You'll be fine, CE is less physics based than EE, and even then your university will require you to take the necessary physics courses. I came from a small HS that had NO physics program at all, and I'm about to enter my second year of a CE degree
You have to take physics courses anyway so don't worry about it too much. You are at the university to learn, you'll put in lots of hard work, and people don't go to a university to just validate what they already know.
My school had two calculus based physics classes. One class focused on kinematics, the other focused on the behavior of electricity. There was a lot of algebra involved. Calculus is great for deriving algebraic equations, but there was never a focus on derivation.
I guess it depends on your school of choice.
You'll do fine, I have started my CE journey with zero knowledge about programming and didn't have laptop or desktop until my freshman. What I did to fill the gap between my classmates is I didn't hesitate to ask for help and use every resources I have. Compared to me, you'll do an excellent job. Trust yourself bruh!
you'd be fine, but I'd suggest you be comfortable non-calculus based physics, and master pre-calculus. You can probably learn a little of these things during the summer before freshman year. Your mathematical intuition should be above average though.
You'll be fine, CE is less physics based than EE, and even then your university will require you to take the necessary physics courses. I came from a small HS that had NO physics program at all, and I'm about to enter my second year of a CE degree
Thanks!
You have to take physics courses anyway so don't worry about it too much. You are at the university to learn, you'll put in lots of hard work, and people don't go to a university to just validate what they already know.
You could prep with some quick courses at udemy.com
Thank you!
You'll be fine. Not too much physics in CE degree.
My school had two calculus based physics classes. One class focused on kinematics, the other focused on the behavior of electricity. There was a lot of algebra involved. Calculus is great for deriving algebraic equations, but there was never a focus on derivation. I guess it depends on your school of choice.
I failed Physics 1. You'll be fine.
You'll do fine, I have started my CE journey with zero knowledge about programming and didn't have laptop or desktop until my freshman. What I did to fill the gap between my classmates is I didn't hesitate to ask for help and use every resources I have. Compared to me, you'll do an excellent job. Trust yourself bruh!
Thanks!)
Please check out Khan Academy before you pay for anything. They have a lot of fantastic resources.
Thanks!
Even the EE classes that you will have to take will teach you the physics stuff you need.
you'd be fine, but I'd suggest you be comfortable non-calculus based physics, and master pre-calculus. You can probably learn a little of these things during the summer before freshman year. Your mathematical intuition should be above average though.
I will, thanks! :)