Usually the conversation among university students is recurrent, stating that his career is the most difficult of all and enumerating a myriad of examples to corroborate it. One of those that seems to always lead the top ten of the most complicated is Telecommunications Engineering . But is it true that it really is such a difficult race? Next, we give you some clues to help us decipher this enigma so keep reading and then tell us what your conclusion is.
If you ask the Telecom freelance engineers themselves as well as those who are immersed in these university studies, the general perception is that it is indeed a particularly difficult career. We must not forget that those who opted for it did so, in most cases, guided by a high vocational component that serves as an incentive at the time of starting to study and that gives them an extra motivation to deal with more zeal to the complex contents of this engineering. But are these contents really more difficult than those that must be learned by those who are studying, for example, Aeronautics or Medicine ? Obviously, as engineering that is, it includes a high load of mathematics and physics which are the subjects that cause the most headaches. Among the students there is panic when it comes to preparing some of the subjects of signals and systems but this may not be a really objective difficulty meter. The conclusions we can draw is that, within the group of Engineering and Architecture, Telecommunications Engineering occupies the fourth place with 14.10% of graduates with respect to the total number of students enrolled. Indeed it does not seem easy to approve this race but there are no big differences with some other engineering. Moreover, after viewing this table it is clear to us that Architecture seems to be even more complicated since just over 10% of those enrolled in those dates managed to graduate.
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AuthorShravani Reddy Vanteru ArchivesCategories |