If you're in engineering, how can you qualify to get credit for Physics B?

<p>On the site, I know that you can't... but is it possible to talk to an advisor and possibly get the credit.
I received a 5 on Physics B and a 5 on Calculus BC.
What do you think?</p>

<p>Physics B will not exempt you from taking it in college. Last summer I was mailed a spreadsheet with all my AP scores and the potential credits I received, and the dean wrote N/A by my physics b score. A 5 on calc BC will give you credit for calc 1 and 2.</p>

<p>I believe getting a 5 on the Physics C exam can exempt you, but I’m not certain.</p>

<p>If you want a definitive answer, you can email Dean Rankin. His email is on this page:
<a href=“http://soe.rutgers.edu/oaa/officehrs[/url]”>http://soe.rutgers.edu/oaa/officehrs&lt;/a&gt;
toward the bottom</p>

<p>Physics C is considered to be the equivalent because Physics B is not calculus based and the Analytical Physics component in SOE is calculus based.</p>