Engineering Degrees Ranked By Salary (Tier List)
Вставка
- Опубліковано 1 лют 2024
- In this video, I have ranked the top 20 most studied engineering degrees by salary. Enjoy!
Want to know how to be a straight A student? Sign up for my ‘2.0 to 4.0 Masterclass' - www.jakeryland.com/service-pa...
My book - amzn.to/47zJPiH
Resumeble - shareasale.com/r.cfm?b=115067...
Video editing is getting better
Thanks!
I ordered your book on Amazon and totally came across your channel by chance! I will definitely be watching regularly
Awesome! Thank you! dont forget to leave a review for the book if you have a minute. much appreciated
I'm not sure if there's a video discussing this already but would you consider making a video briefly discussing how fields may affect engineers from different disciplines, like chemical engineers in pharmaceuticals vs health care, computer engineers in steelwork companies vs tech companies? I am lightly adjusting my course path to keep myself viable in either pharma and health while I keep smashing through my core STEM courses, though soon I'll have to start taking actual engineering classes soon (focusing first on chemical engineering with a minor in neuroscience but might pursue computer engineering/science)
hey thanks for the suggestion. i will add it to the list
Can you make all you need to know about information engineering? The university which I want to go has this course and I want to take it as it does not offers any other computer related degree. I need to know about this so I can finalize whether I do this or chose another university or engineering.
Can you rank the trades in the same way you do the degrees? Then can you compare the engineering degrees to the trades?
What about renewable energy engineering? I would love if u can talk about it as there's no one who really talked about this major before i would love to hear your thoughts about it
I'm currently a freshman majoring in civil engineering, but my interest is mostly in structural. I was under the impression that structural was on par if not higher than civil engineering. I'm questioning if I should continue to pursue civil/strucutral engineering or switch to mechanical. Any input on this would be hugely appreciated!
Side Note: The switch to mechanical would not hurt my graduation timeline at all so it really comes down to preference.
Depend on what is your interest. Civil engineering would be structural (building or bridge), civil (roadway design). I am a bridge engineer myself and most of the firms are always hiring. Mechanical engineer job is limited to certain area of US, depend on where u live. There is a high chance that you have to relocate.
I am an upcoming college freshman, admitted for nuclear engineering. I applied to the major based on the recent advancements made in nuclear science as well as the increasingly demanding energy market worldwide. I was curious as to why the demand increase for nuclear is at 0%. Is it because mechanicals and chemicals will get to work with reactors? Any explanation would help. Thanks.
This is an excellent question. I think you may be right to an extent. I also think that nuclear energy is a bit taboo in certain parts of the world, unfortunately. hopefully that changes soon. because I agree with you. Nuclear is going to be a big part of the future.
Why haven't I seen and found any videos about someone talking about nanotechnology engineering?
What specialization do you recommend for chemical engineering: biotechnology, energy, sustainability or materials?
Brother what about data science?I am doing my B.S. in data science.
For someone considering going to school for engineering, between mechanical and computer engineering. What would you recommend? I just want to make sure whatever one I pick will be the most in need in the future and is least likely to have issues with automation.
i really think you'll be fine either way. Just pick the one that interests you most.
I’m currently a freshman taking mechanical engineering and I want to work in the oil and gas industry. I’ve been considering switching to petroleum or should I stay in mechanical?
I work in the oil and gas industry. Plenty of mechanical engineers here, I’d say most are either chemical or mechanical engineers. Depends on what you want to do, for process engineering you’d need your chemical engineering degree, anything else, mechanical.
There is also a gap in instrumentation engineers which tend to be electrical engineers.
can you tell me what is your opinion on mechatronik engenerig. i mean it is really cool but also harder the the most engeneerings but what you think about it because it is not that popular
I think mechatronic is super cool. It all depends on what you like .. what you see yourself being fullfilled doing. But with all of the automation happening everywhere ... i thinkg mechatronic has a solid future.
I'm about to do my entrance exam this year, I'm in doubt between software engineering, Electrical engineering and Computer engineering. (My English may be bad because I'm using Google Translate)
all are great choices. choose the one that interests you most. id probably say electrical and computer open more doors
A classmate graduated in Electronics and worked for a bank. Eventually, he climbed to COO with $500K plus perks. 😂
Say abt petroleum engineering sir
İ m 40 yrars old i m economist but love enginering so much.İt s too late for me to study again universtet and applied for jon in this field😢
It's never too late, bro. Just find a way. You still have a decent chunk of your life left.
you can make a degree related to economy, like industrial engineer, i think is a good option
Aerospace engineers in california are starting at 100k
Electrical Engineering=Computer Engineering=Software Engineering
Electrical Engineering is a king
@@kenzoseven8860I like chemical
definitely brother!
Computer engineering = Electrical Engineering + Electronics + Computer Science
@@yahyaa4499 Nah, CE is 60% CS 40% EE. It’s a weird major in my opinion, I’ll recommend student to choose CS only or EE only “in my opinion”. Some school don’t have a CE program; often as EECS program
which one of these are used to design cars or planes
Planes is aerospace engineering and far is mechanical
do you think that university prestige/ranking matter much?
especially if the university is kind of near to the bottom of some rankings
I would say yes it does up to a certain point. Ivy League tends to demand more pay. But after that, as long as the institution is ABET accredited, I don’t think it matters too much.
It depends. You don't want to attend a college where its main focus is DEI regardless how prestigious it might be. It would be a huge waste to attend an Ivy League, like Harvard, thinking that you are going to get a world-class engineering education just to hear a bunch of drivel about DEI or graduate just to become nothing more than a social justice warrior because nothing that you took actually served a purpose. Pick the college wisely and choose the college very carefully, and you should come out with job offers beyond your wildest imagination.
Im just worried because I want to go to a certain school in the us that is ranked very low but for personal reasons I really feel that I should go there, but it's ranked very very low, since abet accredited but very low, or I can go to prestigious universities in Canada where I live but just feel like I shouldn't go to, they arent the ivy league universities of course but the best ranked universities in Canada@@michaelhargus4316
Hey Bro, is it Worth to pursue Mechanical engineering, because most of my friends Decided to pursue computer science engineering. Will mechanical still be in demand in near future ?
No
Mechanical isn't going anywhere any time soon
@@becominganengineer2271 Thanks Man, 🙃. It's my dream.
@@MonkeyDRad I hope you wake up soon coz right now this is the era of software branches
@@DarkCastleBoy have fun finding a decent job with a CS degree and no experience lol
In the social hierarchy
Engineers , scientists and doctors must be at the top .
Lawyers and Doctors r top 2 and Engineers at 3rd according to a study conducted
Network Engineer?
No mechatronics as always
What is your definition of an Electronic Engineer that would differentiate them from an Electrical Engineer? Is it some sort of subset?
Of course. Electric engineer works with any device that is powered by electricity, an electronic engineer works with devices that contain electronic elements (transistors, diodes, etc.). I hope my answer is clear and correct
Soofweare engineering it is. Money is good.
Brutto? Netto?
"Computer Engineering" isn't REAL ENGINEERING!!!!! Ridiculous
It is. It is the combination of electrical engineering, electronics and computer science. You basically learn most math and physics an electrical engineer do. Most uni event offer Electrical and Computer Engineering
@@yahyaa4499 Electrical engineering is engineering. It's still requires a solid foundation of physics. "Computer Engineering" is just computer programming, the difference a few 4-5 classes make it 'engineering'.
@@user-xq1ow3yq7k Nah you dont know what you are talking about. CompEng is all about hardware and circuits that make up computers , robots and millions of devices. It invloves programming at a low level. Not as high level as computer Science or software eng
@@yahyaa4499 NOPE. Where's the physics foundation? Software "engineers" are the newest "engineer" to everything now. Why aren't electricians considered electrical engineers?
@@user-xq1ow3yq7k Computer engineer is not software engineer.