<p>guys what is the best program for EECS? or what would be the best option :O</p>
<p>Depends on your interests.</p>
<p>I originally signed up as Option IV. </p>
<p>After taking cs61c, I'm considering going to Option III.</p>
<p>Honestly, it really doesn't matter with the exception of whether it says "Computer Science and Engineering" or "Electrical and Computer Engineering" on your transcript and who your faculty advisor is.</p>
<p>which option actually does it enable you to learn more?</p>
<p>last one on that list, option V General. It's very broad study, but the tradeoff is that you wont as specialized in any one area. </p>
<p>I'm actually facing the same dilema as you. lol it's so hard to decide which program to pursue.</p>
<p>hmm i think i might go comp sci but the other choices seem to have more engineering courses on it :P and robotics sounds so techno! LOL</p>
<p>My best advice is to sign up for General, and then pick a specialization later if you find an area you're particularly interested in.</p>
<p>Your option does not matter. The options do not restrict you from taking certain classes. You can take any class you want within the EECS department. The option is an informal specialization.</p>
<p>Just because you take option IV (Computer Science), doesn't mean you can't take EE classes. You take whatever you want as long as you meet the requirements to graduate. All EECS majors, regardless of option, have the same requirements.</p>
<p>Options III and IV do require that the discrete math requirement be either Math55 or CS70 whereas other options can choose to take Stat 134.</p>
<p>what courses are usually the most essential as in terms of doing jobs after graduation?</p>
<p>e190- technical communication.</p>
<p>cool, whats it about?</p>
<p>When do you sign up for the option?</p>
<p>i have no idea :O i haven't even schedule for calso yet @_@</p>