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4 answers

A curriculum of general engineering should be appropriate. Check with the university you plan to transfer to and make sure that they will accept the credits from wherever you are planning to go for your Assoc. degree.

2007-01-22 04:22:36 · answer #1 · answered by . 4 · 0 0

Check what courses you need for a pertoleum engineering degree and take those courses for your associates degree.
It could be a general degree. The courses you need will most likely qualify you for an associates degree in Chemistry. Make sure the classes are transferable.

2007-01-22 12:30:24 · answer #2 · answered by Dennis Fargo 5 · 0 0

A minimum of a batchelor's degree is required to call oneself an engineer. Associate's degrees are not required to get a batchelor's. So engineers usually don't get associate's degrees, they just go straight for the BS. (pun intended)

If you are going to a community college, I would take the pre-engineering curriculum, if the have one. If not, seriously think of going to another college. You will need certain engineering classes in your freshman and sophomore year. Not taking them then will seriously affect your schedule and probably delay getting into a engineering upper division school/department. If you have to pick a "major" for the AS, then pick either math or physics.

2007-01-22 14:12:12 · answer #3 · answered by Imagineer 3 · 1 0

math.

2007-01-22 12:22:31 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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