>>11608061Do you actually learn to do anything worthwhile in terms of circuits as a ME?
I'm in grad school as EE and I was a TA in an electronics course for MEs and it was literally just ohms law and basic RLC circuits.
I work part time doing schematic and PCB design for a company and I think that should be about the lowest threshold job you can do with an EE degree. It still requires a deeper insight into how circuits actually work, something I don't think you can cover with the limited amount of credits in ME.
Most of the actually useful skills you learn in an EE degree are FPGAs and VLSI, low level programming, filters, op amp design and signal processing. I wouldn't worry about learning those as an ME, it's not gonna be your job.