Weird looking at some of those modules throughout it. I would probably say its best to take it as a masters year specialisation but not for an entire course, way too specific for an entire bachelor into master.
Weird looking at some of those modules throughout it. I would probably say its best to take it as a masters year specialisation but not for an entire course, way too specific for an entire bachelor into master.
I do tend to agree - a more general undergrad followed by a specialist MSc is a usually a better idea. After all, you might change your mind about the specialisation anyway...
What are the positives and negatives in marine engineering course. I personally have a lot of interest in marine engineering course and would also like to get a job in merchant navy. It will be really helpful if you could help me out.
What are the positives and negatives in marine engineering course. I personally have a lot of interest in marine engineering course and would also like to get a job in merchant navy. It will be really helpful if you could help me out.
It's a very specialist area. You need to identify the pros and cons in respect of yourself.
When you say you want a job in the merchant navy, what sort of job?
Weird looking at some of those modules throughout it. I would probably say its best to take it as a masters year specialisation but not for an entire course, way too specific for an entire bachelor into master.
What do you mean by background and yes I'm at uni and I'm doing civ eng.
I meant qualification wise but okay.
You just seemed a little uninformed about Marine Engineering so I thought you were an A-level student. Think of it as say Automotive where it's pretty much very similar to Mechanical just it's more geared towards automobiles except in this case it's more applied to marine subsystems, ship science etc.
You just seemed a little uninformed about Marine Engineering so I thought you were an A-level student. Think of it as say Automotive where it's pretty much very similar to Mechanical just it's more geared towards automobiles except in this case it's more applied to marine subsystems, ship science etc.
Saying that it seems rather odd to do it as a full course because its a pretty specialised area of other engineering disciplines. Looked at my unis course for automotive engineering and it has mostly shared modules with other engineering subjects in the first 2 years, whereas Newcastle for marine engineering is mostly specific modules to it throughout the course. I would think it normal to do one of the main engineering disciplines and then specialise in it later especially since with this course you are going into a pretty specific area of engineering work.
Saying that it seems rather odd to do it as a full course because its a pretty specialised area of other engineering disciplines. Looked at my unis course for automotive engineering and it has mostly shared modules with other engineering subjects in the first 2 years, whereas Newcastle for marine engineering is mostly specific modules to it throughout the course. I would think it normal to do one of the main engineering disciplines and then specialise in it later especially since with this course you are going into a pretty specific area of engineering work.
It depends on what the OP finds interesting to study and his career goals but I wouldn't say it would restrict you that much. For example, my project supervisor in my third year (who is a head of automotive engineering research at my last university) did his undergrad in Marine Engineering (at Newcastle as well funnily enough) then did a PhD in Engineering at Bristol. He teaches all the systems engineering modules as well as all the advanced mechanical dynamics modules.
Just shows you/puts into perspective how interlinked a lot of the engineering disciplines actually are despite their names.