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What is the easiest engineering degree to earn?

I am considering getting my bachelors in engineering but am unsure as of which type. Any background info would be helpful. Thank you!

Asked By: jenny42203 - 9/2/2008
Best Answer - Chosen by Asker
If you are asking which engineering degree is easiest to earn, you aren't qualified for an engineering degree. None of them are easy to earn. It's a time intensive, math intensive, and detail oriented field where they don't allow for mistakes or half hearted work. These people are serious because they have to be. They don't accept second best on any job. I know because I'm married to one and guess who my friends are? Find another field if you want easy!

EDIT: Seriously, it's like asking what is the easiest medical degree to earn. Do you want a lazy doctor responsible for your care? Do you want an engineer who 1/2 tried to be responsible for the money you invest into an oil company. And the guy wasn't worried so he ordered the company to drill the oil well 5 feet over from where the oil was trapped underneath the ground. There goes your millions of dollars with that dry hole he just ordered to be dug. Or how about traveling on a complicated highway interchange, and the engineer who approved the plans wasn't the best in the business. Would you wonder why the slope of the road seemed a bit "off" for some reason? These guys just can't afford mistakes. Easy isn't in their vocabulary!

Sorry about the lecture, but your question isn't even reasonable in my mind.
Answered By: Woods - 9/2/2008
Additional Answers ()
The first couple years are all similar between the majors. Mechanical Engineering is probably the easiest engineering degree to earn. The concepts are intuitive and generally less abstract compared to other majors The mechanical engineering field is generally very stable as well. Good luck!
Answered By: kevin kyle tidemand - 9/3/2008
When I was an undergrad, we tended to make the most fun of engineering management/industrial engineering and also civil engineering. I don't know if that necessarily correlates to ease of major, but that would be how I'd guess.

However, it's never a good idea to pick your discipline by how difficult it is. Even the easiest one's going to be rough for at least a few semesters. . . and then it's the part where you at least *used* to like the field for what it is and where it will get you later that keep you going. Trust me, because I've seen this over and over -- I've been either an undergrad engineering major myself or have had them working for me in the lab for almost a decade in total. Going into a certain discipline just because it's easiest is setting yourself up for failure at least as much as going into it for the future salary will.

What do you like about the idea of being an engineer? Presuming it's not 100?bout the salary -- I'm told you really have to work for that, too, beyond the 4-5 years of trial just to be qualified for it -- that might tell you something about which flavor to pursue.
Source(s):
engineering Ph.D. student
Answered By: geek_girl - 9/2/2008
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