<p>can i get into grad school with a 2.0001 electrical engineering g.p.a? forget about stanford but is there anyone who will take me? </p>
<p>seriously.</p>
<p>can i get into grad school with a 2.0001 electrical engineering g.p.a? forget about stanford but is there anyone who will take me? </p>
<p>seriously.</p>
<p>I don't think so, at the very least you need is 3.0 (there are lower like 2.7, 2.9 can get in but with exceptional test scores or other things). If you really wanna go to grad school, you can work for couple years and then go to a professional master where they won't count your gpa if it's really old. For now, applying to an EE program with 2.001 is impossible.</p>
<p>Best route to take is to work for a few years, get some experience, and then apply for grad school. At that point, I think they'll consider your work expereince more.</p>
<p>hmmm... so there isn't any "cheap" "offbeat" schools that would take me?</p>
<p>I don't know of any that would take you with a 2.00. I agree with the others in that you might as well get some work experience then apply later.</p>
<p>I think you need to understand that grad school may not be for you if you really struggled with undergrad. Remember it is a step up in difficulty of material.</p>
<p>even with a 2.0 gpa to find a job in engineering is very hard. You can always do some other things but then it would be a waste of a degree.</p>
<p>What you may want to consider is work for a few years, and take classes at a local college as a non-degree seeking student. Then after a few years apply to grad school.</p>
<p>Since you are currently an undergrad see if your school offers a BS/MS program, this is a program that my school offers that you do a 5 year program and get both at the end. You dont need to take a gre or anything. as for gpa requirements im not sure, but it seems like the best shot if thats what ya got.</p>
<p>Possible spend another semester in school and look at your grades and retake 3-4 classes that you did bad in. If you can PUll A's in this it may help,</p>
<p>At least at my school, you need to have about at least a 3.5 for your application to be approved for the concurrent program.</p>
<p>
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Possible spend another semester in school and look at your grades and retake 3-4 classes that you did bad in. If you can PUll A's in this it may help,
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<p>it won't be enough, even with one semester of 4.0, he/she can only bring it up to like a 2.3 max. 5 year bs/ms program at any school requires 3.0 (some requires 3.5). </p>
<p>The best way is to find a job (not putting 2.0 on ur resume and add great experience if you have).</p>
<p>The 5 year BS/MS programs are for the top end of the class (around 3.5+) so that's not an option</p>
<p>Is this a joke, Why are you even in engineering? I know that many people fail out of engineering but those who stay have pretty respectable GPA. The average GPA at my school is ~3.0 for EE.</p>
<p>average at mine is a 2.3</p>
<p>haha nah i don't think average can be 2.3 that's too low should be around 2.7 or so</p>