![]() |
Re: Why Science Majors Change Their Minds (It’s Just So Darn Hard)
Quote:
|
Re: Why Science Majors Change Their Minds (It’s Just So Darn Hard)
My experience as someone who graduated from Northeastern University in 2010 with a BS in Mechanical Engineering:
The first couple of semesters at NU for an engineering student were definitely a shock to some. I felt much more prepared for engineering school than most of my peers and I think that had to do with taking several AP classes, and my participating in FIRST throughout high school. Many of my peers had issues adjusting to college and learning to balance social life with school work. You could see definite struggles for people who coasted through high school without having to really dig in (I credit my AP Chemistry teacher in high school for really showing me and my classmates how hard work can result in a remarkable improvement in understanding the subject matter- best teacher I ever had). Being on the FIRST team also instilled this in a couple of ways. First, you had to learn to balance robotics with school work in high school (in addition to social life). On top of that, you also learned to really dig in and solve problems. It taught me that putting actual hard work into something can yield promising results. If i were to estimate, I'd say 1/4 of my classmates freshman year understood this principle. I'd say another 1/2 eventually figured it out, and the last 1/4 eventually threw in the towel. Obviously these are not concrete numbers, but I'd say they are close estimate to reality. If you can reasonably estimate that the top 25% of students can handle engineering coming into the school, and the bottom 25% are most likely not cut out- the question for me becomes how do you keep the middle 50% sticking around? For Northeastern they do it with co-op. Co-op is the reason I chose Northeastern, and it quite literally has shaped my life. For those unfamiliar with NU, it is a 5 year school where you spend 18 months working full-time at a company. This 18 months is split into (3) 6 month chunks. Oh, and you lose your summers because you must take classes to make up for the lost time spent on co-op. This last fact turns a lot of people off, but co-op has made a world of difference for me and my classmates. Spending time at an engineering job and learning how that job works helps people in several ways. You learn what being an engineer is like in a couple different companies which helps to show you the spectrum of jobs available. It shows you a real world application for some of the material you are learning in class. Lastly, it gives you a respectable paycheck which can show you what sticking with engineering can result in (not to say you cannot make money in other disciplines). Northeastern has been climbing college ranking boards at a blistering pace because they have really embraced cooperative education. It may not be for everyone, but in terms of engineering and retaining students, it seems like an obvious answer to me. -Brando |
Re: Why Science Majors Change Their Minds (It’s Just So Darn Hard)
My advice to people interested in improving education: become a teacher.
Quote:
|
Re: Why Science Majors Change Their Minds (It’s Just So Darn Hard)
:)
Quote:
The extended co-op sessions allow you to spend more time with your mentors and get involved in real-world projects at a much deeper level. My two extended sessions better prepared me for my eventual job more than anything else I took part in during my college career (which, sadly, was devoid of FIRST, even though Team 48 was just getting started at the time I was on co-op. Did anyone think to invite the n00b co-op student to help out and go to Disney and win the Championship Event in 1999? NooooooooOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!! Yeah, I'm not bitter. ;) ) Did I mention they pay you money to do this? Co-op is highly recommended. |
Re: Why Science Majors Change Their Minds (It’s Just So Darn Hard)
Hey everyone,
I have read most of the article and your opinions and I thought to shed a light over what is going on overseas. I am from Israel and I am also a university student there, even though I am not taking anything related to engineering, I am taking several math classes and stats classes. I am doing a double major in psychology and biology. here in Israel things are a little different since not like in other countries we have to draft to the army fresh out of high-school. girls serve for 2 years and guys serve for 3. after that we need to do an exam that is similar to the SAT's in order to get in to universities. (BTW the funny thing is you need to get a higher score in that said test in order to get in psychology then into engineering). (just for the record we are now an average of 3-4 years after high-school when we had any kind of class, math included). most of us usually work for a while because we don't have students loans here usually (most people don't take them anyway) so we pretty much pay for tuition ourselves or our parents do. so basically we go into university 4-6 years after we graduated from high school, without remembering anything about math, equations, or even chemistry, biology, anything like that, and of course we start at a university level math which as you all know is not that easy. that make most people fail the classes, or simply drop out of them. and not just in engineering. I also believe that if we have more engineers, they will have work. the science field and engineering fields keep growing and finding new ways to combine fields that are no necessarily related (such as psychology and biology). just a point for thought. :) Or from Israel |
Re: Why Science Majors Change Their Minds (It’s Just So Darn Hard)
Quote:
Quote:
Summer interns get paid too. ;) |
Re: Why Science Majors Change Their Minds (It’s Just So Darn Hard)
Quote:
Please reconsider your blanket statements. |
Re: Why Science Majors Change Their Minds (It’s Just So Darn Hard)
Quote:
|
Re: Why Science Majors Change Their Minds (It’s Just So Darn Hard)
Quote:
Also, please note that UIUC is a top-notch school; I'm sure they do well because they have these things figured out. Other state schools (and there are tons, for sure) have variable quality. |
Re: Why Science Majors Change Their Minds (It’s Just So Darn Hard)
Quote:
Quote:
|
Re: Why Science Majors Change Their Minds (It’s Just So Darn Hard)
Quote:
I'm more annoyed because you're assuming all state schools are large. SDSM&T, where I go, has somewhere in the neighborhood of 2,000 undergrad students, and is a state school, and specializes in engineering/science. And we're highly rated. (Don't even get me going about our competition teams--we've had at least one year where every team--at that time, 12 of them--was in the top 10 at competition.) Stereotyping negatively doesn't exactly make you the most liked person in the area that you stereotype negatively, for some reason. |
Re: Why Science Majors Change Their Minds (It’s Just So Darn Hard)
Quote:
Boiler Up. I think I understand what you were trying to say, and it is noble, but I will not expand on it for fear of putting words in someone's mouth. Suffice it to say that students get out of college what they put in to it. Effort = Education. |
Re: Why Science Majors Change Their Minds (It’s Just So Darn Hard)
Quote:
Edit: My use of figurative language at times is a problem, considering how literal it appears. Taylor is far more eloquent than I am. |
Re: Why Science Majors Change Their Minds (It’s Just So Darn Hard)
I will just counter the large schools one with this.
I go to Iowa State University a school with 25,000 undergraduates. I am one of about 150 Materials Engineers on campus. You can't look at the size of a school to generalize either, you have to do in depth analysis of the program. You know what they say about what happens when you assume. Maybe I am overly defensive but ISU's Mat E program is one of the better programs in the country and we have the most engineering grad students at ISU. The student to faculty ratio in Mat E is 6:1, pretty crazy for a state school of 25,000 and we also have things like Ames Lab and the Center for Non-destructive Evaluation. You cannot base anything on a single statistic. |
Re: Why Science Majors Change Their Minds (It’s Just So Darn Hard)
Quote:
I never mentioned specifics in my post because it's impossible to have the time to point out every single specific instance of where some schools do it right and others do it wrong. If your's happens to do it right by making sure most students can transition to the more demanding curriculum within the first two years, props for it. The number of grad students is completely irrelevant to what I was saying, unless they all happen to be TA's and working with all undergraduates. |
| All times are GMT -5. The time now is 18:46. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2017, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © Chief Delphi