Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I will be a voice for the other side and say that if it doesn't come naturally to your kid, it will be a tough road ahead. I wanted very badly to go into medicine and still have some unresolved envy for my doctor friends, but my chem and calc grades were not going to cut it.
I switched to a very easy major - poli sci - during freshman year and ended up graduating top 5% in my class and going to a T3 law school and my life is better/easier now for taking the easy route.
DH did the same thing. Also ended up at T3 law school after changing majors. Not sure his life is better. He hates being a lawyer in biglaw. Soul sucking. So if you like engineering, stick with it.
Anonymous wrote:Civil (along with Systems) is considered one of the easier engineering majors. With that said, it's still engineering, so not easy in general.
My son took AP Physics 1 and didn't even bother with the AP exam and got a 3 on the BC calc exam and is an engineering major at a T50 and while he has to study hard, he's doing well and learning a lot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son is a junior in HS and also wants to do civil engineering. He took 3 pre-engeneering courses in his HS but he did not take any AP courses other than history. Does that mean he stands no chance at getting accepted into a civil engineering program?
Motivation and diligence matters most.
Yes, taking AP Calc would help with engineering admissions, as would a science AP, but he doesn't have to take AP Calc or AP science. I will urge he take some Calc class his senior year, if possible, as that will help a lot.
I took AP English and AP US History in HS. My HS did not even offer Calculus. I was accepted at 3 well regarded colleges. I had to work hard in engineering, especially in math, but I graduated on time and work in engineering now.
Thank you for this. He is planning on taking pre-calc and calc by the time he graduates. Math is usually not all that hard for him. I think he would do well because the only courses he ever really cared about his whole life are the pre-engineering courses he is taking. He doesn't get phenomenal grades because the teacher is super strict, but he loves them.
Look at Marquette in WI.
With all due respect, he needs to have Calc done with a good grade before even applying to an engineering program
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son is a junior in HS and also wants to do civil engineering. He took 3 pre-engeneering courses in his HS but he did not take any AP courses other than history. Does that mean he stands no chance at getting accepted into a civil engineering program?
Motivation and diligence matters most.
Yes, taking AP Calc would help with engineering admissions, as would a science AP, but he doesn't have to take AP Calc or AP science. I will urge he take some Calc class his senior year, if possible, as that will help a lot.
I took AP English and AP US History in HS. My HS did not even offer Calculus. I was accepted at 3 well regarded colleges. I had to work hard in engineering, especially in math, but I graduated on time and work in engineering now.
Thank you for this. He is planning on taking pre-calc and calc by the time he graduates. Math is usually not all that hard for him. I think he would do well because the only courses he ever really cared about his whole life are the pre-engineering courses he is taking. He doesn't get phenomenal grades because the teacher is super strict, but he loves them.
Look at Marquette in WI.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son is a junior in HS and also wants to do civil engineering. He took 3 pre-engeneering courses in his HS but he did not take any AP courses other than history. Does that mean he stands no chance at getting accepted into a civil engineering program?
Motivation and diligence matters most.
Yes, taking AP Calc would help with engineering admissions, as would a science AP, but he doesn't have to take AP Calc or AP science. I will urge he take some Calc class his senior year, if possible, as that will help a lot.
I took AP English and AP US History in HS. My HS did not even offer Calculus. I was accepted at 3 well regarded colleges. I had to work hard in engineering, especially in math, but I graduated on time and work in engineering now.
Thank you for this. He is planning on taking pre-calc and calc by the time he graduates. Math is usually not all that hard for him. I think he would do well because the only courses he ever really cared about his whole life are the pre-engineering courses he is taking. He doesn't get phenomenal grades because the teacher is super strict, but he loves them.
Anonymous wrote:DS got a 2 in AP Physics 1 and 2. He’s currently a PhD student in physics. It’s possible, but you have to work hard in those foundation courses.