Education: Best place for Audio Engineering?


I'm currecntly an undergrad student at the University of Kentucky with a amjor of electrical engineering (and minors in
mechanical engineering and math). I'm very interested in audio
engineering-particularly speaker design- and it has been my goal all along to do graduate work in the audio engineering field. However, I can't really find universities offering programs in the field. There are a great number of professionals in the audio engineering field, and surely these professionals are receiving some type of specialized education
in the field. I'm just wondering, is there some sort of educational haven for audio engineering that I'm just not aware of? Or do people simply do things like interships with corporations? I simply have no idea where to start!

Thanks for your input,

Nicholas Jackson
njackson9aae
Nicholas,

You should take an independed study and study on your own and maybe you will come up with the great idea on creating a very good speaker.

There are lots of books on speaker designs and since you're becoming an EE with a mix of ME majors you may figure what boock suits you best.

You will also need the basics of acoustics i.e. sound pressure, resonance etc... which I guess you may've went through studying some ME and if not you may figure out when you start reading yourself.
Hello Nicholas,

I spent most of my adult life in an industry that I did not enjoy, and now I'm peddling audio gear, which I love. I still fantasize about designing loudspeakers, but the reality is I couldn't pass the math classes it would take to have a solid background. It took me three tries to pass the first calculus class, and I never passed another math class after that. So I can't help but be impressed by anyone who graduates with an engineering degree.

If this is your dream and your passion, I say go for it. I have come to believe in doing what you're passionate about, instead of what people expect of you or what would be most lucrative.

You might want to contact the Audio Engineering Society; someone there is likely to have a pretty good feel for what the best graduate-level programs are out there. You might also try contacting industry professionals to see what they'd do if they were in your shoes. In particular, you might contact Vance Dickason, editor of The Voice Coil loudspeaker industry publication. I don't know him, but he probably has an extremely thorough understanding of the loudspeaker industry today.

Hey maybe one day I'll peddle the stuff you design!

Best of luck to you,

Duke
There is a place in Phoenix i believe that offers accoustic physics classes. check around there, i cannot remember the name of which college, but it made me wish i lived in phoenix.