concordia.ca/students/financial/tuition-fees/deadlines.html.

Academic Regulations, including Academic Standing and GPA requirements 

The academic progress of graduate students is assessed at the end of every term. Getting a poor grade (C or F) has consequences. The Graduate Calendar has detailed information about Academic Regulations, including Academic Standing and Grade Point Average requirements, as given at https://www.concordia.ca/academics/graduate/calendar/current/academic-regulations.html#21407. Note that F and C grades remain on your transcript and and all grades received are taken into account in GPA calculations. As mentioned in that link, you must achieve a cumulative GPA of 2.70 or higher and must be in good academic standing in order to graduate. A spreadsheet to calculate Weighted GPA is available here.

Questions? Contact Us, International Students Office (ISO), Birks Student Service Centre, Access Centre for Students with Disabilities (ACSD) 

If you are a student who is already in the program or who has been accepted for the program, you can contact us by email:

Primary contact: Ms. Charlene Wald, Graduate Program Coordinator, Mechanical, Industrial and Aerospace Engineering
Secondary contact: Dr. Gerard Gouw, Professor & MEng Industrial Engineering Program Director

When sending an email, please always include your ID on the subject line and make sure Ms. Charlene Wald is cc-ed.

If you have any questions related working off-campus or your status as an international student our International Students Office (ISO) is there to answer your questions. Every international student has been assigned an ISO advisor. Who your ISO advisor is depends on your ID number, see https://www.concordia.ca/students/international/how-to-meet-with-your-iso-advisor.html.

The Gina Cody School of Engineering and Computer Science has a special Student Services page at https://www.concordia.ca/ginacody/students/services.html.

If you have a question and you don't know where to go the Birks Student Service Centre is able to help you, see https://www.concordia.ca/students/birks.html. They offer many services, including Special Letters related to your studies, see https://www.concordia.ca/students/birks/assistance-requests.html.

The Access Centre for Students with Disabilities (ACSD) provides excellent support to students with disabilities. Students with permanent or temporary disabilities should register with ACSD (see https://www.concordia.ca/students/accessibility/register.html). Once registered, an ACSD advisor will meet with you and develop a unique accommodation plan (see https://www.concordia.ca/students/accessibility/accommodations.html).

Note that we do not handle admissions. For admission related questions email graduate-admission@encs.concordia.ca.

Important Links for Potential and New Students 

If you are a student who is considering applying for the MEng Industrial Engineering program, here are important academic links:
and these other links:
Last update by GJ Gouw: 17 March 2025