<p>I'm going to apply for Cornell this year. And I personally am interested in bio/chem/engineering, so I am thinking if anyone can give me some advice about the classes of AAP and college of Engineering and CALS. Personal experiences better, and I am eager to know the differences of the subjests of the classes.
I know about engineering and architecting since my dad is an engineer and work in a prestigious company, the problem is that I am a poor drawer, does that matter?
I would love to hear so advice and hope I can find the college that suits me best with your help!!</p>
<p>If you are interested in college of engineering, your drawing skills will matter little to nonexistent as a student. This is a college that value mathematics and logic. If you are bad at either and don’t particularly enjoy some math (linear algebra, multi-var, etc), computer science, physics, any major in engineering will be tough since all engineering majors are required to take these courses.</p>
<p>If you are interested in architecture, it’ll be nice if you have some drawing skills but again it will probably matter little in the long run. Most of my architecture friends use tools to sketch and value attention to detail over actual drawing skills. However, I do believe most of my AAP friends when applying to Cornell had to showcase their skills through submitting portfolios. This may be something you should think about for AAP.</p>
<p>AAP, engineering, and CALS are three very different colleges with different majors unique to each. Your questions are too broad and there are simply too many ways I can answer. I would suggest going through the Cornell website and do some research to get a better idea. You can ask more specific questions on this forum then.</p>
<p>Thank you so much renyun! I did some research on their site earlier today.
Still, your answer is a lot of help~</p>