take a public speaking class, or a writing class. engineers who communicate effectively both written and orally are much more valuable than those limited to calculation skills. the ability to work well with others, identify and coordinate critical resources, plan, organize, set and meet reasonable deadlines are valuable skills you dont get in class.
2007-07-15 02:55:35
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answer #1
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answered by mpgmich 2
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Engineering courses vary depending on what country you live in and what university you’re attending to. However, I would think regardless of that… Physics, Algebra, and Calculus would be obviously requirements and good courses for engineering. For my first semester, I’m taking Engineering Professional Development, Engineering Mechanics, Computer-aided Analysis, Differential Calculus, Linear Algebra, and General Chemistry. Second semester… Engineering mechanics II, Electric Circuits, Graphical Communications, Computer-aided Design, Integral Calculus and Introductory Physics II.
And besides your school will tell you the requirements so as the other person said... it's not the courses you take that will make you a good engineer because Engineering is a very prearranged and controlled program... they will tell you what courses you'll need to take.
Good Luck =)
2007-07-11 15:21:40
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answer #2
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answered by A 2
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Well first of all its not the courses that make you a good engineer. Its the effort you put into them and the ability you have.
Different schools will have different req for the major. And each school will definitely tell you what you need to take to get the degree.
2007-07-11 15:15:04
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answer #3
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answered by Lady Geologist 7
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English. Really though, nothing makes an engineer better than experience. You can learn only so much from books, but takes a lot to apply that in practice. Just keep working.
2007-07-11 18:10:38
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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if you are talking out of high school type of coarses pretty much science and math classes (more specifically look towards physics and chemistry for math algebra for basics, geometry and calc)
if your wondering what type of college coarses you will be taking you are going to want mechanical and electrical engineering, chemical engineering, architecture and calculus if you havent taken it (should probably take it again though)
2007-07-11 15:26:08
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answer #5
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answered by somethin_fierce 2
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all of the required courses are listed in the college catalog. You wont get a degree unless you take them.
2007-07-11 15:47:25
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answer #6
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answered by bignose68 4
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