I'm studying bachelors of EEA(Electronics Electrotechnics and automation) in Tunisia, and i wanna get into electrical engineering degree after that(engineering degree not bachelors) and after that a PhD in quantum physics. Can i get accepted due to my lack of knowledge of basic topics in quantum mechanics that i didnt study neither in EEA or electrical engineering such as quantum field theory, entanglement, Schrödinger equation and many others? Bcs electrical engineering focus only on electromagnetism which is import in quantum physics too, so is that possible ?
I wish this video came out two years ago, but I hope it blows up for all the current and future EE students to see! Nothing but factual information and advice in this video. That senior design project experience was spot on - I just recently got third place with my group out of our class. We had no idea how we were going to complete our project, we never felt confident most of, if not all of the way through, but in the end we never felt more like we understood what it meant to be engineers. It was during and after our project's completion that I felt myself understanding how components functioned and wanting to learn even more. Being able to experience that feeling should be sought after earlier if possible. Luckily for myself, as someone who also had no internships before graduating, that project alone (and my better understanding of foundational EE concepts) helped me land a job as an electronics engineer right after graduation. However, most people should look into getting some internship or any relevant experience if they can. I'd say more, but people should watch the video in its completion. Great job!
Thanks for the content!
No way! I am studying electrical engineering at Columbia and seeing our senior expo getting recognition made me happy!
That’s awesome ! Good luck on your senior project.
Love the shirt ❤
Considering doing a masters in EE after a bachelors in CS - any courses I should brush up on to prepare? 😅 this channel has great advice thanks!
That's what I'm thinking to do.
legit its all who you know, gonna help with referrals hella!
Facts!
So I am old and am interested in electrical Engineering which schools would you recommend. Thank you
I'm studying bachelors of EEA(Electronics Electrotechnics and automation) in Tunisia, and i wanna get into electrical engineering degree after that(engineering degree not bachelors) and after that a PhD in quantum physics. Can i get accepted due to my lack of knowledge of basic topics in quantum mechanics that i didnt study neither in EEA or electrical engineering such as quantum field theory, entanglement, Schrödinger equation and many others? Bcs electrical engineering focus only on electromagnetism which is import in quantum physics too, so is that possible ?
I wish this video came out two years ago, but I hope it blows up for all the current and future EE students to see!
Nothing but factual information and advice in this video. That senior design project experience was spot on - I just recently got third place with my group out of our class. We had no idea how we were going to complete our project, we never felt confident most of, if not all of the way through, but in the end we never felt more like we understood what it meant to be engineers.
It was during and after our project's completion that I felt myself understanding how components functioned and wanting to learn even more. Being able to experience that feeling should be sought after earlier if possible.
Luckily for myself, as someone who also had no internships before graduating, that project alone (and my better understanding of foundational EE concepts) helped me land a job as an electronics engineer right after graduation. However, most people should look into getting some internship or any relevant experience if they can.
I'd say more, but people should watch the video in its completion. Great job!
Thank you 😊