<p>My son will be attending Columbia U Fu School this fall. Since childhood he has expressed an interest in aerospace engineering but never actively did anything to demonstrate this interest, for example, by building model aircraft or engaging in other science/engineering projects. In high school he excelled in all subjects, studied 2 languages to AP level, did very very well in physics, etc. He is a conceptual kind of person till now, not hands on. Lives in his head. Nice raw talent. 2350 SAT first attempt. 800 in physics. I don't know if they reflect real aptitude. </p>
<p>I don't want him to choose an engineering major, like mechanical, etc, then graduate and discover he doesn't like engineering. This has happened to a friend's son. Studied EE/CS at CMU, worked at Microsoft for a few years, then dropped out of engineering altogether. Of course, this is a sample size of 1. I would like college to be an intellectual exploration, a feast to the point of gluttony. Looking at the engineering curriculum, he will be very restricted because he has to satisfy those ABET requirements. </p>
<p>Would it make sense to study applied math or applied physics, then study a lot of different electives, econ, astonomy, other cultures ,etc, that is, get a solid education , then when more sure, after 4 years in college, go specialize in engineering if that's what he still wants. Or will it become impossible? I guess I am asking what kind of courses would be viable for future grad school in engineering whilst avoiding an undergrad engineering major?</p>
<p>I am a little disappointed that much off the discussions center on earnings and jobs. Please suggest subjects that an educated person should know: I vote for astronomy (to get a sense of one's place in the cosmos), math, physics (to develop capacity for abstraction), other cultures, ancient philosophy, Greek tragedy, art history or music, economics, neurobiol. There is so much he can do if he only avoids those ABET requirements. Please help.</p>