Wow, go back and get a B in calculus and you can earn your way to a Masters in some type of Engineering...
There may be hope for those folks like me who really enjoyed undergrad!

Nuff said.
IIRC, think you can get a MS in engineering if you have a science related undergrad, but you cannot get a MENG without an engineering undergrad. (At least if you want an accredited degree)
Don't say never. Know a retired CDR ECMO who was undergrad fine arts at Walla Walla and Masters in Aero from UW. It happens and is very person dependent. I don't know any universities that have ironclad rules on this and it's common for people to do it at JHU.
(mmm although flattered, your sig line doesn't mean much without context does it?)
+1. To my fellow engineer SNA's out there, does it piss you off to be in the same squadron as guys who got liberal arts degrees when you busted ass to get that BS in engr? Or maybe to the USNA folks who wear the same bars as the rest of us who didn't suffer through 4 years of military school. All seems about the same in my mind...there is always going to be someone out there who is getting/got a better deal. Cest la vie....
Were you not the one who was very upset about all females with 50+ NSSes getting TH?
Were you not the one who was very upset about all females with 50+ NSSes getting TH? C'est la vie...
...just my gut feeling anyway.
Not trying to invoke any sort of heated discussion here, but what does engineering do for me as an SNA anyway? Engineering to me always seemed like a status thing. Yes, I definitely have more respect (from an academic and work ethic sense anyway) for those who endured the misery to earn an engineering degree, but in the end, a part of me questions why does it even matter? Unless you are trying to become an Astronaut or be picked up for something like TPS, what's the point (unless you want to do something related in the civilian world)? I was always told that the Navy will teach you what you need to know, and if SNA's can't hack it in flight school because they weren't engineering majors, then why do they even bother accepting those who aren't? Anyone feel free to jump in.I'm not "very upset" (or even concerned at this point), but if you want to open that can of worms I will justify it by saying that women have no choice in their gender. In the example(s) I gave, I'm talking about some folks just simply making choices that lead them down the same path in an easier way. Not really the same situation. I also think that is a whole different discussion that may not really be a great thing to put on the internets in much more depth......just my gut feeling anyway.
... a part of me questions why does it even matter? Unless you are trying to become an Astronaut or be picked up for something like TPS, what's the point (unless you want to do something related in the civilian world)? I was always told that the Navy will teach you what you need to know, and if SNA's can't hack it in flight school because they weren't engineering majors, then why do they even bother accepting those who aren't? Anyone feel free to jump in.
Not trying to invoke any sort of heated discussion here, but what does engineering do for me as an SNA anyway? Engineering to me always seemed like a status thing. Yes, I definitely have more respect (from an academic and work ethic sense anyway) for those who endured the misery to earn an engineering degree, but in the end, a part of me questions why does it even matter? Unless you are trying to become an Astronaut or be picked up for something like TPS, what's the point (unless you want to do something related in the civilian world)? I was always told that the Navy will teach you what you need to know, and if SNA's can't hack it in flight school because they weren't engineering majors, then why do they even bother accepting those who aren't? Anyone feel free to jump in.
I did Aero Eng for three years and I guess you could say I gave up on it. It's something I kind of regret, but I definitely did enjoy my undergrad time a whole lot more and found myself less tired and miserable, and better yet, was able to graduate a little earlier than I would have if I had stayed with it. It would of have been cool to have Aeronautical Engineering written on my college diploma, but like I said, in the end is it going to matter that it instead reads International Studies?
Nah, I agree. I originally started in Aero because I thought potentially being a Navy pilot with an Aeronautical Engineering background would make me quite marketable and possess a cool and bad ass resume. Also, it kept the possibility of being an astronaut and/or going to TPS a reality. Not that being an astronaut or going to TPS was a primary goal of mine, it kept the opportunity out there, which is why I kick myself for eventually switching out.Saving a long story, I did engineering because I was interested in the subject and wanted to have the chance to go to TPS at some point. I'm not sure at this point if I will actually want to do that, and I have no intent of ever working as an engineer, so yes, maybe it all was for the "cool" factor![]()