Tails47 wrote:
If you think of it, if engineer dont have a tight grasp on concepts, many people could die...
No argument there. I'm in my university's Ceramics and Materials Engineering program (we're the fun chemical engineers), and I agree with you. I'd say my hardest math course was my Calc 2 (108 here) class. Hard as anything. Calc 3 isn't that bad, and I heard calc 4 was even easier (at least compared to calc 2).
Sure, if I only had one test, I may be able to study for a week strait to get the A (rather, B in my case). But, you don't have just one test. There's calculus, then physics, then chemistry, computers...you see where I'm going with this. It took me two semesters to get my system down for studying, and it works well for me.
I prefer classes that start earlier in the day -- 9:00 or so. I get up at 8:00 go grab some breakfast, then go to all my classes and labs, and am usually out around 2 or 3. Then I go to work for a few hours (where I can get a lot of my stuff done), and eat dinner. At this point, it's usually 5-6. That gives me a good 8 hours until I should go to sleep. I give myself 2 hours of free time, which I usually spend at the gym or playing video games. The others are usually spend doing homework and the like. Rinse and repeat until Saturday.
Again, I would say it depends on your major. My friend, who's a history major, has only a fraction of the work I have, and usually spends his free time napping. I've made it through most of the weeder classes in engineering, and I can attest that this major is
hard. Heck, my buddy had a 4.7GPA in high school, yet he's almost failing his intro chemical engineering class. To expect to pass a class, let alone get an A, without copious amounts of studying isn't happening. The only way I'd get an A in all my classes is if I spend every free minute of mine studying. Always. But hey, what fun is that?