TheLonelyPhoenix
Diamond Member
- Feb 15, 2004
- 5,594
- 1
- 0
Originally posted by: simms
Originally posted by: TheLonelyPhoenix
I take back my previous vote, this has to be brutal.
I call chop.
Almost certainly, but still hilarious.
Originally posted by: simms
Originally posted by: TheLonelyPhoenix
I take back my previous vote, this has to be brutal.
I call chop.
Originally posted by: dullard
I've said it before, chemical engineering undergraduates have a LOT of work but it is all easy work. A chemical engineer is the Jack of all trades but master of none.
<- Dullard: BS and MS in chemical engineering and PhD in engineering (focus on chemical engineering and math).
I don't like the comparison of chemical engineering to chemistry. So much difference between the two. Heck you could be quite a good chemical engineer in some jobs and know nothing at all of chemistry. But yes, your point is correct. Chemistry work is often spending months to develop gram quantities of chemicals. To the chemist, it often doesn't matter how long it takes to get the product. Chemical engineers need to figure out how to do the same thing in just hours and while producing ton quantities of that chemical.Originally posted by: simms
If anything I've heard that ChemE's just know rates a hell of a lot better than Chems. Mass, heat, fluid rates, etc.
Originally posted by: BigJ
Originally posted by: Jzero
Music. And not because you have to be a whiz to take it. No, it's because you still have to take the same gen-ed requirements, and you are still required to maintain the same number of credits to get full-time status, but your classes are all .5-1.5 credits despite meeting 2-3 times a week.
I could take a CS lab class, a Science lab class and 2 non-lab classes and be full-time with a day off every week.
The music majors had to take 8 classes just to be full-time. It's lunacy. I had a brief stint as a band instructor this summer and I thought how awesome it would be to go back to school for music ed until I remembered the ass-tastic curriculum I'd have to endure to get there.
At UMD, the only classes that are 1-2 credits for music majors are lessons (1cr) and ensembles (2 credits). Then some relatively easy electives they take for 2crs (for piano I think there are only 2-3 electives they have to take for 2 crs). It looks time consuming, but I wouldn't say it is hard as long as you were decently gifted (if not, why would you be a music major in the first place).
PS I am not a music major, but this was just looking up information from my colleges music department website.
Originally posted by: dullard
I don't like the comparison of chemical engineering to chemistry. So much difference between the two. Heck you could be quite a good chemical engineer in some jobs and know nothing at all of chemistry. But yes, your point is correct. Chemistry work is often spending months to develop gram quantities of chemicals. To the chemist, it often doesn't matter how long it takes to get the product. Chemical engineers need to figure out how to do the same thing in just hours and while producing ton quantities of that chemical.Originally posted by: simms
If anything I've heard that ChemE's just know rates a hell of a lot better than Chems. Mass, heat, fluid rates, etc.
Originally posted by: RaynorWolfcastle
Stupidest analogy ever, I could probably manage writing 30k+ words in 2 months (though I would probably hate it) .Originally posted by: Horus
HISTORY. When you EE majors write 30K+ words in 2 months for essays, come back and talk to me.
Heck I've written two lab reports in the last 3 weeks that together are 60 pages and 16,000 words.
Originally posted by: liluqt
Originally posted by: BigJ
Originally posted by: Jzero
Music. And not because you have to be a whiz to take it. No, it's because you still have to take the same gen-ed requirements, and you are still required to maintain the same number of credits to get full-time status, but your classes are all .5-1.5 credits despite meeting 2-3 times a week.
I could take a CS lab class, a Science lab class and 2 non-lab classes and be full-time with a day off every week.
The music majors had to take 8 classes just to be full-time. It's lunacy. I had a brief stint as a band instructor this summer and I thought how awesome it would be to go back to school for music ed until I remembered the ass-tastic curriculum I'd have to endure to get there.
At UMD, the only classes that are 1-2 credits for music majors are lessons (1cr) and ensembles (2 credits). Then some relatively easy electives they take for 2crs (for piano I think there are only 2-3 electives they have to take for 2 crs). It looks time consuming, but I wouldn't say it is hard as long as you were decently gifted (if not, why would you be a music major in the first place).
PS I am not a music major, but this was just looking up information from my colleges music department website.
I go to UMD too!
Originally posted by: Horus
Originally posted by: RaynorWolfcastle
Stupidest analogy ever, I could probably manage writing 30k+ words in 2 months (though I would probably hate it) .Originally posted by: Horus
HISTORY. When you EE majors write 30K+ words in 2 months for essays, come back and talk to me.
Heck I've written two lab reports in the last 3 weeks that together are 60 pages and 16,000 words.
Correction: Thirty Thousand words which require creative thought to come to conclusions. I've heard this type of thought process is difficult for engineers
Originally posted by: Darien
It probably is. Most of the engineers I know suck at writing.
Originally posted by: jagec
Originally posted by: Darien
It probably is. Most of the engineers I know suck at writing.
Guess I must be the exception then.
Originally posted by: Siva
Every major is different, what kind of moron thinks there's a "hardest" major.
I spent 8 hours a week in labs which I get no credit for in addition to a full course load. Meanwhile most theatre majors at my school would faint at the idea of more than just 6 hours of classes a week. But if you asked me to act, I couldn't, no amount of classes or learning could make it easy for me. Meanwhile if you put any of them in a lab they'd probably freak out.
College is about finding what you like, what you want to study, and what you want to do with your life. That's what makes a major easy. If you're major is so difficult to you maybe you oughta switch.
<---- Chemistry major btw.
Originally posted by: Horus
Originally posted by: RaynorWolfcastle
Stupidest analogy ever, I could probably manage writing 30k+ words in 2 months (though I would probably hate it) .Originally posted by: Horus
HISTORY. When you EE majors write 30K+ words in 2 months for essays, come back and talk to me.
Heck I've written two lab reports in the last 3 weeks that together are 60 pages and 16,000 words.
Correction: Thirty Thousand words which require creative thought to come to conclusions. I've heard this type of thought process is difficult for engineers
Originally posted by: TheLonelyPhoenix
Originally posted by: Horus
Originally posted by: RaynorWolfcastle
Stupidest analogy ever, I could probably manage writing 30k+ words in 2 months (though I would probably hate it) .Originally posted by: Horus
HISTORY. When you EE majors write 30K+ words in 2 months for essays, come back and talk to me.
Heck I've written two lab reports in the last 3 weeks that together are 60 pages and 16,000 words.
Correction: Thirty Thousand words which require creative thought to come to conclusions. I've heard this type of thought process is difficult for engineers
Finish a 500 line C++ project in one night like I just did, then come back and tell me you didn't have to be "creative". n00b.
Originally posted by: loki8481
Originally posted by: TheLonelyPhoenix
Originally posted by: Horus
Originally posted by: RaynorWolfcastle
Stupidest analogy ever, I could probably manage writing 30k+ words in 2 months (though I would probably hate it) .Originally posted by: Horus
HISTORY. When you EE majors write 30K+ words in 2 months for essays, come back and talk to me.
Heck I've written two lab reports in the last 3 weeks that together are 60 pages and 16,000 words.
Correction: Thirty Thousand words which require creative thought to come to conclusions. I've heard this type of thought process is difficult for engineers
Finish a 500 line C++ project in one night like I just did, then come back and tell me you didn't have to be "creative". n00b.
but at the end of the night, your program either works or it doesn't work as an English major (and probably History too), even after the paper is done, we then have to defend it point-by-point, and can't really tell whether or not the teacher will like the thesis until we've already been graded.
Originally posted by: SwiftWind
learning cisco stuff is your worst nightmare. trust me.
Originally posted by: BigJ
Originally posted by: SwiftWind
learning cisco stuff is your worst nightmare. trust me.
Have you taken any mid-range college level engineering, math, or computer science courses? CCNA can be earned by a decently tech-savvy HS kid.
I know it goes far beyond that, but so do these majors I listed above. Unless you're talking about the upper level Cisco certifications (which take more years then a BS in eng, math, or cs to truly learn) I just can't agree with you.