Purdue Agricultural and Biological Engineering Grad Program Earns Top Ranking…Again

Somali Chaterji, agricultural and biological engineering assistant professor, and graduate student Jayoung Lee test their algorithms on micro drones for drone swarms to collect data across agricultural fields or to survey regions affected by natural disasters. (Purdue Agricultural Communications photo/Tom Campbell)

Purdue University’s Agricultural and Biological Engineering graduate program is ranked No. 1 in its category in the 2024 U.S. News & World Report Rankings of Graduate Schools. The ABE graduate and undergraduate programs have been ranked first or second for more than a dozen years.
“We are extremely proud of Purdue ABE’s team of faculty, staff and students for their commitment to research, outreach, teaching and innovation,” said Ken Foster, interim dean of the College of Agriculture.
Nate Mosier, department head and professor of agricultural and biological engineering, also credits his colleagues for this accomplishment. “We’re honored for the continued recognition of the excellence in research and graduate education in ABE at Purdue. It is through the outstanding work of our graduate students, mentoring of our faculty and support of our staff that we have stayed at the top for so long.”
Mosier, who earned his doctorate from Purdue’s ABE department and holds the Indiana Soybean Alliance Soybean Utilization Endowed Chair, explains that ABE’s diverse disciplines create important options for graduate students.
“Our graduate program offers numerous opportunities for graduate students to deepen their understanding in their areas of specialization and to broaden that knowledge through collaborations,” he said.
Arvind Raman, the John A. Edwardson Dean of the College of Engineering, said the No. 1 ranking also acknowledges the department’s commitment to growth: “The field of agricultural and biological engineering is rapidly evolving with disruptive technologies such as synthetic biology, IoT (the Internet of Things), automation and artificial intelligence. Purdue’s ABE department has been quick to adapt to these changes, and this ranking validates its reputation during this period of rapid transformation in the field.”
ABE’s graduate program includes 118 students who come to the university from around the world. Last year ABE’s faculty and graduate students published 160 research papers, filed 31 patent applications and were awarded nine U.S. patents.

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