Sep

<p>I’m no professional, but I don’t think that will be grounds for them starting you in CAS. It’d be the same thing as someone who gets CGS who wants to get out of it.</p>

<p>And you’ll end up with pretty much the same courses, but they’ll be taken in MET, not in CAS. You’ll probably still start taking CS classes freshman year. The MET classes are smaller with more individualized attention. Also, and this may just be for engineering SEP classes, but some of the classes that are a semester long in ENG, they split into two separate semesters for MET. Like in ENG we have a class called Mechanics where we study both statics and dynamics in one semester, but the people I know in the SEP program take one semester of statics and another semester of dynamics. SEP’s not necessarily about whether or not you know what you want to major in. I think it’s more about getting people through the core classes with a strong background so that they don’t fall through the cracks and are more prepared for the upper level classes.</p>