Courses Which foreign language course is best for a mechanical engineering major?

  • Thread starter Thread starter jcsolis
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Course Language
AI Thread Summary
Choosing between Chinese and German for a foreign language requirement in a mechanical engineering program involves weighing career prospects and language learning challenges. Mandarin is highlighted as a valuable asset due to China's rapid economic growth and increasing demand for engineers, potentially broadening job opportunities. However, achieving fluency in Mandarin requires a significant investment of time—approximately 2400 hours for native English speakers—compared to around 800 hours for German. While learning Mandarin can demonstrate cultural awareness, German may be more practical for business use and easier to learn. Additionally, some engineering programs may exempt students from foreign language requirements, which could influence the decision.
jcsolis
Messages
37
Reaction score
1
Hello everyone, I am a mechanical engineering major and I have to decide which course in foreign language to take because is required at my school. I am between chinese and german, but I want to pick one that can help me in my future career.

Any suggestions?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
jcsolis said:
Hello everyone, I am a mechanical engineering major and I have to decide which course in foreign language to take because is required at my school. I am between chinese and german, but I want to pick one that can help me in my future career.

Any suggestions?

You can't go wrong with learning mandarin, China is growing rapidly, and i imagine engineers will continue to be needed there at exponential rates. That would open your job possibilities quite i bit i imagine
 
walksofar said:
You can't go wrong with learning mandarin, China is growing rapidly, and i imagine engineers will continue to be needed there at exponential rates. That would open your job possibilities quite i bit i imagine

Before you jump into learning Mandarin, you have to recognise the amount of work it takes to become fluent in an asian language. For a native English speaker, it takes around 2400 hours of study to become fluent in an Asian language, compared to 800 hours with a European language.

I studied Japanese for 3 years, and loved it. Am I fluent in it?...well, I did 6 months of French and I probably speak that better now.

If you want to show cultural awareness, and are actually interested in it, by all means do Mandarin. But, if you want a foreign language to use as a business tool with any fluency, I'd choose German.
 
Also realize that Mandarin will also have a completely different character set... one that is huge!

My school excuses Engineering students from Foreign Langauge requirements, but we also need more than the 120 credits standard to graduate.
 
I'm going to make this one quick since I have little time. Background: Throughout my life I have always done good in Math. I almost always received 90%+, and received easily upwards of 95% when I took normal-level HS Math courses. When I took Grade 9 "De-Streamed" Math (All students must take "De-Streamed" in Canada), I initially had 98% until I got very sick and my mark had dropped to 95%. The Physics teachers and Math teachers talked about me as if I were some sort of genius. Then, an...
Bit Britain-specific but I was wondering, what's the best path to take for A-Levels out of the following (I know Y10 seems a bit early to be thinking about A-levels, but my choice will impact what I do this year/ in y11) I (almost) definitely want to do physics at University - so keep that in mind... The subjects that I'm almost definitely going to take are Maths, Further Maths and Physics, and I'm taking a fast track programme which means that I'll be taking AS computer science at the end...
After a year of thought, I decided to adjust my ratio for applying the US/EU(+UK) schools. I mostly focused on the US schools before, but things are getting complex and I found out that Europe is also a good place to study. I found some institutes that have professors with similar interests. But gaining the information is much harder than US schools (like you have to contact professors in advance etc). For your information, I have B.S. in engineering (low GPA: 3.2/4.0) in Asia - one SCI...
Back
Top