As per my roadmap, I’m slated to take Thermal Fluid Engineering and Thermal Fluid Engineering Lab in Fall 2018. Given my history with the professor who teaches it, I am trying to find if I can take it over the summer. My two questions are:
Is it a good idea to take an engineering course over the summer?
Are there any universities that offer Thermal Fluid Engineering over the summer? If so, which ones, and what is the course name at that university?
You’d have to either share what university you attend so that we could look up the details of the class or else share the syllabus or course description with us, because “Thermal Fluid Engineering” could mean any number of things and is not a standard course title at most universities.
@boneh3ad First and Second Law of Thermodynamics for closed and open systems. Fundamentals of fluid mechanics and heat transfer. This is at Kent state University
In theory it should not be a problem. But you will need to either take it at Kent State or locate an equivalent class your department will accept transfer credit for. Talk with your department advisor.