- #1
AXidenT
- 26
- 2
Hey guys, I'm in my final year of high school and, like many, am struggling to decide what to do at uni next year.
*Random boring stuff* I do all science and maths subjects and am usually in the top three or so for each depending on the time and how hard I work (if at all), but generally I'm not a super smart genius type person. Of all my subjects, I find the theory in physics to be the most interesting and enjoyable and am quite keen to go a bit deeper with it all. However, my skills aren't limited to maths and physics, let alone science, I'm generally best student in the school at English and am quite "creative" I guess.
Anyway ignoring all that, I've been looking at Physics, Engineering and Maths at Uni. I looked at the courses for each and the ones in Physics and Maths did seem to become far more interesting than those in Engineering. However, everyone seems to imply Engineering is the much more sensible route to take, but for some reason I don't like the idea of doing it (not the right way to think of it, but everyone in my maths classes seem to be heading that way).
Generally, can someone say what each course entails in terms of intullectual demand and where you'd most likely end up? Thanks for your time. :P
BTW, what forum would I post asking how to modify the double slit experiment for an assignment?
*Random boring stuff* I do all science and maths subjects and am usually in the top three or so for each depending on the time and how hard I work (if at all), but generally I'm not a super smart genius type person. Of all my subjects, I find the theory in physics to be the most interesting and enjoyable and am quite keen to go a bit deeper with it all. However, my skills aren't limited to maths and physics, let alone science, I'm generally best student in the school at English and am quite "creative" I guess.
Anyway ignoring all that, I've been looking at Physics, Engineering and Maths at Uni. I looked at the courses for each and the ones in Physics and Maths did seem to become far more interesting than those in Engineering. However, everyone seems to imply Engineering is the much more sensible route to take, but for some reason I don't like the idea of doing it (not the right way to think of it, but everyone in my maths classes seem to be heading that way).
Generally, can someone say what each course entails in terms of intullectual demand and where you'd most likely end up? Thanks for your time. :P
BTW, what forum would I post asking how to modify the double slit experiment for an assignment?