Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The irony is every engineer you talk to says they rarely use Calculus or Physics in their every day job. Yet these colleges weed out these kids based on those two courses
This is complete nonsense. Those who say that are probably in management.
Signed,
An Engineer
Anonymous wrote:Any kid who gets admitted to VT engineering is smart enough to do well. But not all will. The have to learn how to study differently than they did in high school and work hard. My oldest skated in high school, did well without having to hit the books and did not have good study habits. He really struggled freshman year at VT and did not get his 3.0 to get into his preferred major. He had to kick it way up sophomore year to up his grades and then got in. It was a good lesson for him. he graduated with a great job offer by October his senior year. My second at VT engineering always had to work hard for grades in high school so had much better study habits. And has a 3.5 after 3 semesters. I don’t really get the “avoid VT cus it does “weed out” comments - don’t you want your kid challenged to put forth their best?
Anonymous wrote:Thanks so much for this last post. I was getting so scared about VT weed out that i was getting afraid to let my child apply there. It should be a match for my son and the price is right and the reputation is good. My son coasted only in elementary school, struggled in middle, and now in high school has learned how to study and be successful in really tough classes.
Anonymous wrote:I was also looking at graduation rates fo VT engineering. Just less than 50 percent complete in 4 years. I think it was two thirds by 5 years. This may be typical, not sure.
It can be typical to Engineering departments/colleges because they are one of the groups that use co-ops the most. For example, my DC is an engineering major and last year he did a co-op from January-August, so he will graduate a semester later, but it will still only be 8 semesters. Many engineering classes are sequential so if you do not have your act together in the beginning or you need to take one class over- it can delay your graduation. Plus, most engineering programs have more required courses/credits needed for graduation and it just takes longer than other majors.Anonymous wrote:I was also looking at graduation rates fo VT engineering. Just less than 50 percent complete in 4 years. I think it was two thirds by 5 years. This may be typical, not sure.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What engineering programs are recommended where DC isn’t constantly worried about not making the cut. It sounds like Pitt is accommodating, any ithers?
No such thing. Engineering is a demanding major. If your kid cannot handle, it’s better to find out early than later. Also, that probably means your kid won’t enjoy career as an engineer. I would not push it.
The BS part of that is that a single trip-up freshman year means a person can't handle an entire career. There are just too many examples around of successful people who stumbled at the beginning.
Yes, engineering is demanding. And certainly some students should move on. But that doesn't change the facts:
* some schools are using the weed-out process differently than others.
* an engineering student with a 3.2 freshman year is very different from one with a 2.2. At most schools the 2.2 kid will probably need to move on or regroup. As for the 3.2 kid... at some schools the kid can move ahead to sophomore year and at others it is "thanks for all the money, now see ya."
And yes, there is a budget element - at one school I talked to in a state facing budget cuts, the state forced the school to increase the number of engineering students so they increased the number of freshman engineering students. but not sophomores.
And for a bunch of people claiming to be engineers (and have statistical training) - y'all seem oblivious to the fact that your GPA is endogenous. If you are at Brown and score at the 50th percentile on the calc exam, you probably get an A. If you are at many public engineering schools, you get a B-, if that.
Parents: read the portion of the school websites for CONTINUING students, and discuss some of the weed-out issues with your kid. I would much rather my kid be a mechanical engineer out of Pitt (even at full fees) than an economics major out of VT (a major he might choose after the weedout.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The irony is every engineer you talk to says they rarely use Calculus or Physics in their every day job. Yet these colleges weed out these kids based on those two courses
This is complete nonsense. Those who say that are probably in management.
Signed,
An Engineer
Programmers do not need calculus or physics. They actually don't need college.
I fixed your signature.
Programmers != engineers
It does now... computer engineering and requires calculus and there is lots of talk about letting go of that requirement.
computer engineering != computer science
Hey look it's an ISTJ.
Analysis paralysis
Sorry - ESTP w/high EQ.
And these are just basic facts. Difficult for some people.
Sure you are. You are exactly who Spearman was talking about.