<p>I am a high school senior going to college this fall. I want to go to engineering field, but my am worried about my physics skill. I am ok in physics, but most of the time when the teacher talk about different laws or theory of physics, I feel like I don't get it quite well.
Is it possible that I could go into any engineering field provided if I would have the right technical education although I am not a physics guy (meaning average physics student)?</p>
<p>The physics that you use in your engineering classes is much simpler and straightforward then the physics in your physics classes.</p>
<p>More so than Math majors, but less so than engineering majors.</p>
<p>Is that the answer you wanted?</p>
<p>Physics majors take a few second year courses from engineering here such as circuits and other basic classes. Physics majors may have some engineering courses under their belt, but it would be a stretch to say the average physics major is qualified without some serious experience (which is really where engineers get their qualifications).</p>
<p>I think the OP was talking about be average in physics courses as an engineering major, but not as a physics major.</p>
<p>Er yes you’re right. I was trying to decipher the malformed title when I responded. The physics you learn in engineering is very easy; I wouldn’t worry about it. Unless you do R&D you won’t have to worry about anything beyond Physics I and II.</p>
<p>Thanks everyone. I was thinking about EE with Computer science or Bio-med. I understand the math type problems in physics, but the other theoretical parts seem kinda hard to me. Should I continue with engineering or take something else?</p>
<p>As far as I know, the electro-magnetic portions of EE rapes people on a regular basis. So be careful of that if you’re not great at physics.</p>