E10 vs E28 IEOR VS. Manufacturing Engineering

<p>I signed up for E10 in fall but do not really know which category to pick. I am interested in IEOR and Manufacturing Engineering. IEOR does can use E 28 and Manufacturing Engineering does not need E 10...</p>

<p>I keep hearing about E10 but not much about E28. How's the instructor and the grade distribution? I cannot even find Manufacturing Engineering advisers. Can somebody please tell me more about it? The description in The Announcement isn't very clear.</p>

<p>ok, here’s what each of the E10 modules were like when i took it:
ME- design wind turbines, learn about renewable energy
IEOR- use optimization equations, but will not know how to derive them
MSE- study batteries. heavy on lecture and lab testing batteries
Civil E- research bridges?</p>

<p>E28 is mostly about visualization; rotating shapes, seeing shapes in different angles in ur mind, and using autocad + solidworks. my instructor for last sem was D.K Lieu, the guy who wrote the huge textbook ur gonna use. pretty useless book, but u need it for the homework. and don’t expect to be taught CAD. all of us basically had to learn it by ourselves.</p>

<p>grade distrubution?
E10:easy A
E28: B- average like all engineering classes</p>

<p>wow b-… was he marking people down for dressing badly?..</p>

<p>Berkeley does not believe in grade inflation. Most engineering classes have averages around 2.3-2.7. Grades are determined by how well you are compared to your peers in a class.</p>

<p>yep, this is Berkeley. don’t confuse it with Standfurd, which inflates GPAs to over 3.5. like one of my professors said when he explained this stuff, giving everyone A’s is no way to test if u actually know the stuff.</p>