<p>my favorite class in high school is English, reading and grammar. i hate math and physics. what type of engineer i should be? mechanical?</p>
<p>Maybe you shouldn’t be an engineer.</p>
<p>It doesn’t sound like you should be an engineer at all. My son will be an aerospace engineering major begining this fall, and he has always, since kindergarden, been very good at math and a great problem solver. Math comes easily to him and he does not get why some people find math difficult. If you do not like Math, and love English, then I do not think engineering is for you. Engineering involves a ton of mathematical concepts. Maybe journalism, creative writing, etc. as a major for you? Why do you think you should become an engineer?</p>
<p>sanitation engineer.</p>
<p>[Technical</a> writing - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia](<a href=“http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Technical_writing]Technical”>Technical writing - Wikipedia)</p>
<p>no its ok. i will just copy off of someone in math and physics so i can be engineer. i know very much grammar and reading comphrension. so what type of engineer should i be. civil? im also very good at world history if this helps in engineering</p>
<p>Clearly, this person is not being sincere.</p>
<p>I agree, silverturtle. His grammar and punctuation leave a bit to be desired as well.</p>
<p>Obvious ■■■■■ is obvious.</p>
<p>Yea ■■■■■!</p>
<p>Why is there this huge ■■■■■ hiding under a bridge???</p>
<p>Originally math was very difficult for me. Liberal Arts classes were always a breeze. I always found math and science incredibly interesting even though I was not very goood at it. For some years I had to work much harder than my classmates to recieve an A or B. But I worked hard and practiced and now math comes easier to me. Don’t let a lack of a natural skill stop you from what your dream is. I didn’t and now I have become a great math student through hard work. In the end do what you love. Don’t let anything hold you back. The human should never be underestimated.</p>
<p>Thanks alchemist. Let’s ignore the OP ■■■■■. I am having this dilemma too. I love the liberal arts. Sociology of Rock ‘n’ Roll, for instance, definitely sounds more interesting to me than Introduction to Circuits. But you can learn to love, right? It’s probably easy to learn to love a 2 credit course, but a 4 year engineering program? How much must I re-program myself for that? Of course I’d like a stable job, and a bachelor of soci will get me to an administrative assistant position. </p>
<p>Really, is every engineer on CC like “Rusty” from Greek? Born into engineering and a bit of a self-declared nerd?</p>
<p>@mamaroneck:</p>
<p>No, not every engineer on CC or elsewhere is like “Rusty.” But many are intellectually curious with a more practical side.</p>
<p>@OP:</p>
<p>I’d recommend “Bridge Engineer” with a minor in “Cave Design.”</p>
<p>■■■■■■■■ specialist engineer. Pe-■■■■■■■■-um engineer.</p>