Originally posted by: pontifex
oh, and the community college I was looking at has what they call a career associate's degree in Mech. Engineering. How would that differ from a 4 year program?
Most likely, the Associate's degree will get you ready for the mechanical engineering courses at a 4 year school. That's the way they're focused at the community college I just graduated from. They prepare you for the course work at the university level and get your first two years out of the way. Then you go to the university as a junior instead of a freshman. It's usually MUCH cheaper to do it that way as long as the schools have articulation agreements. (make sure of that first!)
Once upon a time, I had dreams of going back to school for a mechanical engineering degree...or preferrably a structural engineering degree...
BUT, I are math stoopid...I'm fine with "regular math, addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division, decimals and fractions, etc. But, as soon as you put letters and squiggly lines in a math problem, (fuzzy math) I go blank and the problem may as well be written in some obscure Chinese dialect.
I have a beginning Algebra textbook here that I picked up at the college bookstore's "yard sale" last year. I keep saying I'm gonna teach myself algebra...but I'll be dammed if it's taking. The book is on my bookshelf less than 5 feet away, you'd think the knowledge would jump over and I'd learn by osmosis! :roll: