<p>Is there any way that I can take a BS in Environmental Science and then take a masters in environmental engineering? I am a freshman in college, currently doing civil engineering, but I am not even sure if "engineering" is right for me. If I stay as a civil engineering student, I am not allowed to take any core courses and try to see if another major is right for me. I am also struggling right now, because I was placed in a difficult computer science class & I have no previous knowledge in it! I cant balance out time for all my challenging courses. Its also challenging how there are so few females in my class doing engineering. I also have responsibilities at home. I am someone who is really into nature, the outdoors. Also, after all the natural disasters (Hurricane Sandy) in my area & around the world I really want to be part in helping the environment.</p>
<p>I am not sure if you can do Engineering in graduate, but from my search I am guessing you probably can’t. Perhaps this will be helpful, [What</a> can I do with a bachelor’s degree in Environmental Studies and a masters in biology? - Yahoo! Answers](<a href=“http://■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■/question/index?qid=20090523173933AAwhfUG]What”>Yahoo | Mail, Weather, Search, Politics, News, Finance, Sports & Videos) . I checked a few university websites as well for Masters in EnvE, and they all said that they do require you to have an “engineering degree or related subject”. I believe the main reason for that is the Math and Physics (and maybe Chemistry?), they teach engineers all that stuff in quite a lot of detail, so for a graduate course they would expect/want you to have that knowledge already.</p>
<p>I was thinking about going into Environmental Engineering/Studies/Science at one point, but I found this other thing I loved more. I might still apply for it to some places. </p>
<p>Anyways. Best of luck!</p>
<p>Thanks for the reply GaleSkylex! I still dont know if environmental engineering or science is right for me! But what is the other thing you loved more?</p>