Engineering programs that aren't to math & physics heavy initially

<p>ABET accredited engineering and CS majors will require at least a year’s worth of math and science (“year” meaning 1/4 of the total number of courses or credits for the degree, typically 30-32 semester credit units).</p>

<p>As noted in post #3, there exist non-ABET-accredited CS majors which have fewer math requirements and fewer or no science requirements. These can still be good quality CS majors (although there also exist poor quality non-ABET-accredited CS majors, so check carefully). ABET accreditation for CS is only really important for the patent exam, unlike for engineering where it (or mutually recognized accreditation of foreign engineering degrees) is generally considered essential for most engineering majors.</p>

<p>Any decent engineering major will start out with math and physics (and chemistry if needed for the major), as an understanding of those subjects is a necessary prerequisite to most engineering courses.</p>