Sorry if this has been answered before. However I looked through a few threads and I didn't find any useful information.
My dilemma is as follows: I am a senior in EE and graduating this spring, but from what little experience I've had in the world as an engineer (doing senior project design)...
C268. I don't think we have to take Thermodynamics or Fluids, but I know we have to take Engineering Stats which I have heard lots of terrible things about. I know a couple of the guys that are almost done with the EE program, and they said that Electrodynamics is a pretty rough class.. well all...
My physics class is considered the first physics in the calculus based physics series - It is titled "Mechanics" and geared for engineers and scientists. I am majoring in Electrical Engineering, so that information is good/scary to hear. From what I have heard most of the physics classes at UW...
By computational, do you mean they are mostly "cookbook" plug-and-chug type math? I have been reading into Matrix Algebra a little bit and it seems terribly tedious, but after reading into Diff EQ, it seems more straight forward; just lots of integration. Was Matrix Algebra hard for you?
Hello, I am currently signed up for Fall Quarter Engineering Physics, Diff EQ, and Matrix algebra at the University of Washington.
Right now I am sort of skeptical if I should drop one of these classes because I have heard horror stories from at least one of each of these classes. I got a B-...
To those of which who said they took Differential Equations: Would it be academic suicide to take Programming 2, Calc-Based physics, and Differential Equations at the same time?
I am a Electrical Engineering pre-major at UW, and I am currently taking Cal 2 in the Summer. I find that most of the material is pretty simple to grasp; however my teacher can hardly complete an English sentence, and let alone clearly explain calculus.. The only reason that I am surviving it...