Advice on Switching from Physics to Engineering: Transferring from LAC

AI Thread Summary
A freshman at a top ten liberal arts college with a strong physics department is seeking guidance on transferring to a school with a mechanical engineering program. Despite a solid academic background, including a 3.4 GPA and a combined SAT score of 1350, the student realized that their true interest lies in engineering rather than pure physics. They expressed concerns about the limitations of pursuing a master's in engineering without a bachelor's in the field, particularly regarding eligibility for the EIT exam and obtaining a PE license. The student is currently enrolled in relevant courses, including physics, calculus, and chemistry, and is looking for advice on suitable transfer programs in the northeast, as well as the best timing for the transfer. It was noted that transferring in the Fall is ideal, as most universities align their course offerings with this schedule, making it easier for students to transition into engineering programs.
jrusselcbrown
Messages
3
Reaction score
0
This year I am a freshman at a top ten liberal arts college in the U.S. with a strong physics department. In case you need a little reference material on my academic background my fall semester GPA was 3.4 and my SAT scores from high school (reading & math) where a combined 1350. I am posting on the boards in search of some guidance.

I entered my current school with the belief that I was interested in pure physics and if I chickened out of grad school for physics I could "fall back" on a masters of engineering degree. What I failed to realize was that my interest was really in engineering in the first place and that selecting a school with no program was not a great way to start my collegiate career. Additionally without a bachelor's in engineering some states will not allow you to sit the EIT exam and the ones that do for engineering masters candidates (justifiably so) make you wait until the completion of your masters degree. This means that it is even later in your career when you can become a PE and I do not want to close any doors by not being licensed.

My goal now is to transfer into a school in the northeast to complete a bachelors of mechanical engineering. I will provide my freshman schedule so that readers can comment on courses I may want to take to get up to speed on engineering curriculum.

Fall Semester:
Foreign Language
Classical Physics (Mechanics, waves and some thermo) With Calculus
Calculus I
General Chemistry (Conceptual quantum chem, structure and bond theory, LCAO & VSEPR, LOTS of spectroscopy and some organic/inorganic/solid state nomenclature, reactions/synthesis techniques).

Spring Semester:
Writing/English Class
Classical Physics II w/ Calculus (Intro E&M)
Calculus II
Foreign Language.

Any comments would be appreciated. I am looking for advice on programs you may think I would be a good fit at and any suggestions or concerns you may have for a student in my position.

Thank You.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Also when is the best time to transfer?
 
Sounds to me like you're taking the exact same schedule an engineering student would take at the freshman level. The difference between physics and engineering for the first year, and sometimes the first two, is mostly cosmetics and a throwaway intro course.

The best time to transfer is Fall, because most universities admit the bulk of new students at this time and structure their course schedules accordingly (for instance, scheduling more "part one" classes in the Fall, then more "part two" classes in the Spring).
 
TL;DR Summary: What topics to cover to safely say I know arithmetic ? I am learning arithmetic from Indian NCERT textbook. Currently I have finished addition ,substraction of 2 digit numbers and divisions, multiplication of 1 digit numbers. I am moving pretty slowly. Can someone tell me what topics to cover first to build a framework and then go on in detail. I want to learn fast. It has taken me a year now learning arithmetic. I want to speed up. Thanks for the help in advance. (I also...
Hi community My aim is to get into research about atoms, specifically, I want to do experimental research that explores questions like: 1. Why do Gallium/Mercury have low melting points 2. Why are there so many exceptions and inconsistencies when it comes to explaining molecular structures / reaction mechanisms in inorganic and organic chemistry 3. Experimental research about fundamental Quantum Mechanics, such as the one being followed by Hiroshima university that proved that observing...
guys i am currently studying in computer science engineering [1st yr]. i was intrested in physics when i was in high school. due to some circumstances i chose computer science engineering degree. so i want to incoporate computer science engineering with physics and i came across computational physics. i am intrested studying it but i dont know where to start. can you guys reccomend me some yt channels or some free courses or some other way to learn the computational physics.
Back
Top