<p>what is the hardest engineering major and why</p>
<p>That so depends on you. if you are bad at chem… then chemE is not for you…if you are bad at electricity & comp hardware…then ECE isnt for you. basically you question is too vague.</p>
<p>What are you good at and bad at?</p>
<p>im just saying like which major is the hardest to learn… doesn’t matter what your good or bad at.</p>
<p>Most Engineering students would say EE or ChemE.</p>
<p>as im_blue said, it’s normally EE or ChemE. I would also add Bioengineering, Aeronautical Engineering, Nuclear Engineering to the list.</p>
<p>then what’s the easiest?</p>
<p>which one is most in demand(in US)?</p>
<p>Civil / Environmental is the easiest.</p>
<p>I don’t think you should pick an engineering major by how easy it is…if you like electrical stuff go for EE…it might be a little harder than say CE but you are interested in it and would probably get more out of it.</p>
<p>How hard is mechanical engineering compared to other majors particularly Electrical?</p>
<p>It depends on what you are good at…
If you are good at trying to make a spring the right constant and then stretch it back far enough so that it would shoot far enough off a table to land in a canister that is a certain distance away from the table and that is hanging at the end of a rod with the other end weighted so that it would not fall when the canister has nothing in it but will fall at a certain speed when a ball is in it so that it passes an object accelerating at a certain rate to make the object spin the right speed so that another marble that is on this object will fall off of the object at the right angle so that it will hit a certain target so that once the object hits the target right on the dot, there will be enough of an impact so that the energy from that collision is used to make the target ‘implode’ thus pushing down on water that is located underneath this target so that the water will rise a certain amount in a tube which will make it overflow putting out a fire, then mechanical engineering is right for you :)</p>
<p>^^ What he said</p>
<p><em>faints</em></p>
<p>lol</p>
<p>lololol</p>
<p>Hell with that!</p>
<p>I think I’ll go with Civil.</p>
<p>Make a thing with some rocks that pile up and don’t fall down if you open a door or blow wind at it.</p>
<p>Rereading that just made me very very confused!
When I was typing it I just incorporated everything I learned from the mechanics portion of my physics class</p>
<p>it is without a doubt in my mind—> electrical and computer engineering, followed by chemical and biomedical</p>
<p>engineering physics and then computer engineering fo sure…</p>
<p>I think the difficulty of cs/ce (computer science/engineering) is underrated by a long shot. It’s a very different kind of engineering, in that really only certain kinds of people are good at grasping it. I can’t really compare it to anything, but too often people seem to think it’s just a step harder than civil</p>
<p>is materials science considered a branch of engineering? or is it like computer science?</p>
<p>materials science usually deals with ceramics… that’s what materials science at rutgers is at least
to answer the question, that would be a branch of engineering</p>
<p>Materials science is a branch of Chemical Engineering. Areas of specialty include ceramics, polymers, and electronic materials.</p>