Do proespective engineering majors HAVE to take math and physics?

<p>I'm just asking, because I would be much better off taking some other subjects such as biology and literature.</p>

<p>all schools have different requirements, check their websites</p>

<p>I think what the OP is trying to ask is whether he will be discriminated against compared to other engineering students who would have taken Math and Physics, in a school which doesn't specify which tests to take.</p>

<p>Yeah, I'm probably totally off, but that's the kind of specific question I would've asked. Just my interpretation.</p>

<p>I would say yes for Math, because it's almost become an "universal" SAT 2 that A LOT of students take for college. If you're going into any form of science, it's even more so important. </p>

<p>I would say that you probably don't have to take Physics though - I guess you can substitute another science in its stead.</p>

<p>If you look at Engineering-heavy schools like MIT: MIT requires Math and one Science SAT 2, so I guess it's in your favor to take math and science, rather than literature or history SAT 2s (you can take them as additional ones, just not as your primary ones).</p>

<p>Yeah I think the OP should abide by Oasis' answer. How about taking math, bio and literature, tenniskid123? Or if the school only requires two (and doesn't specify which two), it'd be to your advantage to take math and bio. If you wanna do biomedical engineering, that's a great combo.</p>

<p>A lot of engineering schools require you take Math and Chemistry or Physics. But it is different with every school, some probably do accept bio as a science SAT II.</p>

<p>lol, you could take chemistry in stead of physics...</p>