<p>Im really worried about the difficulty of engineering. Im not a genius at all but im not dumb either. If i were extremely focused and dedicated would i be able to pull off a 3.5.</p>
<p>Im looking for input. </p>
<p>thanks</p>
<p>Im really worried about the difficulty of engineering. Im not a genius at all but im not dumb either. If i were extremely focused and dedicated would i be able to pull off a 3.5.</p>
<p>Im looking for input. </p>
<p>thanks</p>
<p>what type of engineering are you interested in? i am in ChemE and i think its more the workload (labs) that is difficult rather than not understanding the material.</p>
<p>What do you guys think of aerospace engineering? Is it a difficult field?</p>
<p>what about electrical engineering? or mechanical engineering? which one is harder?</p>
<p>i dont know much about aerospace engineering, but all engineering majors are on about the same level of difficulty. Electrical and chemical are known to be the hardest...you should really like electronic circuit design and physics for EE. if you are worried about having to do alot of lab work and want something easy, i wouldnt go for engineering. i am probably going to switch into physics from chemE because it is something i truly enjoy learning about.</p>
<p>I'm in the same boat as camerakid400. I was going for CivE but decided instead to pursue a Physics degree.</p>
<p>biomedical engineering at cal poly.
anyone have any input on the previous program because thats what im doing</p>
<p>aero is considered the hardest major at MIT... u do the math... no pun intended, but chem e pays the most with a bachelor's degree</p>