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clazziquai
6685 Posts
-Physics -Math -Biology -Chemistry | ||
MaZza[KIS]
Australia2107 Posts
No. 2 - Physics (this will apply irrespective of what discipline: electrical, civil, telecomm etc. etc. but the dosages may be different) No.3 and No.4 Differ between biology and chemistry... for example, enviro will need some biology, whereas a civil engineer may not do any, yet a civil engineer will need to know a bit more chemistry to understand the bonding and such of cement, grout, etc. etc. I finished Telecommunication Engineering at University of Sydney (Australia) Quick edit: if you're asking so you know "which subjects to pic". I'd go with maths and physics as prerequisites and bio and chem as optional. You may need to do chem if you intend to do civil type engineering as opposed to something electrical (p.s. theories in chemistry will help you with, say, computer engineering, to understand things at atomic/sub-atomic level, but you'll get pretty much the same knowledge from physics) Hope that help. | ||
infinity21
Canada6683 Posts
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clazziquai
6685 Posts
Industrial Engineering, hopefully by my second year. I know for sure it's Math and Physics, but I want to know what is more important between those two. As for bio/chem, I asked because I'm taking chemistry my first year (most likely) | ||
geometryb
United States1249 Posts
politics religion english history | ||
MaZza[KIS]
Australia2107 Posts
On June 02 2008 12:43 clazziquai wrote: Hmm Industrial Engineering, hopefully by my second year. I know for sure it's Math and Physics, but I want to know what is more important between those two. As for bio/chem, I asked because I'm taking chemistry my first year (most likely) If you're doing Industrial Maths, Chem and Physics ALL be equally important. Forget Bio. | ||
clazziquai
6685 Posts
On June 02 2008 12:43 geometryb wrote: art politics religion english history ROFL </3 | ||
clazziquai
6685 Posts
On June 02 2008 12:45 MaZza[KIS] wrote: Show nested quote + On June 02 2008 12:43 clazziquai wrote: Hmm Industrial Engineering, hopefully by my second year. I know for sure it's Math and Physics, but I want to know what is more important between those two. As for bio/chem, I asked because I'm taking chemistry my first year (most likely) If you're doing Industrial Maths, Chem and Physics ALL be equally important. Forget Bio. Oh I see. Thanks for clearing it up. ^^ Good to have an actual Engineering student answer my question. Thanks once again | ||
We Are Here
Australia1810 Posts
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clazziquai
6685 Posts
On June 02 2008 12:55 We Are Here wrote: what engineering dicipline are u looking at? cause for civil eng. you need to be good at integration/differentiation or are you doing core engineering for the first 2 or so years then specialise afterwards? industrial eng. | ||
imDerek
United States1944 Posts
physics math chemistry biology for Industrial engineering | ||
Plexa
Aotearoa39261 Posts
everything else is a derivative | ||
HeavOnEarth
United States7087 Posts
On June 02 2008 13:30 Plexa wrote: Math Math Math Math Math everything else is a derivative yeah, the cool thing about engineering is everything can be understood; other subjects are just memorization hax ; and politics is a web T_T | ||
Failsafe
United States1298 Posts
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Myrmidon
United States9452 Posts
+ Show Spoiler + j/k Honestly I'd say math is the most important for most engineering (from personal experience, definitely in EE by far), but IE might be the exception. I know in my school's IE curriculum that IE requires 1 semester less math than most engineering and all sorts of introductory basics in many fields (intro statics, intro circuits/EE, intro materials science, etc.) So I'm thinking physics may be the most important, followed closely by math. Chemistry...may be important for an IE doing traditional work in the manufacturing field depending on the type of manufacturing being done I guess. Biology's definitely the least important. | ||
Wizard
Poland5055 Posts
On June 02 2008 12:43 geometryb wrote: art politics religion english history lol | ||
MaZza[KIS]
Australia2107 Posts
On June 02 2008 13:40 Myrmidon wrote: You need math to do imaginary engineering? + Show Spoiler + j/k Honestly I'd say math is the most important for most engineering (from personal experience, definitely in EE by far), but IE might be the exception. I know in my school's IE curriculum that IE requires 1 semester less math than most engineering and all sorts of introductory basics in many fields (intro statics, intro circuits/EE, intro materials science, etc.) So I'm thinking physics may be the most important, followed closely by math. Chemistry...may be important for an IE doing traditional work in the manufacturing field depending on the type of manufacturing being done I guess. Biology's definitely the least important. so basically what I said? | ||
HeadBangaa
United States6512 Posts
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kransekake
Norway24 Posts
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thedeadhaji
39473 Posts
plus oftentimes in engineering you don't really need to "understand" the physics, just use it, and using it requires math. | ||
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