physics
engineering (whichever type is the toughest)
What do you think are the hardest majors?
And you can voice your biases you liberal art bas s.![]()
physics
engineering (whichever type is the toughest)
_____ engineering
_____ engineering
_____ engineering
_____ engineering
_____ engineering
tbh
Out of the engineering(s), I would argue that chemical engineering is probably the hardest, but I am biased.
Not counting any of the engineering(s), I would list
1. Physics
2. Math
3. Chemistry
4. Economics
5. Accounting
at the top of my head tbh
tbh i take pretty much all my math/science classes with engineers (majoring in geophysics) and i've never seen a group of people cheat so much
This is true. I know an engineering/accounting double major and he's a huge cheater/isn't really that smart.
all i know is it would ing suck to be an economics major, i could do almost any type of engineering before i did that . accounting is hard, but for some people it's extremely easy. it's one of those either you get it or you don't type things, and most people don't. chemical, aerospace, physics, gotta be at the top imo.
Depends on what one considers hard. My major (or should I say field of study, since I'm all graduate level and ) is as pretentious and academic as it gets, and as a result none of the work I have to do is particularly complicated or confusing, but it's far from easy. Just lots of reading, discussion based seminar classes, research, and the production of (hopefully) rigorous scholarly arguments and papers. But not everyone's cut out for it. My younger sister is currently double majoring in organic chemistry and microbiology, while also training as an EMT (so hardly averse to hard work), but you couldn't pay her to do what I'm doing.
An important point, actually. I would guess all majors are as hard and/or challenging as you make them. I've never been the type to be satisfied with skating by, and am too prone to boredom when I'm not challenged, so I've never let my lowly liberal arts major be the easy ride it probably could be.
i dont give a if it's a stupid curriculum class. i don't like to cheat in most of my geology/science classes unless i have to. on the other hand, for a sociology class i needed, i only showed up twice for both tests and got an A because my friend had the answers
Well, now, let's be realistic. No one ever has to cheat. Just as no one ever has to study thoroughly enough to be prepared for a test. There's a choice made, there.
What is your area of study?
damn brah i swear your major changes every time. you trying to be at tech for life or somethin bro? lol
crofl wtf I don't get it.... 2 people, economics, really? dis is pretty easy![]()
I started my major in Mechanical Engineering, then changed my major about a year ago to Computer Science this is my last semester of basics. I'm hoping for the best.
the mass comm thing was just bull . used it to troll someone awhile ago tbh
My undergrad degree is in Art History with a minor in Multicultural Studies. And I also almost completed a second major in studio art (which, I know, isn't particularly demanding academically, but also isn't as easy as folks assume).
I'm currently at about the midpoint of an MA in Art History, and will likely follow that up with a second master's in Library/Information Science.
you major in it? how far are you? get's pretty hairy because it's not an exact science, it's all theoretical and there are so many factors that weigh in, sometimes things you learn even seem to be contradicting. (comparing different models or theories)
why not just get a real degree at 22 and be done with it instead of being 32 and not only being broke but actually being in the negatives with all your debt? tbh
EDIT: and before you give me that generic response about picking what you are interested in and it not being all about money, there are about 15-20 different "useful" degrees I'm sure at least one of them would be of interest to you imho.
most majors are easy if you understand and have a passion with the interests whats taught in those courses/subjects...
Just look for the most asperger-laden college students and ask them!
Probably physics @ #1. Lots of really mind-bending big ideas and even more unanswered questions. It's computationally difficult with lots of ODE, PDE, probability, stats, group theory, numerical analysis, differential geometry, linear and multilinear algebra, functional analysis, etc. Then hands-on work in the lab and some programming skill is required too.
Last edited by baseline bum; 10-18-2011 at 11:47 PM.
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