Schools Failed Engineering Admissions: How to Stay on Track for a EE Degree?

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The discussion centers on a student's rejection from an engineering college despite a strong GPA and meeting admission requirements. The college cited full capacity, leaving the student anxious about completing their Electrical Engineering (EE) courses on time. The student considers pursuing a physics degree with engineering electives and a potential EE minor, which could allow them to graduate on schedule. They seek advice on the viability of this path, expressing a desire to work in industry and a preference for a bachelor's degree. A conversation with a former physics professor highlighted the close relationship between physics and engineering courses, suggesting that a physics degree with an EE minor could be a valid alternative. The main concern raised is how to effectively market oneself to employers without an official EE degree.
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So I applied for the engineering college and they rejected me even though I have a 3.9 gpa and all the classes required for admission. They made it sound like the college is full because they can't even accept me as a undecided engineering major. I'm freaking out a little bit because next semester, according to the curriculum, I should be taking 3 EE classes. So unless I could take summer classes I would finish a semester late and that's if spots open up in the college of engineering.

I want to be an EE and need to figure out how I should approach this. The physics degree at my school has a nice option with engineering electives (15 credits) and the college of engineering does have an EE minor which if I do get accepted for the minor later it won't matter that much. So I could do a physics major with 33 credits in EE (18 minor + 15 physics electives) and still graduate on time.

I guess my questions is has anyone ever done a physics degree with the complete intention on becoming an engineer? The main reason I wanted to do EE was because I want to work in industry and I'm also fairly certain I would just stop at a bachelor's. Any thoughts?
 
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I just talked to one of my past Physics Professors about this yesterday and he said that EE and Physics are very closely related as far as classes go. I don't think that physics with a minor in EE would be a bad Decision at all. the only real difference would be marketing yourself to companies, in which you would have to be more descriptive about your capabilities because you don't have the "EE" title on your diploma. I hope this helps a little...
 
Hey, I am Andreas from Germany. I am currently 35 years old and I want to relearn math and physics. This is not one of these regular questions when it comes to this matter. So... I am very realistic about it. I know that there are severe contraints when it comes to selfstudy compared to a regular school and/or university (structure, peers, teachers, learning groups, tests, access to papers and so on) . I will never get a job in this field and I will never be taken serious by "real"...
Yesterday, 9/5/2025, when I was surfing, I found an article The Schwarzschild solution contains three problems, which can be easily solved - Journal of King Saud University - Science ABUNDANCE ESTIMATION IN AN ARID ENVIRONMENT https://jksus.org/the-schwarzschild-solution-contains-three-problems-which-can-be-easily-solved/ that has the derivation of a line element as a corrected version of the Schwarzschild solution to Einstein’s field equation. This article's date received is 2022-11-15...

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