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I am currently in my 2nd year (out of 3) for graduate school in Electrical & Computer Engineering. I have this 3-year timeline because I was accepted conditionally where I will need to take 6 undergraduate engineering courses along with my graduate curriculum since my BS was in Electrical Engineering Technology. I am also taking math & science courses at a community college (non-degree seeking) in hopes for my overall combined education meets NCEES Engineering Education standard so I would be more open to applying for licensure across the US without any setback. I passed both the FE & PE. One day, I was talking with one student who have experience in the electrical field. I told my plan in the paragraph shown above along with my differential and integral calculus taken in my Bachelors program (Applied Calculus for Technology 1 & 2 for my calculus coursework). That one student told me those two courses would not count towards NCEES Engineering Education Standard. I am still deciding if taking Calculus 1 & 2 would be worth it to meet the education standard. I was in contact with NCEES regarding this and sent my syllabuses for the Calc for Technology courses and said it appeared to be acceptable.I was wondering if anyone licensed that had a BS in Technology or someone in a similar situation to mine. What would be the best route for the differential & integral calculus portion of the engineering education standard. Keep the Applied Calc 1 & 2 I have or take Calc 1 & 2?
I am currently in my 2nd year (out of 3) for graduate school in Electrical & Computer Engineering. I have this 3-year timeline because I was accepted conditionally where I will need to take 6 undergraduate engineering courses along with my graduate curriculum since my BS was in Electrical Engineering Technology. I am also taking math & science courses at a community college (non-degree seeking) in hopes for my overall combined education meets NCEES Engineering Education standard so I would be more open to applying for licensure across the US without any setback. I passed both the FE & PE.
One day, I was talking with one student who have experience in the electrical field. I told my plan in the paragraph shown above along with my differential and integral calculus taken in my Bachelors program (Applied Calculus for Technology 1 & 2 for my calculus coursework). That one student told me those two courses would not count towards NCEES Engineering Education Standard. I am still deciding if taking Calculus 1 & 2 would be worth it to meet the education standard. I was in contact with NCEES regarding this and sent my syllabuses for the Calc for Technology courses and said it appeared to be acceptable.
I was wondering if anyone licensed that had a BS in Technology or someone in a similar situation to mine. What would be the best route for the differential & integral calculus portion of the engineering education standard. Keep the Applied Calc 1 & 2 I have or take Calc 1 & 2?