<p>Is this possible? I was planning on trying to get into Ross for Finance (looking into S&T, possibly IB), but decided that an undergrad degree in Engineering would be better because I could always get a Masters in Finance but couldn't really do it the other way around (I'm also considering going into academia or possibly engineering) . I was wondering if it's possible to get a bachelors in Computer Sciences and then get a Masters in Mechanical Engineering or EECS if I have a change of heart... I'm interested in a lot of stuff. I'm going into Michigan's LSA right now for CS and planning on trying to cross-campus transfer and get a BSE in CS from the College of Engineering instead of a BS from LSA.</p>
<p>At Michigan CS is in the EECS department… </p>
<p>For MechE you’d need to take some different classes. I happen to know you can use 12 of your EECS elective credits to take MechE classes and you can always take more. You probably need to take thermo and statics and stuff like that. It’d be possible but not optimal to major in CS and then do a masters in MechE.</p>
<p>You can also do CS through LSA though too…</p>
<p>Would not actually majoring in Mechanical/Electrical Engineering (or any engineering field for that matter) prevent admission into top grad schools if you have a change of heart? Or is getting a Masters in a different type of engineering pretty common in top schools?</p>