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(Music)
Well I'd like to pursue physics, I'd like to go to grad school for it.
If for some reason I decide I don't want to, then I've got engineering to back me up.
The difference is kind of the math and the theory, where it comes from.
Physics, they like to tell you how that came about, why this is.
Engineering you learn the math, not so much how it came to be, but how to exploit it. How to use it to get what you want, that kind of thing.
It exists because a lot of the classes are kind of similar.
Right now I'm in a class called Electricity and Magnetism, and there's one that's similar to engineering.
And you learn kind of the same stuff, just the physics you learn how, you learn more in depth about the equations. While in engineering you learn how you can use those equations to apply them to real world things.
Usually if you start kind of slacking off and not keeping up with your work then you're going to fall behind and its really hard to catch up once you fall behind.
If you're motivated then you should be fine. If you're not then you're going to have some trouble.
Probably to plan out what they want to do for the day, for the week or whatever. Make sure they give themselves enough time. Make sure they study and do their work and they should be fine otherwise.
(Music)