<h2>Please help! I want to figure a versatile degree for future job options! Ultimate goal is NASA, but this can always change. I may not be successful in engineering. Science is not my natural subject, I have to work hard to understand but am willing to do that.</h2>
<p>AAE / Physics</p>
<p>AAE/ Humanities or English</p>
<p>------Not sure of this one. I have been called a prolific essayist / writer by my English teachers for the past two years. I can write a 98%+ paper everytime, first draft...thing is, I am interested more in science. I believe I can be a successful English major, but what could I do with that? This option is good if I fail to succeed in engineering. Trust me, I have never been good with mechanics. But I find it so interesting! I find writing interesting too, but not as applicable as the physical sciences.</p>
<p>AAE / Nuclear Engineering, or, Electrical Engineering.
---I believe Nuclear engineering would be cool, I am interested in the particle accelerator.</p>
<p>AAE / Pilot License</p>
<p>AAE alone / Astronomy Minor
----Always have been interested in astronomy, too bad it is not a good job market.</p>
<p>if you major in engineering, it is easy to switch careers after you graduate. Many engineers go back to graduate school and receive an MBA and enter a business/management career. It is easy to go from engineering to english or business but it is impossible to go from English to engineering so would major in only engineering and go from there!</p>
<p>Perhaps look at getting a minor or second degree in technical writing instead of English?</p>
<p>While I’d say a AAE/Physics degree would be superb, if you figure you’re going to be struggling just to get through AAE, then tacking a physics degree on top of that is pretty much suicide.</p>
<p>no no
the best combo is engineering and business
nowadays people have to deal with business everyday. if you have a degree in engineering and business, you can both open a company/work in the top position of a company but still understand how the workers are doing. some people are in charge because their workers do the wrong technique while the director doesn’t know anything about the speciality.
lol talking about this I remember my father. he used to be an engineer but now he only cares about business, he doesn’t have to go to factory like an engineer
just my ideas. i believe engineering + business is the best if u have engineering in mind. :D</p>
<p>Engineers who can write are rare and valuable! Whether you double major in English or writing or not, take some writing classes and play up your writing skills when you go for jobs.</p>
<p>It’s very hard to double major in Engineering and something else - unless you come to college with a lot of AP/IB/Dual enrollment credits. Engineering alone requires more credits than a normal degree.</p>
<p>If you don’t feel strong in the sciences, how about math? </p>
<p>There are schools that offer “custom-designed majors” - such as one that combines Math, Physics and English…or… Theatre and business…or…Music and Math… or English and Fine Arts… or…whatever! :)</p>