I wanna know why are there so many girls in Chemical Engineering? Don't get me wrong, I am not complaining about them being there at ALL! I just wanna know why chemical. Why not Electrical or Mechanical? What is it about Chemical that attracts girls so much? I would understand Biomedical but why Chemical?[Edited on October 30, 2005 at 8:59 PM. Reason : missed a word]
10/30/2005 8:58:02 PM
there's plenty of hoes in CE too
10/30/2005 9:13:12 PM
I think it has to do with the fact that CHE is by large not as theoretical and mathematical as electrical/computer science.
10/30/2005 9:15:08 PM
not as theoretical and mathematical?!ECE's don't take thermo i know ECE's do more math and suchbut a good number of ChemEs (girls included) take extra maths and CHE classes with more math related material
10/30/2005 9:20:44 PM
Well I am not going for Engineering Showdown here. I respect all Engineering Majors and consider all of them to be hard. I just don't understand why are there so many girls in Chemical. I disagree with that the intensity of theoretical and mathematical knowledge isn't as challenging to that of Electrical or Computer Science.
10/30/2005 9:46:56 PM
Are you a freshman or sophomore? During those years you'll generally see a large amount of girls in your major classes (large in relation to the number of girls you'll see in your last few semesters, that is). I wouldn't be surprised if most of the girls in the early chem classes have an "I took a year of AP chem in high school and I got an A, so I'm a shoe-in for ChemE, plus I hear the jobs pay well" attitude. Reality tends to set in during junior year, and a large number of those girls "discover" that chemistry is really boring and not what they want to do with their lives. The ones that are determined to stay in engineering go to IE, and the rest go to sociology or psychology.
10/30/2005 9:50:27 PM
10/30/2005 10:17:18 PM
10/30/2005 10:24:59 PM
10/30/2005 10:30:06 PM
If ifs and buts were bolts and nuts we'd all be in the hardware business.
10/30/2005 10:39:36 PM
Computer Science uses a lot of graph and queueing theoryI don't know why you would say it isn't mathematical.
10/30/2005 10:42:12 PM
10/30/2005 10:46:48 PM
10/30/2005 10:57:52 PM
10/30/2005 11:12:18 PM
It shouldn't be like this.I know my peers in CSC in college had a good time with graph theory.
10/30/2005 11:13:21 PM
10/30/2005 11:21:36 PM
I understand girls being in Industrial Engineering, but thats about it.
10/31/2005 1:46:26 AM
CSC can be applied or theoretical, depending on which courses you decide to take / "unofficial" track you go on. Whether or not its "mathematical" is a matter of definition and opinion.Can't link this easily, but go http://www2.acs.ncsu.edu/UPA/enrollmentdata/index.htm and click around a few times.
10/31/2005 5:38:14 AM
My cousin, who is a woman, not a hoe, switched from Aerospace To Chemical. (And this is after three years of spending her summers at various engineering space camps). She did so largely due to the adviser, Lisa Bullard. Lisa is passionate about chemical engineering and makes it sound fun and interesting to many. If women can see someone who is excited about engineering and making it in a traditionally male area, they just happen to think they can do it too. Lisa makes women (or any student for that matter) see what they can do with chemical. It becomes real.
10/31/2005 8:17:27 AM
better question would bewho fucking cares
10/31/2005 8:49:53 AM
haha, i like how wolfeee added the "not a hoe" part.
10/31/2005 9:13:14 AM
hahaha
10/31/2005 9:25:50 AM
^^^^Agreed, Dr. Bullard is the woman. And Transport Phenomena is nothing but theoretical mathematics.[Edited on October 31, 2005 at 11:56 AM. Reason : ]
10/31/2005 11:55:41 AM
10/31/2005 4:11:22 PM
10/31/2005 4:37:19 PM
i'll agree for the most part. i do think that companies should hire the best candiate for the job. however, there is the arguement (and a good one too - seen it in my work place in practice) that having people from different backgrounds (cultures, gender, age, etc) promotes more creative thinking and thus sometimes a better solution. i.e. a room with men, women, indian, black, white, 20-somethings, 60 somethings, etc may come up with a more creative and better solution than a room full of 50-something white males who all think similarly.
10/31/2005 4:45:46 PM
^Someone needs to relay this tidbit of information to DuPont in Richmond.
10/31/2005 5:11:25 PM
doesnt matter all the girls are in ChE since the ones that were hot were either taken or wouldn't date inside their dept. (wtf?)oh....2 semesters C.K. Hall/Spontak thermo or 2 semesters of transport would change anyone's opinion about ChE not being theoretical/mathematical.[Edited on October 31, 2005 at 6:10 PM. Reason : .]
10/31/2005 6:09:20 PM
^^^ duhbecause life experiences are so much more varied for a diverse group of people
10/31/2005 6:35:47 PM
if you have to ask...
10/31/2005 7:11:49 PM
QuetiThermodynamics and Reaction kinetics are just about 2 of the theoretical components of a CHE degree...and then again it depends on your concentration/focus.For electrical engineers, everything involves numbers from discrete math to control systems to ic technology to fiber optics.
10/31/2005 7:22:03 PM
I think it's somewhat of a self-perpetuating cycle. Many girls don't like to major in sausage fest fields. So they stick to the ones that other girls are already in.
10/31/2005 7:31:35 PM
I think it's somewhat of a self-perpetuating cycle.
10/31/2005 7:59:09 PM
10/31/2005 8:50:04 PM
11/1/2005 1:58:33 AM
AICHE put out a shirt a few years back in regards to women in the CHE dept."the odds are good, but the goods are odd"discuss
11/1/2005 10:38:03 AM
i wish i did chemical engineering..
11/1/2005 10:51:22 AM
11/1/2005 10:54:34 AM
^^ nooooothen 303 would be even more depressing
11/1/2005 11:32:09 AM
^ oh man ... all ECE courses are depresssin !
11/1/2005 11:35:54 AM
Well, in a way, I am kinda glad there aren't too many HOT girls in Engineering. It keeps you from getting disattracted.
11/1/2005 10:25:35 PM
11/2/2005 7:28:19 AM
11/2/2005 9:49:30 AM
girls like biology
11/2/2005 7:39:44 PM