Thank you all for the input, and would this degree plan be considered "Hard" Engineering. Or would it be better to pair Nuclear Engineering with a Masters in Health Physics?
The safety certificate is offered through the University and they say it is recognized by industry worldwide.
http://engineering.tamu.edu/media/831345/2010_bs_rhen_curriculum.pdf
There are a lot of posts on a number of threads in these forums concerning the up and downs of a nuclear engineering degree,....
You should read them,...
You might want to cast around in other forums and at A&M also about what you speculate being an engineer is and the various lines of endeavour engineers actually populate,...
some are deskbound,....
some are in the field,...
some are groomed to be PMs,...
some are partners/corporate PEs,...
some assist research,...
a few fly airplanes in the USN & USAF,...
I'll add the same caution I always add,...
Work in the nuclear stuff because you want to and you know you want to,...
So first thing to answer is that nuclear is what you know you want to do,...
If you're not certain, then keep your options open and hard engineer in mechanical, chemical or electrical as those allow you to use your abilities over a broader range of options until you settle into what fits best for you,...
that's all I got, oh and know your calculus, calculus is the great differentiator,....
