Where on campus is it located?
Question for all you long time MSU engineers and I don't want this to deteriorate into a boomer vs millennial ya ya. Is the engineering curriculum at State as difficult as it was back in the 60's, 70's and 80's ? I was in awe of how hard you guys had to work when I was there...yall were very identifiable by you slide rules on your belts. By far the brightest and most serious students on campus.
Question for all you long time MSU engineers and I don't want this to deteriorate into a boomer vs millennial ya ya. Is the engineering curriculum at State as difficult as it was back in the 60's, 70's and 80's ? I was in awe of how hard you guys had to work when I was there...yall were very identifiable by you slide rules on your belts. By far the brightest and most serious students on campus.
Question for all you long time MSU engineers and I don't want this to deteriorate into a boomer vs millennial ya ya. Is the engineering curriculum at State as difficult as it was back in the 60's, 70's and 80's ? I was in awe of how hard you guys had to work when I was there...yall were very identifiable by you slide rules on your belts. By far the brightest and most serious students on campus.
Why the hell did they cut the trees down
It's still as difficult, but shorter. My program was 139 hours in the '90s. IHL pushed for all BS curriculum to be reduced to 128 hours at some point during the 2000s in order to facilitate more students graduating in four years. Graduating engineering in 4 years was very difficult without some summer school before the reduction to 128 hours. Now graduating in four years is now very common in engineering without summer school, which is a good thing. All departments still offer a robust summer schedule to facilitate COOP students, however.
One reason for your second point is not enough native English speakers go to grad school to fill the faculty ranks. Free tuition plus a $2,000/month stipend is not enough to entice US students to stick around for five more years of school to earn a PhD when they walk over to the career fair at the Hump and come away with a job offer in the upper $60Ks. This is not just an MSU problem, however.
Question for all you long time MSU engineers and I don't want this to deteriorate into a boomer vs millennial ya ya. Is the engineering curriculum at State as difficult as it was back in the 60's, 70's and 80's ? I was in awe of how hard you guys had to work when I was there...yall were very identifiable by you slide rules on your belts. By far the brightest and most serious students on campus.
They would take some of the harder classes and call them a “lab” if you ever took Cole’s (I think it was called) “Fundamentals of Structural Analysis” you know what I’m talking about. I spent more time working on that class than any other class my whole time at state.