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aerospace engineering; civil engineering, chemical engineering, mechanical engineering or any other engineering

2007-08-16 06:15:08 · 16 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Engineering

16 answers

About the only 'engineering' that will not require a great deal of personal effort and study is the 'engineering' of driving a garbage truck, and I wouldn't want to be on the road with one asking such a question at the wheel.

2007-08-16 06:23:14 · answer #1 · answered by credo quia est absurdum 7 · 3 0

Usually difficulty and salary are directly proportional, not inversely proportional. Engineering is hardly an exception to that rule.

Having survived a chemical engineering degree. . . certainly not that! We always liked to make fun of the civil engineering majors when I was an undergrad because that was "easiest" (well, if you throw out engineering management), but it's really all relative.

I'm presently in environmental engineering for grad school, and it doesn't really *seem* all that awful after a few years. . . but we must remember that my reference point here is ChE. A lot of the current issues in EnvE are also rather ChE in true nature and are just placed within the confines of a civil engineering program, so that also may be making me think this is somehow easier as I'm not having to learn much totally from scratch here.

2007-08-16 06:39:08 · answer #2 · answered by geek_girl 6 · 0 0

Engineering Management :-)

2007-08-16 08:15:07 · answer #3 · answered by muddypuppyuk 5 · 1 0

All of them require a lot of studying. There is no substitute for practice though. All of them are payed good enough, though aerospace engineering is paid the most.

2007-08-16 06:43:49 · answer #4 · answered by kill3r_beast 1 · 0 0

Waste Management Engineer (i.e. Garbage Man) or Custodial Engineer (i.e. Janitor). Seriously though, can pay pretty well.

2007-08-16 07:07:55 · answer #5 · answered by Ten Years Gone 4 · 1 0

You want to be a sanitation engineer. You get to work outside and make good money with very little required in the way of education.

2007-08-16 06:19:38 · answer #6 · answered by Jonathan B 3 · 7 0

None, they're all good money but they all involve intense, intense studying, good work ethic, and a strong math and science inclination. You cannot float through engineering, which is why many schools make it a 5-year program instead of 4.

2007-08-16 06:18:45 · answer #7 · answered by Jon G 4 · 4 0

engineering is not easy..if you are only looking for the good pay you can go & sell drugs..
you have to love engineering & the good experience is what gives you a good pay

2007-08-16 07:35:03 · answer #8 · answered by edward n 1 · 0 0

They're all very hard; that's why they pay so well. Not many people have the necessary skills for engineering jobs.

2007-08-16 06:18:43 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 4 0

Depends on who you are.

To some people all parts of engineering are easy.

To others, no parts of engineering are easy.

2007-08-16 16:05:01 · answer #10 · answered by gatorbait 7 · 0 0

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