Electrical Engineering

<p>@Data10‌ </p>

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<li>I do not know. I haven’t sampled the entire EE program around the world. However, institutions that require an English component as a transfer and/or have some type of english component for their students (this list is in no form exhaustive) </li>
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<p>UCLA
UCB
UCD
UCR
Cornell
UMich AA
UI UC
Georgia Tech
CPP</p>

<p>Schools that approve Ochem
Cal poly Slo
CPP</p>

<p>Economics
CPP
Cal poly slo</p>

<p>I’m sure there are more, but after a ten minute search I became bored. But as you can see, the list includes ABET certified school and top ones at that so it has merit, no? </p>

<p>True, Economics and Ochem are less common. But I already disclaimed that in the original post with…

No where in the post I claimed ochem is a staple. I never claimed economics was a big one either. I clearly wrote

. Also I said check with the school themselves as the schools requirements vary. So where is the issue?</p>

<ol>
<li><p>As for relevancy, true Op asked a specific, question. however the question was already answered by the first poster and, the question could have easily expanded to “which courses should I take?” Since the OP is unsure about the math requirements, I doubt they aware of the other requirements. I was trying to be helpful and expand on the conversation. But sure, by strict definition, it is irrelevant which leads to… </p></li>
<li><p>Isn’t the quip about my previous post being irrelevant, also irrelevant? Pot, kettle moment it seems, or are you excused from that because you attended Stanford? <em>shrugs</em> Not that I’m trying to instigate; but the irony is palpable. </p></li>
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