Anonymous wrote:Nursing
Anonymous wrote:Nursing
Anonymous wrote:I’ve heard that Philosophy is difficult. It has the disctinction of being both hard and not particularly useful.
Really, any subject can be made difficult.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Whatever you are not good at is the hardest major for you. If you’re not good at math, STEM majors would likely be the most difficult for you. If you’re not good at reading, analysis, and writing, majors like English and history might be the most difficult for you.
If your major is *that* difficult, you are likely not in the best major for you.
This isn't true. Not all engineering majors couldn't hack it at English or History.
I vote electrical engineering as one of the hardest. Chemical and petroleum engineering are up there too.
But you're presuming that all English and history majors couldn't hack it as engineers?
Yup, pretty much.
Engineers can do reading, analysis, and writing. English and history majors can't do math.
Not in my experience. Some can. Though I would say a field based on judgment and analysis is far easier to do okay in than a technical field because the flaws aren't as clear-cut.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Physics is extremely hard. Some people switch to engineering because it’s easier.
I switched to math, physics was a lot a work and I realized I only liked it for the math. Math is the major for the profoundly lazy.
Not at Princeton!
Anonymous wrote:Such a weird question OP. People are good at different things. So, for some people engineering is a breeze and for others they might think writing white papers is a breeze. Not everyone wants to be STEM<STEM, STEM. It's strange for people to presume those are necessarily difficult majors....different strokes for different folks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Physics is extremely hard. Some people switch to engineering because it’s easier.
I switched to math, physics was a lot a work and I realized I only liked it for the math. Math is the major for the profoundly lazy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Whatever you are not good at is the hardest major for you. If you’re not good at math, STEM majors would likely be the most difficult for you. If you’re not good at reading, analysis, and writing, majors like English and history might be the most difficult for you.
If your major is *that* difficult, you are likely not in the best major for you.
This isn't true. Not all engineering majors couldn't hack it at English or History.
I vote electrical engineering as one of the hardest. Chemical and petroleum engineering are up there too.
But you're presuming that all English and history majors couldn't hack it as engineers?
Yup, pretty much.
Engineers can do reading, analysis, and writing. English and history majors can't do math.
Not in my experience. Some can. Though I would say a field based on judgment and analysis is far easier to do okay in than a technical field because the flaws aren't as clear-cut.
Engineering requires considerable judgment and analysis. Try again.
Anonymous wrote:CS degree...dropped out of EE - too tough. And I didn't like it. Thought Electrical beat Physics & Chemical for difficulty. Now...Econ, History, English Lit? Easy As!