93gobears;842272883 said:
This is not my strength. His father is a construction contractor without a lot of college experience but wants the best for his kids. Apparently the kid has already gone to some sort of Cal Engineering Camp and got hooked despite being the only white guy there.
What kind of Engineering degrees are available at Cal? And what are the best ways to pursue them outside of initial acceptance?
I previously heard going to L&S then taking mostly courses in engineering. How successful is that?
If he REALLY wants to do Engineering, then the JC route is the way to go. Going from L&S into Engineering is nearly unheard of. On the other hand, about 30%-35% of the upper division Engineering students come from JC's. Lots and lots of folks leave Engineering disciplines as lower division students at Cal - opening up a lot of slots for JC transfers as Juniors.
You need to get good grades at a JC - probably 3.5 or better as noted earlier. But, the best bet is to check and see what type of grades it takes to get into Cal Engineerg from a JC these days.
If he is primarily interested in Civil Engineering, then maybe even a 3.2 or 3.4 from the JC would get him there.
Now, that's not easy at any JC. You are still talking about plenty of Calculus, Linear Algebra, Diff EQ, three semesters of Physics, Statics, etc. etc. Getting a 3.5 in those classes at a JC won't be easy either. But, it's a far better option than getting into Cal in L&S and trying to back-door into the engineering school.
Plus - just personal experience - my education at DVC in chemistry and physics classes with only 30 students was rather excellent. Perhaps likely, even better than I would have had at Cal with 800-1000 students and counting on a TA...
As it turned out ... the best academic students at Juniors and Seniors at Cal came from JC's. I don't know why that is, but folks definitely came in very prepared. Plus the upper division Engineering classes are almost identical to the JC experience in size, etc. You get to learn from the Proj with only 20-30students in the class...
I spent 10 years recruiting engineers on campus at Cal twice a year while I was with Exxon (and, as a side note, it's the only thing I really miss about not working at Exxon after all these years - that decade on campus with the Profs was a lot of fun, actually). But, during those ten years I found that most of the very top GPA students all came from JC's. I never experienced the lower division "weed out" at Cal, but from what I heard it can be very overwhelming.
I encourage anyone to do the JC option almost from the get-go anyway...