<p>it might be the easiest one. definitely top 3.</p>
<p>^ a lot of people that i’ve talked to have taken it thinking it was going to be an easy A. They regretted taking those classes because the curves are really high and it was more more work than they expected. Not difficult, just time consuming i guess. </p>
<p>Take it if you’re interested in it. IMO, civil engr. and MAE are easier.</p>
<p>Who is your professor? If it’s King for Engr110 then you can go to any discussion on friday and they are kind of a joke so you definitely do NOT have to go. My last like 5-6 discussions only lasted like 15-20 minutes each.</p>
<p>Also, it is pretty easy and way less stressful than math/ee/physics or whatever type classes you would take for other technical breadths since you just learn basic interest formulas and things like that which are essentially plug and play numbers into given formulas. </p>
<p>It’s not very difficult, but as others have said the curve is pretty high and most people aced all the homeworks, so don’t go in expecting to get an easy A but an easy B+ or B is probably more like it.</p>
<p>tech management courses were pretty easy but like others said, the curve is extremely high. just be sure you’re interested in the topic and explore the other options beyond engr110, 111, 112 (such as engr113, engr180, and anderson courses that may satisfy the tech breadth requirement).</p>
<p>How do you check Anderson courses that fulfill Tech Management?</p>
<p>@MadeinChina: Were you a CS major, if so what Sci-Tech classes did you take?</p>
<p>What do you think of this schedule?</p>
<p>I’m a CS&E major with EE as tech breadth:</p>
<p>CS1
EE10
EE100
EE103
CS111</p>
<p>I’m kinda scared about taking CS111. So far, I’ve completed all lower div CS classes and taken only one upper div class, CS M151A (Computer Architecture). Should I get more experience in other upper div classes before taking CS111 this fall? Thanks for your advice in advance!</p>
<p>
contact the professor and see if they will give you a PTE to take the course. also ask counselors to see if there are any available Anderson courses that may satisfy the requirement (reason some of them are now available to us is because the engr110-112 classes fill up every quarter and some students need one of the classes to graduate. as a result, some Anderson professors are forced to open up their classes to undergrad students). or if you’re particularly close to an Anderson professor, they can give you a PTE. then just talk to a counselor to see if you can petition the course to fulfill the requirement.</p>
<p>
nope, i was a CSE major. however, if i were CS, i would have taken the math sci-tech and gotten a math minor.</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>CS111 was my first upper div class. It’s really time consuming, and I don’t know whether or not it would go well with all those EE classes you’re planning to take. I found CS111 lectures to be really interesting though. You really shouldn’t miss any lectures even though notes are posted online because his tests are open ended and the questions are somewhat derived from the things he says during lecture.</p>
<p>What is ENGR 113 about, what kind of projects did you work on?</p>
<p>Hi there, can somebody comment on the quality and condition of the Chem Eng lab? Have visited some top ranked Chem Eng Schools only to be left wondering how they achieved this ranking with the condition of the labs.</p>
<p>Also, what percent of OOS comprise the UCLA eng class?</p>
<p>Thanks,
Vizsladad</p>
<p>Regarding CS, can someone comment on the issue of outsourcing? How much of a threat is it to CS majors? How much of a threat is it to those who are currently working in a CS-related field?</p>
<p>Thanks!</p>
<p>
We read two books in ENGR113 - one was ‘Crossing the Chasm’ and the other one was about Product Strategy and how companies compete against one another to dominate a specific market. For the most part, you discuss these books in class and the professor expands on the topics discussed.</p>
<p>The only real homework you have in the class is a case study with a large team (in my class, teams ranged from 8-15 people). In your case study presentation (you have about 1hour-1hour15min to present), you go over what strategies your company leveraged to become successful. Our team had the Apple case study (around iPhone 2G era) so it was pretty damn interesting.</p>
<p>Besides that, no other real homework assignments. No midterm. Short final exam (individual case study - 2-3 page report). My final was on Blu-ray vs. HD-DVD and how Blu-ray won the battle.</p>
<p>
The effects are pretty negligible unless you specifically want to become a trivial code monkey after you graduate.</p>
<p>
only the hsseas GE requirements</p>
<p>
I actually think I do want to be a “code monkey.”
Would you still call the effects minor… ? Thanks!</p>
<p>
Yes, I would :).</p>
<p>
If you want to be sure as sure can be, then confirm it with an oasa counselor. but yeah, I’m sure about it.</p>
<p>also, seasoasa.ucla.edu</p>
<p>@MadeInChina
haha! I see.</p>
<p>[url=<a href=“http://www.bls.gov/oco/ocos027.htm]Engineers[/url”>http://www.bls.gov/oco/ocos027.htm]Engineers[/url</a>]</p>
<p>The threat of outsource and offshore is real. My husband, brother in law and many church friends with 20+ years all have faced layoff in their careers and some multiple times. Although this economic down turn does not seems to be as severe compare to the burst of tech bubble sector years ago. Beside the health care professional, engineer still able to weather better as job hunting go. In the past, the main goal of offshore is labor cost reduction. However, the dynamic now have change, where it is partially a global strategy to position new market place. So, the present has a more two ways exchange. The IT industries as a whole, has also learn what function to offshore and want require team join effort and what not to do. It all depend on your job function and what engineering field. Try getting an internship if you can, make use of all connection from your parents, relatives and friends. That is how my S1 gain his internship this summer. When you internship, make friends with the older current employees and not just the intern alone. Have a good attitude during intern and do beyond what is being ask. A few good reference words will out shine any glorify resume for the future.</p>
<p>here’s the pdf with the sections and classes</p>
<p><a href=“http://www.registrar.ucla.edu/ge/GE-EngrNew09-10.pdf[/url]”>http://www.registrar.ucla.edu/ge/GE-EngrNew09-10.pdf</a></p>