Stick with Industrial Engineering

<p>Hey Guys,</p>

<p>I just wanted your opinion. I'm currently a sophomore in engineering at a major technical university. Math has never been my strength but I do enjoy it a great deal and I"m willing to work hard in it. I've struggled through my freshman year and had to withdraw from calculus 2 for a variety of reasons ( I had never learned integration before like all my peers and the class was combined with other challenging classes like physics and vector geometry that I had no predisposition to). Anyway, I'm currently taking Integration over again and learning a great deal more, but will I be able to handle the Industrial Engineering curriculum? I'm willing to take five years to graduate and to bust my ass to get there (I've already worked much harder than my peers who've already had these classes). So to sum up my question: Are there any IE's out there who struggled with the basics but worked hard and eventually started doing alright?</p>

<p>Thanks!</p>

<p>If you work hard you can do it. I’ve talked to professor’s with Phd’s in math that said they failed calculus 2 the first time they took it. It’s more about work ethic than natural ability unless your a genuis.</p>