Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless very very sure about engineering, another consideration is a school that offers everything, in case like many they decide to change majors
Good point, but in my experience, most people that dropped out of the engineering program either went to the engineering tech equivalent (which is lighter on math), computer science, IT, imaging science, ect. They typically didn't switch to a non-tech major (although I did know a few kids that went into hotel and resort management from CS) so being at a school with a well rounded tech program offered a lot of opportunities for success.
I've also never heard of engineering tech. At my university, engineering majors who found engineering too difficult tended to move into the business school.
At my university, engineering majors who found engineering too difficult tended to transfer to schools that had an undergraduate business school.![]()
Yeah, that used to be pretty common joke. And business major kids used to joke engineering major kids sitting around writing lab reports on the chair they are sitting on...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless very very sure about engineering, another consideration is a school that offers everything, in case like many they decide to change majors
Good point, but in my experience, most people that dropped out of the engineering program either went to the engineering tech equivalent (which is lighter on math), computer science, IT, imaging science, ect. They typically didn't switch to a non-tech major (although I did know a few kids that went into hotel and resort management from CS) so being at a school with a well rounded tech program offered a lot of opportunities for success.
I've also never heard of engineering tech. At my university, engineering majors who found engineering too difficult tended to move into the business school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless very very sure about engineering, another consideration is a school that offers everything, in case like many they decide to change majors
Good point, but in my experience, most people that dropped out of the engineering program either went to the engineering tech equivalent (which is lighter on math), computer science, IT, imaging science, ect. They typically didn't switch to a non-tech major (although I did know a few kids that went into hotel and resort management from CS) so being at a school with a well rounded tech program offered a lot of opportunities for success.
I've also never heard of engineering tech. At my university, engineering majors who found engineering too difficult tended to move into the business school.
At my university, engineering majors who found engineering too difficult tended to transfer to schools that had an undergraduate business school.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless very very sure about engineering, another consideration is a school that offers everything, in case like many they decide to change majors
Good point, but in my experience, most people that dropped out of the engineering program either went to the engineering tech equivalent (which is lighter on math), computer science, IT, imaging science, ect. They typically didn't switch to a non-tech major (although I did know a few kids that went into hotel and resort management from CS) so being at a school with a well rounded tech program offered a lot of opportunities for success.
I've also never heard of engineering tech. At my university, engineering majors who found engineering too difficult tended to move into the business school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless very very sure about engineering, another consideration is a school that offers everything, in case like many they decide to change majors
Good point, but in my experience, most people that dropped out of the engineering program either went to the engineering tech equivalent (which is lighter on math), computer science, IT, imaging science, ect. They typically didn't switch to a non-tech major (although I did know a few kids that went into hotel and resort management from CS) so being at a school with a well rounded tech program offered a lot of opportunities for success.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless very very sure about engineering, another consideration is a school that offers everything, in case like many they decide to change majors
Engineering department is very hard to get into.
Depends on the school. VERY easy for most girls to get into Engineering at the non T20 schools.
No
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless very very sure about engineering, another consideration is a school that offers everything, in case like many they decide to change majors
Good point, but in my experience, most people that dropped out of the engineering program either went to the engineering tech equivalent (which is lighter on math), computer science, IT, imaging science, ect. They typically didn't switch to a non-tech major (although I did know a few kids that went into hotel and resort management from CS) so being at a school with a well rounded tech program offered a lot of opportunities for success.
What is "engineering tech"?
-engineer
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless very very sure about engineering, another consideration is a school that offers everything, in case like many they decide to change majors
Good point, but in my experience, most people that dropped out of the engineering program either went to the engineering tech equivalent (which is lighter on math), computer science, IT, imaging science, ect. They typically didn't switch to a non-tech major (although I did know a few kids that went into hotel and resort management from CS) so being at a school with a well rounded tech program offered a lot of opportunities for success.
What is "engineering tech"?
-engineer
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless very very sure about engineering, another consideration is a school that offers everything, in case like many they decide to change majors
Good point, but in my experience, most people that dropped out of the engineering program either went to the engineering tech equivalent (which is lighter on math), computer science, IT, imaging science, ect. They typically didn't switch to a non-tech major (although I did know a few kids that went into hotel and resort management from CS) so being at a school with a well rounded tech program offered a lot of opportunities for success.
Anonymous wrote:Unless very very sure about engineering, another consideration is a school that offers everything, in case like many they decide to change majors