Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Software engineering is not an engineering degree. Computer science degrees typically require calc I and calc II while real engineering requires calc I, calc II, calc III, and differential equations.
Kid doing CS is required to also take linear/matrix algebra
ANd at many schools, if you get a BS in CS thru the engineering school, your kid needs all 4 calc plus Linear/Matrix Algebra (or at least 4 total math classes)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am curious about material engineering, I don’t totally understand how it is different from chemical
In a nutshell, it's hard stuff rather than liquids or gas. It's a lesser known field, but the ratio of jobs to applicants is very favorable - you are very versatile, less funneled into one narrow path. At most schools, you'll benefit from smaller classes and lots of faculty attention and research opportunities once you've made it out of the Intro to Engineering type classes. Worth checking out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Software engineering is not an engineering degree. Computer science degrees typically require calc I and calc II while real engineering requires calc I, calc II, calc III, and differential equations.
Kid doing CS is required to also take linear/matrix algebra
Does he/she have to take Introduction to Quantum Mechanics? Linear algebra is a requirement for QM.
Also, mining engineering? Who offers that degree?
CO School of Mines, SD Mines, and someplace in TX. High ROI.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Software engineering is not an engineering degree. Computer science degrees typically require calc I and calc II while real engineering requires calc I, calc II, calc III, and differential equations.
Kid doing CS is required to also take linear/matrix algebra
Does he/she have to take Introduction to Quantum Mechanics? Linear algebra is a requirement for QM.
Also, mining engineering? Who offers that degree?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Software engineering is not an engineering degree. Computer science degrees typically require calc I and calc II while real engineering requires calc I, calc II, calc III, and differential equations.
Kid doing CS is required to also take linear/matrix algebra
Does he/she have to take Introduction to Quantum Mechanics? Linear algebra is a requirement for QM.
Also, mining engineering? Who offers that degree?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Software engineering is not an engineering degree. Computer science degrees typically require calc I and calc II while real engineering requires calc I, calc II, calc III, and differential equations.
Kid doing CS is required to also take linear/matrix algebra
I think this understates the differences and may not be correct in terms of the chemistry statement.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am curious about material engineering, I don’t totally understand how it is different from chemical
It is not. Only 1-2 classes different. Both have orgo and analytical chem; both have physics multiple semesters
Anonymous wrote:Electrical Engineering requires the most physics knowledge and is a very heavy theoretical field for an engineering degree. I'd put them "tier 1" before chemical any day
Anonymous wrote:I’m hesistant to ask but curious why you are asking, op?
To hound your child into the one perceived as hardest or denigrate your frenemy’s child who is a lowly industrial engineer or whatever?