@@Hernake-aanand haha it’s quite the ride doing specific design projects! You will have some in between but these are more group oriented rather than design projects specifically. Glad to hear you liked the video!
Hey @chemengweekly I love your page. I wondered if you have some advice for someone who is studying a level 3 engineering course and really wants to become an engineer but isn’t particularly strong in maths and doesn’t know what area of engineering they want to go into after college? Thanks.
@@CurtisIsacc Hey Curtis, thanks for your kind words! Glad you’ve found some utility from our content, and congrats on getting into the level 3 engineering course. I’d say the best way to find out is maybe applying for a foundation year in engineering at a university- this is quite general and will give you the skills needed to transition into the first year of an engineering degree either at the same university or a different one after you finish, and more importantly it’ll mean that your weakness in maths won’t be an issue. Having weak maths isn’t going to hold you back as long as you are willing to work hard and ask for support from teachers and peers, and this is also what I’d advise doing (asking teachers) for finding out which engineering is right for you. Maybe have a read through this page (www.topuniversities.com/courses/engineering/which-type-engineering-should-you-study) to determine which engineering stands out the most for you. Hope this helps!
Hey Curtis, thanks for your kind words! Glad you’ve found some utility from our content, and congrats on getting into the level 3 engineering course. I’d say the best way to find out is maybe applying for a foundation year in engineering at a university- this is quite general and will give you the skills needed to transition into the first year of an engineering degree either at the same university or a different one after you finish, and more importantly it’ll mean that your weakness in maths won’t be an issue. Having weak maths isn’t going to hold you back as long as you are willing to work hard and ask for support from teachers and peers, and this is also what I’d advise doing (asking teachers) for finding out which engineering is right for you. Maybe have a read through the page on top universities for “which type of engineering should you study” (it keeps deleting my comment when I add the link) to determine which engineering stands out the most for you. Hope this helps!
Recently got accepted to do a Bachelors in Process Engineering, excited about it. Still wanted some ideas on potential jobs positions. I.E what other aspects of Process can I work in or is the job gonna mainly be just sitting and looking at monitors? Any advice would be appreciated.
First off, congratulations on getting in! You can work in a variety of different roles, not just process monitoring as you have mentioned- there’s scope for you to do hands on work in industries like oil and gas, lab work within research companies if you choose to specialise down that area, and also the chance to design new projects if you choose to become a process design or project management engineer. Since process engineering is very heavily overlapped with ChemEng, the possibilities of jobs is quite extensive!
@@ChemEngWeekly appreciate the reply man, I start on Monday, just really excited for this new step. Really hoping for a stimulating career and not something mundane, hence why I asked
Hey Jup I am interested in chemical engineering however I do bio,chem,business (no maths) and I am in year 13 However there are great foundation year chemical engineering opportunities that have lower than usual grade requirements and are in great universities, do you think I should go for it ?
Hey there, thanks for reaching out! If you’re quite interested in doing ChemEng, I’d really recommend going for the foundation courses! I know the one at Southampton for example is a great bridge onto ChemEng and gives you scope to continue on with ChemEng at Southampton or another uni for ChemEng undergraduate. I’d say if you’re very sold on doing ChemEng, taking a gap year to do maths A level yourself and applying again in that same year isn’t the worst track either, given you will already have 3 a level grades secured and offers will be only conditional on your maths A level, but again this is entirely up to you. Either track is good, although I’d recommend the latter if you’re very keen on going straight into ChemEng; hope this helps!
Hello, your content is quite good, I could see your description, but your video tag is not very good or not given in many places, if you write a good description, and tag it with good keywords, your RUclips channel's video will get many views very quickly, it would be converted into a big channel very quickly.
I watched some Videos, and I saw that you didn't do SEO on your video, And you did not add a thumbnail to your video. So how do viewers find you interesting! I add a picture to better understand. I have found a problem because I am a RUclips SEO expert.
Which part did you agree the most/least with? Comment down below! ⬇️
wait a minute so i just finished design in year 1 and ur saying i wont have it now until year 4 ???? :( but it was so fun!!! Loved the video tho 🤣
@@Hernake-aanand haha it’s quite the ride doing specific design projects! You will have some in between but these are more group oriented rather than design projects specifically. Glad to hear you liked the video!
Hey @chemengweekly I love your page. I wondered if you have some advice for someone who is studying a level 3 engineering course and really wants to become an engineer but isn’t particularly strong in maths and doesn’t know what area of engineering they want to go into after college? Thanks.
@@CurtisIsacc Hey Curtis, thanks for your kind words! Glad you’ve found some utility from our content, and congrats on getting into the level 3 engineering course.
I’d say the best way to find out is maybe applying for a foundation year in engineering at a university- this is quite general and will give you the skills needed to transition into the first year of an engineering degree either at the same university or a different one after you finish, and more importantly it’ll mean that your weakness in maths won’t be an issue. Having weak maths isn’t going to hold you back as long as you are willing to work hard and ask for support from teachers and peers, and this is also what I’d advise doing (asking teachers) for finding out which engineering is right for you.
Maybe have a read through this page (www.topuniversities.com/courses/engineering/which-type-engineering-should-you-study) to determine which engineering stands out the most for you. Hope this helps!
Hey Curtis, thanks for your kind words! Glad you’ve found some utility from our content, and congrats on getting into the level 3 engineering course.
I’d say the best way to find out is maybe applying for a foundation year in engineering at a university- this is quite general and will give you the skills needed to transition into the first year of an engineering degree either at the same university or a different one after you finish, and more importantly it’ll mean that your weakness in maths won’t be an issue. Having weak maths isn’t going to hold you back as long as you are willing to work hard and ask for support from teachers and peers, and this is also what I’d advise doing (asking teachers) for finding out which engineering is right for you.
Maybe have a read through the page on top universities for “which type of engineering should you study” (it keeps deleting my comment when I add the link) to determine which engineering stands out the most for you. Hope this helps!
Recently got accepted to do a Bachelors in Process Engineering, excited about it. Still wanted some ideas on potential jobs positions. I.E what other aspects of Process can I work in or is the job gonna mainly be just sitting and looking at monitors?
Any advice would be appreciated.
First off, congratulations on getting in! You can work in a variety of different roles, not just process monitoring as you have mentioned- there’s scope for you to do hands on work in industries like oil and gas, lab work within research companies if you choose to specialise down that area, and also the chance to design new projects if you choose to become a process design or project management engineer. Since process engineering is very heavily overlapped with ChemEng, the possibilities of jobs is quite extensive!
@@ChemEngWeekly appreciate the reply man, I start on Monday, just really excited for this new step. Really hoping for a stimulating career and not something mundane, hence why I asked
What Is SEO, and why is it important?
Hey Jup
I am interested in chemical engineering however I do bio,chem,business (no maths) and I am in year 13
However there are great foundation year chemical engineering opportunities that have lower than usual grade requirements and are in great universities, do you think I should go for it ?
Hey there, thanks for reaching out!
If you’re quite interested in doing ChemEng, I’d really recommend going for the foundation courses! I know the one at Southampton for example is a great bridge onto ChemEng and gives you scope to continue on with ChemEng at Southampton or another uni for ChemEng undergraduate. I’d say if you’re very sold on doing ChemEng, taking a gap year to do maths A level yourself and applying again in that same year isn’t the worst track either, given you will already have 3 a level grades secured and offers will be only conditional on your maths A level, but again this is entirely up to you. Either track is good, although I’d recommend the latter if you’re very keen on going straight into ChemEng; hope this helps!
What laptop do you use
The standard one recommended for ChemEng is something like a HP Elitebook 840- anything with i5 processor and NOT a Mac is good to use!
Hello,
your content is quite good, I could see your description, but your video tag is not very good or not given in many places, if you write a good description, and tag it with good keywords, your RUclips channel's video will get many views very quickly, it would be converted into a big channel very quickly.
@@RahelaBegum-b4y thank you for the suggestion, I’ll look into this!
I watched some Videos, and I saw that you didn't do SEO on your video, And you did not add a thumbnail to your video. So how do viewers find you interesting! I add a picture to better understand. I have found a problem because I am a RUclips SEO expert.