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November 17, 2004
A: FROM MENTOR DEBBIE BREDEL
IN PA
Casey;
Taking a variety of classes while in high school always helps
to
"broaden your horizons". Don't limit yourself at
this time in your
life. You may find that you enjoy engineering as a field and
would like
to pursue it further. Also, there is a field of engineering
called
biomedical ( this is not offered at all universities, but
was offered at
my school - the University of Pittsburgh) which ties engineering
to the
medical field. This is something that might interest you.
Since this is
not my field I cannot supply any details on the type of work
that you
would be doing - but thought that at least it gives you something
to
research.
Good luck.
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November 13, 2004
A: FROM MENTOR SIDDIKA PASI
IN NJ
Engineering curriculum at best teaches you problem solving.
You learn a lot
of theories in engineering school and some of which you might
not use in
real life. But taking these classes will expose you to a variety
of
scenarios were problem solving in essential. Engineering will
condition you
to properly formulate problems, devise different approaches
to solving it
and applying it to find the real solution. As far as how Engineering
applies to nursing is that it will help you understand some
phenomena in the
human body. For example, study of Fluid Mechanics can help
you understand
blood flow in human arteries and so forth. So you can never
go wrong with
taking an engineering class because it will teach you essential
knowledge
and skill you will need in nursing.
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A: FROM MENTOR JOAN LUSK IN
RI
Being neither an engineer nor a nurse, I feel fully qualified
to
answer this one! I know from being a teacher that one of the
biggest
hurdles for students of medical science (nursing included)
is
translating real-world problems expressed in words into equations
expressed in math. (Patients don't tell you their problem
as an
equation - they have a possibly incoherent set of symptoms
and
complaints that you have to make sense of.) An engineering
course in
high school, I would hope, would familiarize you with that
vital step
in solving all sorts of problems, and the skill would transfer
to
physiology and biochemistry and the technical background for
nursing.
The skill would transfer to any sort of scientific problem
solving;
and you might find that you could enjoy and succeed at a wider
variety of fields.
If you know the course has a good teacher, if you have or
would learn
the math background, and if taking doesn't prevent you from
taking
something more important to you, why not go for it?
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