July 1, 20178 yr Author 12 hours ago, Volta said: what kind of engineer.. Transportation system. Railroad, trucks, planes, ships, warehousing you name it. It's quite a broad programme (4 years), tbh. It looked at transportation more from logistics and supply chain point of view, but also included engingeering subjects like math, physics, drawing in Solidworks & AutoCad, mechanics to calculate loads on different elements, etc. Overall conception of programme is not bad, but the execution in my university was pretty terrible... Many professors lacked conception of how theory works in reality, most study materials hadn't been changed since around 2005, when the programme was estabilshed, etc. (basically that's what you get if you spend your whole life reading books and not working in the industry). TBH, neither me or my study mates are super excited about the quality we received, but degrees a degree. I guess. Edited July 1, 20178 yr by Magerange
July 1, 20178 yr 8 hours ago, Magerange said: Transportation system. Railroad, trucks, planes, ships, warehousing you name it. It's quite a broad programme (4 years), tbh. It looked at transportation more from logistics and supply chain point of view, but also included engingeering subjects like math, physics, drawing in Solidworks & AutoCad, mechanics to calculate loads on different elements, etc. Overall conception of programme is not bad, but the execution in my university was pretty terrible... Many professors lacked conception of how theory works in reality, most study materials hadn't been changed since around 2005, when the programme was estabilshed, etc. (basically that's what you get if you spend your whole life reading books and not working in the industry). TBH, neither me or my study mates are super excited about the quality we received, but degrees a degree. I guess. That's a good type of engineering to be in. Probably more job opportunities than other fields.
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