Orglethorp
Not Active
I'm just finishing up the final exams for my 3rd academic term of engineering in the Electrical & Computer Engineering program, and I'm worrying about whether or not I'll be allowed to continue in the program.
The program alternates between academic terms and work experience terms, with no summer breaks, starting in term 3. This means the fall semester is always for students in 1st year, term 3 and term 6. Winter (January) is for 1st year, term 5 and term 8. Spring (May) is for 1st year (course repeats & slow-track), term 4 and term 7.
For terms 3-8, 5-6 of your courses are considered your "core courses" (most students take 6-7 courses). To be promoted to the next term, you must have 50% or above in all courses with an average of 60% or above between the core courses. If you have the 60%+ average but fail a core course, you write an extra exam. If you don't get the 60% (regardless of whether you passed everything or not), you fail the term. If you fail the term, you may or may not be allowed to go on your work term in the following semester. It's up to the employer. If you still want to be an engineering student, you apply back to the faculty after 2 semesters, to re-enter at the term you failed.
Now, all of these courses put a weight of 50% or higher on the final exams. This is despite having as many as 6 major tests throughout the term, up to 10 labs, and up to 10 projects, not including readings and smaller assignments. (Physics had nearly 30 assignments.)
Going into exams, I knew my circuit analysis course would be tough, but I thought all 4 other core course exams would go really well. Math, as it turns out, really sucked. Add that to yesterday's (predictably) horrible circuits exam, and I'm now relying on Monday's programming exam to keep my average at or above 60. This is despite having a 70 before exams, since they're worth so much.
So, I'm planning ahead. I have a plan B. This school offers joint majors in Computer Science and various other science disciplines, including both Pure Mathematics and Applied Mathematics. I really like the sound of those options, I can still do cool, nerdy, challenging things with a degree like that, and my transfer credits from my previous life as a history/psychology student will actually cover most of my elective credits. I could possibly be done a Comp Sci degree before I would finish the engineering degree, even if I stay in the faculty this semester.
I'm worrying about what happens if I fail this semester, though. Should I fight to keep my work term, or should I take courses? I'm not sure if this company will keep me if I fail, and I'm not sure if this is a good job to have on my resume if I don't end up in an engineering field.
If I fail, this will be the second time I've dropped out of an engineering program. I was diagnosed with PTSD during my first semester of university, back in 2006, and I couldn't handle the program then. That was at a different university. I went back to engineering because I felt like I'd been cheated out of something I really wanted to do, and I wasn't being challenged as a history student. If I fail out this time, am I going to have the same feelings of being cheated out of something?
If I take courses toward a Computer Science degree in the mean time, I'm not sure if I'd apply back into engineering or not. I'm not sure if I'll love the Comp Sci degree enough. I'm also not sure that I'd apply back to the same discipline, or that I'd get the same discipline even if I tried. I do know I would be pretty crushed if I did decide to re-apply and didn't get in.
Being that I'm 25, turning 26 in February, I'm also not sure that I would want to re-apply for class of 2018. It takes 4 years of experience on top of a degree to get licensed as an engineer. I'll be 30 in 2018. Work terms can only account for a maximum of 1 year of the 4 required years of experience. A computer science degree could have me finishing by 2016 and actually being done in 2016.
I really don't know what to do!
The program alternates between academic terms and work experience terms, with no summer breaks, starting in term 3. This means the fall semester is always for students in 1st year, term 3 and term 6. Winter (January) is for 1st year, term 5 and term 8. Spring (May) is for 1st year (course repeats & slow-track), term 4 and term 7.
For terms 3-8, 5-6 of your courses are considered your "core courses" (most students take 6-7 courses). To be promoted to the next term, you must have 50% or above in all courses with an average of 60% or above between the core courses. If you have the 60%+ average but fail a core course, you write an extra exam. If you don't get the 60% (regardless of whether you passed everything or not), you fail the term. If you fail the term, you may or may not be allowed to go on your work term in the following semester. It's up to the employer. If you still want to be an engineering student, you apply back to the faculty after 2 semesters, to re-enter at the term you failed.
Now, all of these courses put a weight of 50% or higher on the final exams. This is despite having as many as 6 major tests throughout the term, up to 10 labs, and up to 10 projects, not including readings and smaller assignments. (Physics had nearly 30 assignments.)
Going into exams, I knew my circuit analysis course would be tough, but I thought all 4 other core course exams would go really well. Math, as it turns out, really sucked. Add that to yesterday's (predictably) horrible circuits exam, and I'm now relying on Monday's programming exam to keep my average at or above 60. This is despite having a 70 before exams, since they're worth so much.
So, I'm planning ahead. I have a plan B. This school offers joint majors in Computer Science and various other science disciplines, including both Pure Mathematics and Applied Mathematics. I really like the sound of those options, I can still do cool, nerdy, challenging things with a degree like that, and my transfer credits from my previous life as a history/psychology student will actually cover most of my elective credits. I could possibly be done a Comp Sci degree before I would finish the engineering degree, even if I stay in the faculty this semester.
I'm worrying about what happens if I fail this semester, though. Should I fight to keep my work term, or should I take courses? I'm not sure if this company will keep me if I fail, and I'm not sure if this is a good job to have on my resume if I don't end up in an engineering field.
If I fail, this will be the second time I've dropped out of an engineering program. I was diagnosed with PTSD during my first semester of university, back in 2006, and I couldn't handle the program then. That was at a different university. I went back to engineering because I felt like I'd been cheated out of something I really wanted to do, and I wasn't being challenged as a history student. If I fail out this time, am I going to have the same feelings of being cheated out of something?
If I take courses toward a Computer Science degree in the mean time, I'm not sure if I'd apply back into engineering or not. I'm not sure if I'll love the Comp Sci degree enough. I'm also not sure that I'd apply back to the same discipline, or that I'd get the same discipline even if I tried. I do know I would be pretty crushed if I did decide to re-apply and didn't get in.
Being that I'm 25, turning 26 in February, I'm also not sure that I would want to re-apply for class of 2018. It takes 4 years of experience on top of a degree to get licensed as an engineer. I'll be 30 in 2018. Work terms can only account for a maximum of 1 year of the 4 required years of experience. A computer science degree could have me finishing by 2016 and actually being done in 2016.
I really don't know what to do!