<p>i am computer science graduates i want to do master in electrical engineering (instrument & control division) please note that i have more than 7years experience in instrumentation & control system specially Endress+Hauser instruments & siemens(S-7 & PCS7) and i did more than 14projects in oil & gas field.</p>
<p>I’m not sure what your question is? You may want to post it in the Engineering forum. </p>
<p>If your question is “can you get into an EE master’s program with a CS degree?”, then yes, as long as you have the grades/test scores and took the EE preq’s (if your CS program was ABET accredited, then you did). If you didn’t take the preq’s, you may have to take them again, before you can take the core EE programs.</p>
<p>If your question is should you get your masters in EE? That’s a judgment call, can you afford the time and cost? Will your employer pay? </p>
<p>Good Luck!</p>
<p>Been there, tried to do it, didn’t get the t-shirt. My bad was that MSEE requires math that should be as fresh as possible in your head, not stale or 'who is this Fourier guy and why did he get this named after him" type quotes.</p>
<p>With a BS Civil Engineering (math up to diffyq) and BSCS (math transferred) but not a math lover I signed up for an MSEE - bad idea. Some classes were easy (architectures, microprocessors, and the like) and some were ‘what is this’ (Circuit theory) but the real challenge was the theory and math happy classes like Signals, Comm Theory, and the like. Without solid and fresh math these are not going to be easy or feasible.</p>
<p>Also depending on your curriculum and expertise projects that involve hardware building may be challenging if you never did it before. But overall fresh math is the biggest concern.</p>