Electrical Engineering

<p>To add…</p>

<p>Your chemistry requirement generally will be at the very least:
A year of Inorganic Chemistry</p>

<p>Additionally you may need a year of organic chemistry as some school add the material science route to elec E.</p>

<p>2 Years of Calculus based Physics:
This generally breaks down to
Mechanics
Electricity and Magnetism
Light, waves and optics
Modern physics</p>

<p>The first 3 courses are lab based. Modern physics is more theoretical, and doesn’t.</p>

<p>A year of English.</p>

<p>Economics*</p>

<p>A year of programming**</p>

<p><em>= This is not a requirement of all schools, but it is seen in many
*</em>= you may only need one course, however it may require a prereq programming course. </p>

<p>Ultimately, it depends on the school. If you are interested in a Californian University, you can use assist.org
It has a feature that allows to see how classes compare to Californian eqivs. Other than that, talk to the schools admissions people. I advise not to talk your own schools transfer. They try, but they do not understand the differences in Stem major requirements so they may send you on the wrong path, suggesting you take courses like a typical humanities major would. As a result a lot of stem kids wind up at CC longer than they should have. </p>

<p>Good luck</p>