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Got a 75 on first test, 75 on 2nd test. Was working ~60 hours a week, commuting 5-10 hours and taking another class, forget what it was. Instructor said if we were happy with our grade, we could bail on the final, but if we took the final, it wouldn't hurt us. He and most of the class were surprised when I closed my books, and walked outta there. It was nice getting a little more sleep. |
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Calculus or physics. View Quote Physics 3 was fun. I literally answered a test on the final "Since the restructuring of the pre req math courses, we never covered this, and I have no idea what you're even asking me to do." |
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Senior level probability and sadisti... er, statistics for engineers. Required for EE degree.
First exam: low grade in the class 0%, high grade 20%. I got a whopping 12% which was the second highest grade in the class. The day after the exam was returned half the class dropped out. Second exam: low grade 0%, high grade 15%, I ended up with a 10%. Half of the remaining students didn't come back. Thank the good lord above for curves, I toughed it out and got a B. |
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Calc 2 was hard. The second semester of O Chem was tough. Business law and tax accounting were difficult, until I stopped thinking rationally about it and just memorized the rules. Then they were easy.
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Dynamics: 6 equations, 6 unknown variables. Professor always had the biggest test of the year the Monday after the craziest party week of the year: VEISHEA. DiffEq sucked ass as well. Structural Steel Analysis was not so much fun either. Ended up with an A- in that one though.
Turns out much of it really wasn’t that bad if you actually went to class, studied, and didn’t drink and smoke half the week. |
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Pretty much all my accounting classes.
Federal taxation comes to mind as most difficult. |
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I forget the actual title of the course, but it was ionizing radiation and its effects on biological systems. No shit 16+ hours of homework per week and harder than hell, JUST FOR THAT CLASS. I think I was taking six or seven classes that semester, it was fucking awful. My advisor referred to it as the GPA killer and I just got shivers thinking about it twelve years after the fact. It was harder than every other class I ever took, including graduate school. Fuck that
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Senior level probability and sadisti... er, statistics for engineers. Required for EE degree. First exam: low grade in the class 0%, high grade 20%. I got a whopping 12% which was the second highest grade in the class. The day after the exam was returned half the class dropped out. Second exam: low grade 0%, high grade 15%, I ended up with a 10%. Half of the remaining students didn't come back. Thank the good lord above for curves, I toughed it out and got a B. View Quote |
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Circuits. Fucking hated it. Calc 2 took me two tries, but somehow everything clicked during Diff-Eq and I walked out with a B without much frustration. View Quote Actually calc 2 wasn't that hard...understanding the Russian instructors and TAs, on the other hand (This was a generation ago...it's probably Indians or something by now) |
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At NDSU, they call it Calc 2 cause you take it twice Actually calc 2 wasn't that hard...understanding the Russian instructors and TAs, on the other hand (This was a generation ago...it's probably Indians or something by now) View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Circuits. Fucking hated it. Calc 2 took me two tries, but somehow everything clicked during Diff-Eq and I walked out with a B without much frustration. Actually calc 2 wasn't that hard...understanding the Russian instructors and TAs, on the other hand (This was a generation ago...it's probably Indians or something by now) |
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Thermodynamics
Took it three times to get my required C. F’n hated that class and every one of the pretentious cocksucking asshat motherfuckers that taught it. May fuck be forever upon them and their heirs... |
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Engineering physics and it's not even close. Ever scored a 35% on a test? Ever been average with that score?
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Econometrics and Advanced Algebra. I had such a poor math background that learning algebra at 22 took pretty much all the available brain power I could marshal. After that it was like everything clicked and the other math/statistics/economics classes were easy until I got to Econometrics. Passing that required probably 10-15 hours of work on my own outside of class sessions to understand and be able to apply the material we were learning to the end of term project. Very difficult but I passed with a grade near the top of the class and was very happy with the result of my effort.
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P chem... instructor was a near incomprehensible polish woman...
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Business law taught by a local lawyer who I had known most of my life. In 16 years of teaching the class, only four students had received As. Even with the notes from one of the A students, I worked my ass off to get a B. I was prouder of that B than any of the As I ever received. View Quote Not difficult (where I took them). Just damn interesting. Great instructor as well. Every other class paled in comparison. |
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Engineering calculus and I have never once used t post college
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Intro to FORTRAN. Anyone else remember IBM punch cards? I am old. View Quote I betcha I'm older |
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Biz calc and stats were rough, but I haz the dumb and dropped out of ME to business lol.
I thought I liked physics until I took a 200 level class. 213 maybe? That wrecked my shit. I did pass but only with a tutor. |
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Real Variables
Comp sci major Math minor This shit was proving calculus. One of the concepts was epislon, the value closest to being zero without being zero. The class (6 people) went out for drinks with the professor after the final. I said "please, give me an epsilon!". I got a D in the course, lowest I ever got in college!!!! |
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There are at least 3 NDSU grads posting in this thread... View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Circuits. Fucking hated it. Calc 2 took me two tries, but somehow everything clicked during Diff-Eq and I walked out with a B without much frustration. Actually calc 2 wasn't that hard...understanding the Russian instructors and TAs, on the other hand (This was a generation ago...it's probably Indians or something by now) |
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Graduate level neuroanatomy, taken my last quarter of my senior year. Had already been accepted to med school. Had to pass this class to graduate, or no med school. I've never been so happy in my whole life to get a C+.
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cal 1-3 and diff eq were easy, idk, it just made sense to me
o chem 1 was a cake walk and 2 was pretty challenging along with engineering pchem heat transfer was easy and mass transport phenomena wasn't terrible thermo 2 though.... Jesus fucking christ no class ever whipped my ass like thermo 2. shitty prof didn't help but man that shit was hard |
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African American literature.
That was one tough mofo. I almost walked out 500 times and said fuck it. |
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Quoted: Been there... engineering was a bitch. I remember once getting a test back and I got a 9. A 9/100... the average wasn’t much better View Quote ETA Up to that point I had never felt like such an idiot in my life. That was 20+ years ago. New standards for idiot have been set and reset many times since. |
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For volume of work, Business Policy (Strategic Management).
For difficulty of material, Topology (300 level math class that is just a bunch of proofs). |
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Well, its a tossup;
"Thermogodamics": got an A but studied my ass off. After that I decided I didn't want to deal with steam tables and phase changes ever again and changed from Mech Engr to Elect Engr. Partial Differential Equations: Memorized solution to 8 problems - what the prof said we should do. Prof was kind of a prick. Wasn't fun. Numerical Analysis: Taught by grad student from Taiwan or somewhere with unintelligible "engrish." The lectures quickly became just copying from the board with audio sounding like Snoopy listening to people. Studied book and notes to learn it. Antennas and Propagation: Understanding the math of Curl, Cross Product, and boundary conditions was difficult. All necessary to understand Mr Maxwell's equations. Prof was caught working a back of book problem wrong by students a time or two. (It had some weird ones). Heavy duty stuff! All required for my major at the time. Shit that was 41-44 years ago! Im surprised I can remember even some of the terminology. |
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Econometrics, which is basically applied statistics. We had to take those horrible statistics classes and apply them according to the principles we learned in the fun cool economics classes.
Had to learn methods, create questions, run out and gather data FROM BOOKS IN THE LIBRARY, feed it into the computer, run it, then write a paper, and be amazed we actually got a passing grade from the professor. |
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Mass Transport. I've learned more outside of college on this topic than a 3 hr course. Fucking professor did her undergrad, masters and PhD at the same fucking school, never stepping foot off campus into industry. People literally delayed graduation a year to avoid her class. I had no such luxury and passed with a "C". Theres a reason theres so few chemical engineers... I'm fascinated there seems to be a significant number on this forum. View Quote Kharn |
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I'm going to go with Quantum Mechanics. And yes. it was required. I can't imagine a non-required class actually being difficult.
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300 level intro to biochemistry and 500 level recombinant DNA techniques lecture/lab
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two way tie. Formal languages and automata & cell molecular bio.
In terms of sheer memorization and quantity of information they were both laughable compared to grad school. |
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What is with all the hate on thermodynamics? Is it from chemical or non-chemical engineers?
My ChEg profs were very clear with us at the start of the semester (fall, sophomore year): if we did not love thermodynamics, steam tables, the Redlich-Kwong equation, etc, we were to change majors ASAP. But then, we had another prof spring of junior year for Heat & Mass Transfer who was the former dean, he refused to allow repeats, and was the only one to teach that class. If you were performing poorly, he would fill out your change-of-major form, get it signed by the current dean, and leave blanks only for your new major and your signature when he stapled it to your returned test. He would include a post-it with suggestions of majors he thought best suited you. The dude gave zero fucks in his quest to keep the quality of the program's graduates high. Kharn |
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My dad was considered the brightest guy in college, aced all the math classes, never used calculus once he left college and became a PE. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Engineering calculus and I have never once used t post college Kharn |
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cal 1-3 and diff eq were easy, idk, it just made sense to me o chem 1 was a cake walk and 2 was pretty challenging along with engineering pchem heat transfer was easy and mass transport phenomena wasn't terrible thermo 2 though.... Jesus fucking christ no class ever whipped my ass like thermo 2. shitty prof didn't help but man that shit was hard View Quote ETA: O Chem 1 was a trick, designed to set you up for failure in the second half. I worked my ass off and missed an A by less than a point. I got a B+. Chem professors don't round shit unless it's down. |
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I remember Current Issues in Monetary Economics being extra challenging. That was 400 level Econ. I remember a couple 300 level Finance classes being quite challenging as well too
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college algebra 104
I suck at abstract alebra I took harder classes such as my history 400 which required 25 + PAGE ORIGINAL RESEARCH PROJECT USING ONLY ORIGINAL SOURCES. BUT i DID NOT FIND THAT AS challenging as the college algebra. |
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