Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I switched to Econ because the business school was a whole separate process. Be aware that Engineering can be hard and at least back in the day, the average gpa was a 2.7 at my top 10 engineering school. This didn't matter if you stayed in Engineering. You could still get hired. Employers understood the school. But if you wanted to transfer to another college in the University, you needed to have a minimum gpa. I think it was 3.3 or something. A lot of my classes fulfilled the econ requirements though.
I went to an engineering school and the whole school curved to a 2.7 so you couldn't even use non-major courses to try to bring up your GPA.
Anonymous wrote:I switched to Econ because the business school was a whole separate process. Be aware that Engineering can be hard and at least back in the day, the average gpa was a 2.7 at my top 10 engineering school. This didn't matter if you stayed in Engineering. You could still get hired. Employers understood the school. But if you wanted to transfer to another college in the University, you needed to have a minimum gpa. I think it was 3.3 or something. A lot of my classes fulfilled the econ requirements though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why not math?
Are you referring to Pure Math or Applied Math? Besides teaching, what are the career prospects for math majors with just a bachelor's degree.
Anonymous wrote:Switching to Physics or to Engineering Physics (at some colleges that is an actual degree). would be an obvious option within STEM.
DC has the math skills and ought to do fine in engineering or Physics.
My engineering program made the Physics Dept cram 4 semesters of in-major Physics classes - at the same depth - into just 3 semesters. Physics faculty really griped about this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC says he wants to major in engineering. His math is great, science interest….a little tepid. Good writer/pretty even (high) on standardized testing.
My wonder is - if he gets a year in and wants to change (many do, right?) what are some natural things to switch to? I’m not sure but if it matters I think he’s not a finance bro/more interested in interesting work than making money.
Any thoughts on what a natural next thing to try could be?
Humanities and then a career where he spends the rest of his adult life wondering why he didn't stick with Engineering.
Anonymous wrote:Why not math?
Anonymous wrote:DC says he wants to major in engineering. His math is great, science interest….a little tepid. Good writer/pretty even (high) on standardized testing.
My wonder is - if he gets a year in and wants to change (many do, right?) what are some natural things to switch to? I’m not sure but if it matters I think he’s not a finance bro/more interested in interesting work than making money.
Any thoughts on what a natural next thing to try could be?