Industrial engineering covers a variety of engineering fields, such as electrical, mechanical and computer engineering. Majoring in this title, it qualifies you for a wider varieties of engineering careers.
Yes, engineering jobs are some of the highest paying jobs you can get without being the CEO of a huge megacorp. Hope this answered your question!!!!!!
A career in engineering is one of the least competitive and highly paying areas of study. Due to the difficulty of achieving an engineering degree, it is a highly sought career option, but hard to obtain.
There are many good paying jobs in the health field. Any type of physician would be a good choice. Anesthesiology and Radiation are also lucrative careers to pursue.
At least, you have a good chance. You'll need a lot of math in engineering. Also consider whether you like science in general, for example, physics.
good wages so they could buy his cars.
You might want to look at some of the applied science areas such as, mechanical engineering technology, electronics engineering technology, or robotics engineering technology. You can search for schools with these majors by clicking on the related links section (College Board) indicated below. Each school should give you an explanation of the program. You can start at the associates level or bachelors level.
Well, people who do well in computer engineering and programming are usually also good at math. If the student's grades are good, then maybe they should consider a double major. It's up to them.
One of the best engineering programs I know of is NJIT, they are located in New Jersey and are great. If I knew where you were located I could look it up for you.
Aeronautical engineering or chemical engineering is GOOD
Your sentence is a tautology: trimming it a bit yields:"Do you suck at engineering if you are [...] bad at [...] engineering?"The other subjects add nothing; you could throw in polo and underwater basketweaving as well (on either the "good" or "bad" side) and the sentence would still be true.If this is an example of your typical thought process, I can pretty much conclude that yeah, you're bad at engineering, physics, chemistry, and programming, and I could even be specific as to why. Also, you're not nearly as good at math as you think you are (you might be good at arithmetic, which is something different).
Everyone will have different reasons. Maybe you're good at math and science, maybe you enjoy solving problems, or discovering how things work. Perhaps you have a desire to change the world, or just want a good paying job.
depends what kind of engineering