<p>Can a CC major take a minor in a field offered by SEAS and can a SEAS student complete a concentration in CC? Will the SEAS student need to complete the complete CC core in this case?</p>
<p>cc cannot minor in seas.</p>
<p>seas have quite a few liberal arts minors. check the bulletin 2007</a> - 2008 SEAS Bulletin: Undergraduate Minors</p>
<p>Thanks. I have seen the available minors SEAS offers, but wanted to see if I could also do a concentration in Physics with a major in Electrical Engineering. Applied Physics may be the closest course of study I can do. I was planning on pursuing a BS in EE then a PhD in Physics, and was hoping that I could get a more theoretical foundation for further studies.</p>
<p>hmm, why would you do EE undergrad if you're set on Physics Ph.D? seems like it'd be more straightforward just to do applied/pure physics instead.</p>
<p>anyways you don't need to worry about an official minor or whatever; grad school will see course load/research and that will be enough to determine if you have enough of a physics background.</p>
<p>or, you could try to create your own major, but that takes a lot of preparation and explanation.</p>
<p>I am interested in electrical engineering, and want that fundamental base to my education. I also want a deeper understanding of the underlying theory behind my engineering studies, hence a higher degree in physics.</p>
<p>Also, Applied Physics minor would end up being a lot more additional credits than a physics concentration since an EE degree already requires a bunch of Physics and doing a Physics concentration would get me an "in" with the Physics dept. which may prove beneficial for research opportunities and grad school admissions.</p>
<p>CC major in Econ can minor in Operations Research in SEAS.</p>
<p>Thanks a lot. Do you know if the opposite also works: say Major in Operations Research (SEAS) and fill a CC concentrations in Econ?</p>
<p>it'd be a CC minor; SEAS can only minor CC cannot minor.</p>
<p>that's joint major - it's not a minor in OR. It's an Econ-OR major. It's different in that OR is not open to other majors in CC.</p>
<p>Anyways, SEAS can only minor in econ - i'm trying to transfer to CC so i can get the full major. So I suppose you should keep this under consideration.</p>
<p>Thanks, the minors available to engineers are still in SEAS and limited to what they offer though. SEAS doesn't offer any minors in the natural sciences which is what I am looking for.<br>
For a joint major, would one have to complete the full CC core or just the SEAS core?</p>
<p>
[quote]
Thanks, the minors available to engineers are still in SEAS and limited to what they offer though. SEAS doesn't offer any minors in the natural sciences which is what I am looking for.
For a joint major, would one have to complete the full CC core or just the SEAS core?
[/quote]
</p>
<p>1) for a double major in both schools you must complete both cores (basically cc core plus principles of econ and gateway)</p>
<p>2) employers and grad schools dont really care if you graduate with an official minor or concentration. both will ask for your transcript and will know what classes you took.</p>