I study/ied engineering for....

<p>a) The marketable nature of the degree
b) The great starting salaries
c) Actual interest in the field</p>

<p>If you find yourself debating between 2 choices, or even all 3, take the one with the highest priority.</p>

<p>I choose (a).</p>

<p>A and C, more A</p>

<p>C moving towards B</p>

<p>I choose C and then A</p>

<p>Highest priority will be A then C then B</p>

<p>A and C, more C</p>

<p>A & B. A especially. I’m told engineers can branch off into non-traditional engineering careers.</p>

<p>C.</p>

<p>I didn’t know engineers had high starting salaries when I first chose this field. I also didn’t know at the time that so many people went off to work in non-engineering fields.</p>

<p>C .</p>

<p>C.</p>

<p>I can’t imagine spending four years of my life (well…now closer to nine) studying something I don’t have a true passion for. Heh, I didn’t even know about the other two until after I had been in college for a few years.</p>

<p>C.</p>

<p>I do think having a marketable degree is nice, and I do want a job where I get decent pay. However, the only thing that matters to me is that I am interested in the field I will be working in.</p>

<p>C then A and B equally.</p>

<p>C becasue I had an interest in C (the programming language :wink: )</p>

<p>none of the above. I majored in it for no reason.</p>

<p>^That’s kind of sad. I did it because most of the male in my family are engineers and the starting salary :)</p>

<p>Highest Priority:</p>

<p>A: 3
B: 1
C: 10</p>

<p>The Money!!!</p>

<p>Highest Priority Tallied:</p>

<p>A: 3
B: 2
C: 10</p>

<p>I have not yet decided between engineering or physics.. I’ll choose the one I like more and better at..</p>

<p>the thing about engineering for me is its flexibility.. and becoming an engineer is not bad in terms of the money or the work hours.. and interest is impt too… i would rather study fluids and mechanics rather than bio or literature so A and C?</p>

<p>C.</p>

<p>One thing that really scares me is to have a job that requires no intellectual capabilities. It defeats the whole purpose of having a brain. Thus my discipline actually requires me to think.</p>