Anonymous wrote:Return on investment. An engineering degree opens up opportunities. Someone with an engineering degree can work in marketing, but someone with a marketing degree cannot be an engineer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:An engineering degree gets you some technical chops clout. Shows you can do higher order math and analysis then if you were just a business major. Two friends are top finance guys in NYC making crazy money. They have masters in engineering disciplines and did that before getting MBAs and going into finance.
+1
Also, engineering major and then pivoting to med school will give you advantages. If you can maintain a high gpa with engineering major, you will most likely do exceedingly well in med school. Engineering majors are some of the most difficult undergrad majors, it teaches critical thinking and analysis. You can apply this to any job and employers know that
Anonymous wrote:Because their parents told them to?
Anonymous wrote:An engineering degree gets you some technical chops clout. Shows you can do higher order math and analysis then if you were just a business major. Two friends are top finance guys in NYC making crazy money. They have masters in engineering disciplines and did that before getting MBAs and going into finance.
Six figures startingAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think your Brown statistics are speaking to the optionality of attending these schools.
I bet the kids studying engineering probably thought they would be engineers, but then they are getting solicited by consulting firms, hedge funds, etc. that value kids with these backgrounds.
what are the salaries?
Anonymous wrote:You have to be an engineer to be a patent attorney.
If you want to understand the industry it’s good to have the background.
You want to run and engineering company not be one.
Anonymous wrote:I think your Brown statistics are speaking to the optionality of attending these schools.
I bet the kids studying engineering probably thought they would be engineers, but then they are getting solicited by consulting firms, hedge funds, etc. that value kids with these backgrounds.