In some hot water

<p>lol… seriously think anyone in the engineering forum is going to be envious of your relatives’ HR careers?</p>

<p>I’m pretty sure your a naive college student who doesn’t realize what working at pricewaters entails, otherwise you wouldn’t leave such a foolish comment?</p>

<p>But that’s what you get when you come on a forum entitled
“collegeconfidential.” Sigh…</p>

<p>■■■■■ for sure. Time for the “Ignore” option.</p>

<p>There’s an ignore option?!</p>

<p>Go to the person’s profile. Under “User Lists”, there’s an option to ignore user.</p>

<p>P.S. To become a supply chain manager, you’ll most likely want to get a certificate or concentration in supply chain management (there are Master’s degrees for this specialization). They involve a lot of hard mathematics like stochastic calculus, matrix/linear algebra and programming. There’s an engineering field that specializes in this called industrial engineering, which often contains classes and departments in operations research.</p>

<p>I know what industrial engineering is, I’m six sigma certified… </p>

<p>As for the post, Ive already extrapolated all that I needed, it’s ok to delete now.</p>

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<p>Oh, well, then.</p>

<p>I go to SJSU and a EE major. I’m assuming you’re referring to the EE101 exam? Don’t worry if you don’t pass it, there’s a ton of other classes you can get out of the way like upper division GEs and some EE classes. There’s pretty much no way you can complete upper division EE in 2 years. Its pretty much impossible unless you want to take 6 EE classes in one semester which is insane (4 is a good limit).</p>