<p>I am a sophomore in high school right now, and I am stressing too much on finding something to do and somewhere to go after high school.</p>
<p>For majors, I'm looking in different kinds of engineering because I keep getting led there. I've looked at mechanical, biomedical, petroleum, systems, industrial, and bunch of others, but I don't really know much about them or if engineering is right for me. After college, I'm thinking about either going to med school or continuing engineering.</p>
<p>Now about colleges. I'm trying to figure out where I should go and what seems right for me. I'm interested in going to a good engineering school but I want to go somewhere with a large variety of engineering programs and many others options outside of engineering as well. I've wanted to find a LAC with a strong engineering program but I still don't know. </p>
<p>If anyone can help at all, that would be AWESOME!!</p>
<p>You are a sophomore. You have 2 and a half more years of high school classes that will help you decide what you enjoy. So sit back and enjoy high school while you still can. The best thing you can do right now is make good grades and prepare for SAT/ACT.</p>
<p>I’m a freshman in college and I’m still not sure which field of engineering I want to go into (though I’ve narrowed it down significantly). Don’t come back to the site until your senior year in high school.</p>
<p>Picking the “right” kind of engineering major is important so you stay focused and finish your degree. The best major is the one that interests you the most (and you’ll figure that out in a couple years).</p>
<p>After college, engineers still tend to focus in their major area, but the actual degree is less important. Where I work I do a ton of electrical engineering work even though my background is mechanical engineering. At a different position within the same company, I did a ton of material science engineering. So you’ll likely do a bunch of different kinds of engineering in the real world, even though your technical background is focused in one area.</p>