Dear Asker,
My Name is Dr. Patrick Vegar. I am a Doctor or Chemistry (DChem). I recieved my Degree from the University of Queensland. It took 5.5 years to receive a Doctorate in that discipline. Although, you must complete your Bachelor and Master of Chemistry before you advance on further, it is a University requirement.
Regards,
Dr. Patrick Vegar
ANGLICAN CHURCH GRAMMAR SCHOOL
Chemical Engineering prepares students for anything. The Chemistry aspect teaches you process on a molecular level and how they affect everything else. The engineering aspect teaches you math and other engineering concepts such as Thermodynamics and Transfer Operations. With Chemical Engineering under your belt, you should be able to be anything from a food scientist to a fuel cell developer to a plastic engineering designer to anything that involves the environment. Basically, Cheg prepares you for creating more efficient processes that save money and time. Also, it is a very difficult major to accomplish, showing that you are hard working and are willing to take challenges. Chemical Engineers can basically do anything, as long as they continue to work hard and push towards bettering their abilities and knowledge.
it takes 1 day
You go to an engineering school or college and take a course in Engineering Drawing.
Yes, but you will probably have to take some basic petroleum engineering prerequisites before completing the degree.
Well I would not say "most people" but yeah some people opt for a an MBA after their Engineering, Why? here are some reasons: 1) An MBA provides strategic outlook of the business across functional confines 2) Equips one with the soft skills needed to progress to a senior management role such as leadership, communication skills, business analysis tools 3) Some engineers opt for bachelors in engineering to broaden their horizon and develop problem solving, analytical skill that a professional degree provides. Masters would take them deeper into specialised areas (design, R&D etc) which they are not keen to pursue 4) Engineers who opt for MBA want to apply/ implement their technical skill in a business context. I always say "There is no point in designing a technically superior- engineering marvel of a product if there are no buyers for it"... Hence an MBA on top of a technical degree is an enabler which allows you to implement your skill/ knowledge in the real world
Well, believe it or not, it is somewhat possible. The chair in my chemical engineering department at the University of Toronto,is actually an applied chemist who took a masters in chemical engineering. But, in terms of knowledge, I believe that a chemist lacks fundamental knowledge about thermodynamics, fluid dynamics, process control, etc.. These core courses really define a chemical engineer at the bachelors level. In short, you will not be considered a chemical engineer with a chemistry degree. You can get a masters aftewards in chemical engineering, but the uses for that are somewhat debatable.
3 years after your masters. My dad has a pHd in Electrical Engineering. :D
1 year apperntice 3 years joneryman then masters so 4 years
A masters in civil engineering can run from 32 to 36 credits to complete. The approximate time to complete the degree can typically run from two to three years depending on course load per semester.
At the masters level, it could take approximately three years, depending on the program of study and the course load taken per semester.
no
Engineering Degree
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Yes it is.
chemical engineering
Generally, a masters in business can take two to three years to complete depending on the specialty.
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