<p>Like what majors go together</p>
<p>Double majoring with engineering is tough unless it is two related engineering degrees or math and physics with engineering.</p>
<p>There's not much of a reason to double major in two unrelated things like Econ and ChemE. Having a second major isn't going to get you any farther ahead if it isn't related to the job you want.</p>
<p>Physics or CS are decent combo degrees depending on which engineering you choose.</p>
<p>I thought ECON + Chem would suit you for like a pharmaceutical occupation?</p>
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I thought ECON + Chem would suit you for like a pharmaceutical occupation?
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<p>Why would that be the case?</p>
<p>business works.</p>
<p>Engineering goes nicely with either math or physics, since both of those sciences form the foundation of engineering.</p>
<p>Daniel Webster College in New Hampshire is putting together a "fast track" combined Engineering (mech or Aero) and MBA. </p>
<p>The engineering takes more then 4 years, so "fast" is realitive.</p>
<p>Other Schools may have something similar</p>
<p>My son has an interesting one.</p>
<p>He is a computer engineering major with a japanese minor. He will need to add a couple of summers to graduate on time or take a 5th year. He seems to think an engineer who speaks and writes japanese will be an advantage.</p>
<p>Applied Math?</p>
<p>I agree with JoeJoe05: double majors in general are not very useful. Nobody really cares. Employers don't really care. Grad school adcoms don't really care either. I have seen countless people with doubles who lost out on the jobs or grad-school admissions they wanted to people who had only singles. Several of those people now rue their choice to double, saying that they should have instead spent their time on more productive endeavors (i.e. sharpening their job interviewing skills).</p>
<p>Especially if you are going to spend 5 years on a double major. You're better off spending 6 getting a Master's.</p>
<p>i think it goes well with english</p>
<p>philosophy... political science... international business... psychology....</p>
<p>all are minors that i am considering to go along with my AeroE degree.</p>
<p>In getting a master's, do students have to pick a subdivision within that field?</p>
<p>Yes, you usually need to specialize in a sub-discipline.</p>