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Ok, so the whole "is engineering a BCMP" thing has been beaten to death. I'm just going to go with the consensus that seems most reasonable as it is stated in AMCAS, course content and not department.
So there have been anecdotes of people classifying their Electrical Engineering Circuits 1 and 2 courses as physics...has anybody tried the lab components of this? My course title would be "EECE: Electric Circuits Lab 1 or 2"
I'm going to go ahead and classify it as Physics no matter what and see what AAMCAS has to say about it, just curious if anybody has already done it and what is the result.
(Tangent, I don't get really what the whole debate about BCMP and engineering is about? I think it should be pretty clear that an EE course titled "Fundamentals in Electromagnetic Fields", for example, is actually a physics course and not engineering. If AAMCAs challenges it anyway, I'm whipping out my course syllabi and proving upper division PHYS Department courses have nothing on this class)
So there have been anecdotes of people classifying their Electrical Engineering Circuits 1 and 2 courses as physics...has anybody tried the lab components of this? My course title would be "EECE: Electric Circuits Lab 1 or 2"
I'm going to go ahead and classify it as Physics no matter what and see what AAMCAS has to say about it, just curious if anybody has already done it and what is the result.
(Tangent, I don't get really what the whole debate about BCMP and engineering is about? I think it should be pretty clear that an EE course titled "Fundamentals in Electromagnetic Fields", for example, is actually a physics course and not engineering. If AAMCAs challenges it anyway, I'm whipping out my course syllabi and proving upper division PHYS Department courses have nothing on this class)