Any colleges with 'Physics and Electrical Engineering" major?

<p>MIT has it as 1 major and that is a crapshot.....It ISN'T a Double Major either.</p>

<p>Any place else have this?</p>

<p>I don't think so becuase usually EE and Physics are often in 2 different departments. Some schools lump Physics and Astronomy and Electrical and Computer Engineering together (Johns Hopkins) but I don't think they lump EE and Physics, Sorry!!</p>

<p>Why not juts do a double major? They are getting more and more popular by the day, and EE and Physics is a very popular and quasi-managable double major!</p>

<p>Good Luck!</p>

<p>I think MIT is also getting rid of it...I knew someone my year who did it, but people a couple of years younger have told me that they didn't have the option.</p>

<p>It's a reasonable double major, though.</p>

<p>It is still on there website though.....</p>

<p>Sadly, school websites are often very out of date due to the lack of oversight and how nobody wants to ever be the person responsible for maintaining them.</p>

<p>Some schools offer UG/graduate majors in Engineering Physics. Maybe that is a better fit than a double major.</p>

<p>The reasons is I would like to work in advanced research...I plan on going for my Ph.D in either of the above subject.</p>

<p>The reasons is I would like to work in advanced research...I plan on going for my Ph.D in either of the above subject.</p>

<p>Engineering Physics is basically applied Physics, I want more of a theoretical/experimental physics program.</p>

<p>Then why not just major in physics?</p>

<p>just studying physics you will know more about E & M than any EE.</p>

<p>
[quote]
I want more of a theoretical/experimental physics program.

[/quote]
</p>

<p>You want to be a Physics major then :-D</p>

<p>Northeastern has a physic and electrical enginnering dual degree program, but it is 5 years with co-op.</p>

<p>Sounds great, I love Boston and only live 25 minutes away via expressway!!!</p>

<p>Because I want a safety to fall back on in case....Especially since I am aiming for a TOP grad school, Like MIT,Caltech,Cornell,Stanford,Princeton,UCal,Chicago..etc....not because I am prestige happy, but because they present by far the best Physics research opportunities</p>

<p>Engineering physics (at my school) is a hybrid of EE and physics. Why do you want both? Why not just major in physics?</p>

<p>Yea Northeastrn will defintly get you into a top grad school, but of course your grades need to be great!</p>

<p>Swarthmore allows double major in engineering (specializing in EE if you like) and Physics.. and its grad school placement is outstanding.</p>

<p>hmm.. I think you can do it at Stanford too..</p>