<p>so i want to build/design cell phones, tablets or other mobile technologies but im not sure what i would major in...Would it be Electrical engineering?</p>
<p>What subjects do you enjoy in school?</p>
<p>I enjoy English and business and some chemistry but i dont really enjoy math but i really love technology</p>
<p>Math is part of engineering. The key is if you can do it, and not hate it. Most engineers all have to take:
Calc 1, 2, 3
Linear Algebra
Differential Equations
Calc based Statistics</p>
<p>And these don’t count the math that you will be using in your major classes either.</p>
<p>Btw, for the majors you are looking at, EE or ME could be a good choice.</p>
<p>Qualcomm, which makes a lot of cellphones and stuff, hires A LOT of EEs from my school.</p>
<p>Concurring with EE being a good choice for your career goals. But Chucktown is right; if you can’t tolerate doing lots of math, engineering is not really the right field for you.</p>
<p>CS might be a better fit, actually. There are still opportunities to design the software side of those technologies for CS majors, and while there’s still lots of logical thinking and math requirements, programmers and software developers don’t do nearly as much equation solving.</p>
<p>Thanks amarkov, its so many tech majors that i dont know where to start but ill look into computer science. If i become a Software developer or program developer i can still work with those types of technologies( cell phones, tablets, computers etc). Chucktown thanks for the rundown of the math involvement of doing EE, I want to do a tech major that requires some amount of math</p>
<p>Computer engineering is an option. Be careful about assuming that CS is not math intensive. At some universities the CS degree requires at least the same as the EE degree. Other universities may require only Calc I and II, and Linear Algebra or Discrete Math.</p>
<p>@ChrisTKD thanks ill look into that, I just want a technology major that doesn’t require a lot of math but still gives you a decent living</p>
<p>I don’t want to discourage you but make sure you REALLY want to go into engineering and not anyone else’s decision. My cousin did that and is really struggling in engineering.</p>
<p>@egelloc80 yeah I don’t want to struggle that’s why I’m trying to keep my options open and learn about other fields that are technology related because engineering requires a lot of math and I’m not the best in that. I need a tech major that doesn’t require a lot of math but can still land me a great career after college</p>
<p>Here:</p>
<p><a href=“http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/engineering-majors/744690-what-type-engineer-requires-least-math.html[/url]”>http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/engineering-majors/744690-what-type-engineer-requires-least-math.html</a></p>
<p>@egelloc80 thanks but I was told I should check out Information technology majors because they would suit me better</p>
<p>thats fine as well</p>
<p>@egelloc80 thanks for all the info, applying to college is going to be stressful</p>