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stuff

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  1. Hi, I'm new to this forum, so please excuse me if my post does not conform to forum standards. I'm currently junior at a top University majoring in physics. Recently, I had an epiphany, and would like to switch to EECS in grad school (I'd like to do an MS for sure, and even maybe a PhD). I've already had a few EE courses, but I can fit about 6-7 EECS course in the next year or so. This is not enough to get me a dual degree with physics & EECS, so I'll be graduate with a physics BS. So here's a breakdown of my weakness & strengths: 1. weaknesses: No EECS research experience, no BS in EE or CS. 2. strengths: perfect physics GRE score, GPA of 3.9/4.0 (physics GPA is 4.0/4.0), published 1 experimental physics paper and several summers of research in physics, extensive graduate coursework in physics. Considering my situation, how realistic is it for me to get in an MS in EECS from a top program, given I maintain my grades up? (MIT, Berkeley, Stanford, etc...) What should I try to do now, to smooth my chances at a top EE/CS program? Thank you for your advice. -stuff
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