Anonymous wrote:On a side note I went to an engineering school and I don't think any of the majors are hard for those type of students.
I say that as my roommate was absolutely "big bang" theory brilliant. For him the very difficult Engineering major was super easy. I lost track of him, but I know he went to MIT for Grad School.
For average non STEM majors Engineering is insanely difficult. But the people who do it most are brilliant and for them it comes naturally.
iAnonymous wrote:I think a lot of people would be interested in the number of credits, completion time, level of math involved, and salary prospects.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is appalling that Electrical isn't number 1. Easily the hardest subfield.
+1 Every Engineer concedes this. EE is the toughest.
No, they obviously don't.
Anonymous wrote:On a side note I went to an engineering school and I don't think any of the majors are hard for those type of students.
I say that as my roommate was absolutely "big bang" theory brilliant. For him the very difficult Engineering major was super easy. I lost track of him, but I know he went to MIT for Grad School.
For average non STEM majors Engineering is insanely difficult. But the people who do it most are brilliant and for them it comes naturally.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is appalling that Electrical isn't number 1. Easily the hardest subfield.
+1 Every Engineer concedes this. EE is the toughest.
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 studied Electrical Engineer in college but I've been working in Cybesecurity for almost twenty years, and I am getting paid 400k/year. Cybersecurity is a piece of cake when you compare it to any engineering disciplines.
Anonymous wrote:It is appalling that Electrical isn't number 1. Easily the hardest subfield.
Anonymous wrote: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.
Absolutely. We have such a hard time hiring materials engineers - they are in really high demand! The ones I know are absolutely brilliant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have heard systems engineering is difficult. I would put it at tier one.
LOL!! No.