Tis amazing as an engineering major to watch how many students drop as the calculus gets tougher and tougher.. Bri On Thu, 23 May 2002, David Lesher wrote:
Unnamed Administration sources reported that Brian said:
Computer science does enforce critical thinking skills, which are a very necessary part of any successful engineer's toolbox.
Remember that "Learned everything in Kindergarten" book a while back?
Well, a good engineering education teaches you less, but educates you more, than you might think.
Specifically, you learn how to know what you [don't] know, and how to learn more as needed.
But most pivotal, it hammers a *rigorous, systematic, problem solving approach* into you. If you can't grasp & embrace that, you'll be gone. As an older student, I watched lots of bright young faces, all smarter than YT, trip at that fence and change majors. (Me? I could never grok the sole philosophy course I tried...)
Just like no one can ever really write a large program, no one can solve a large problem. Just like a soldier dives for a foxhole when he hears weapons fire, and THEN thinks; when your reflex is "how do I break up {whatever} into parts I can handle?" then you're over the hump.
THAT won't be obsolete when Billy introduces Windows 20000, and we have 6ESS's & DMS 2500's.
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