About the Faculty of Engineering
The Faculty of Engineering at Lagos State University is one of the academic faculties of the university, hosting the departments, programmes, and research activity of its disciplines. The faculty operates 6 departments. Established in 1983.
This guide covers the faculty's history, the courses offered, the constituent departments, the current dean, the admission patterns, the research strengths, and the post-graduate career trajectories of its alumni. For prospective applicants choosing between faculties or universities, the courses and admission sections are the most consequential; for current students and alumni, the history and research sections give the broader context.
History and evolution
Founded in 1983, the Faculty of Engineering has evolved alongside the broader history of Lagos State University. Most Nigerian university faculties trace their origins to the immediate post-independence era of university expansion (1960s-1980s) โ when the federal and state governments invested heavily in higher-education capacity to staff the growing public sector, professional services, and industrial base of the new nation.
The Faculty of Engineering at Lagos State University offers undergraduate and postgraduate programmes across multiple departments.
Courses offered
The faculty offers 6+ undergraduate and postgraduate programmes across its departments.
Indexed undergraduate and postgraduate courses in the faculty:
- Chemical Engineering โ Chemical Engineering department (JAMB cut-off: 180)
- Civil Engineering โ Civil Engineering department (JAMB cut-off: 180)
- Computer Engineering โ Computer Engineering department (JAMB cut-off: 180)
- Electrical/Electronic Engineering โ Electrical/Electronic Engineering department (JAMB cut-off: 180)
- Mechanical Engineering โ Mechanical Engineering department (JAMB cut-off: 180)
- Petroleum Engineering โ Petroleum Engineering department (JAMB cut-off: 180)
Programme structure across the faculty follows the standard NUC-approved curriculum for each discipline. The first one to two years cover general university courses alongside the discipline's foundations; middle years focus on the core; final year combines specialised electives with a substantial project or practicum component.
Departments
Indexed departments within the faculty: Chemical Engineering, Civil Engineering, Computer Engineering, Electrical/Electronic Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Petroleum Engineering. Each department is led by a Head of Department (HoD), with academic staff organised into research groups and teaching teams. Department-level administration handles course allocation, student counselling, examination coordination, and the day-to-day academic operations.
For students considering the faculty, the choice of specific department within a faculty often matters more than the choice between similar faculties at different universities โ departmental culture, the strength of the teaching team, and the research orientation vary substantially even within a single faculty.
Admission process and competitiveness
Admission into Faculty of Engineering programmes follows the standard Nigerian undergraduate pathway: register for JAMB UTME, sit the examination, register for Post-UTME at Lagos State University, submit O'level results through the JAMB CAPS portal, and watch for admission offers. Direct-entry candidates (with A'level or HND) bypass JAMB UTME and enter through the JAMB DE register and Post-DE screening at the university.
JAMB cut-offs vary across the faculty's courses โ the most competitive (medicine, law, computer science, civil engineering, accounting at the top universities) carry the highest cut-offs; the less-competitive disciplines admit closer to the JAMB minimum. Course-specific cut-offs are published by Lagos State University in the annual admission brochure.
Beyond JAMB and Post-UTME, secondary admission filters include O'level subject grades (five credit passes minimum, with discipline-specific subject requirements), the JAMB CAPS quota considerations (catchment-state, ELDS, merit, and discretionary slots), and in some faculties an additional interview or practical screening.
Facilities
Standard facilities of a Nigerian university faculty include the faculty building (housing administrative offices, lecture halls, and departmental offices), laboratories (for science and engineering disciplines), studios (for arts and architecture), moot courtrooms (for law), teaching hospitals or clinical attachments (for medicine, nursing, pharmacy), and libraries or library access. The quality and condition of these facilities varies materially between universities and across faculties within a single university โ the older federal universities typically operate substantial physical infrastructure with ongoing capacity stresses; the newer private universities operate smaller but better-maintained facilities.
For prospective students considering the faculty, a campus visit โ including a walk-through of the faculty building, library access, and laboratory or studio capacity โ is the most direct way to assess the on-the-ground reality. Online prospectus materials reliably overstate the quality of physical infrastructure; in-person visits provide the necessary correction.
Research
Research activity within the faculty covers the disciplinary areas of its departments. Most Nigerian university faculties combine teaching with research that is funded through a mix of internal university grants, TETFund (the Tertiary Education Trust Fund), and external grants from international research councils, NGOs, and corporate partnerships. Publication output, postgraduate supervision, and conference participation are the visible measures of research strength.
For prospective postgraduate students or research-track applicants, the faculty's research profile โ visible through the publications of its senior academics, the active research groups, and the postgraduate students enrolled โ matters more than its undergraduate teaching reputation. Direct engagement with prospective supervisors before applying for Master's or PhD admission is strongly recommended; the supervisor-student relationship typically shapes the postgraduate experience more than any other single factor.
Where graduates go
Graduate career trajectories from Faculty of Engineering span the standard Nigerian post-graduation pathways โ private-sector employment, professional-practice routes, public-sector employment, further study, and entrepreneurship. The specific distribution across these pathways depends on the discipline and the graduating cohort's strength. For professional disciplines (medicine, law, pharmacy, engineering, accounting), professional-practice routes dominate the early-career years, with private-sector and entrepreneurial paths gaining traction by mid-career.
NYSC service in the first year post-graduation effectively delays the substantive labour-market entry by 11-12 months for most graduates. During NYSC, corps members are posted to public-sector and private-sector Places of Primary Assignment (PPAs) โ for some, the PPA leads to a post-NYSC employment offer. For others, NYSC is a holding period before the substantive job search begins. Alumni networks of the faculty, accessible through alumni associations and informal university-graduate networks, often play a substantial role in early-career placement.