Hi my name is Jimmy. I'm a '08 HSC grad from FSHS. Currently completing a bachelor of chemical and biomolecular engineering degree (advanced) @USYD. My goal today is to tell you guys about what this course is. I got a UAI of 99.45 and chose Chemical engineering over things like Law / Med / Commerce / Aero Engineering. I apologise for my bad grammar/spelling - I really rushed to get this out so I could focus on other things!
Why Engineering?
Engineering brings together a wide range of different disciplines into something that is physicall conceivable in the real world. If a scientist discovers the photo electric effect, engineers actually apply it to real world products.
It's on average one of the highest paying careers paths. (Chemical esp.)
What is Chemical Engineering?
Chemical Engineering is commonly called 'process engineering' in industry. The main role of chemical engineers is to design systems for producing things on a big scale. E.g. If a scientist produces a new drug, chemical engineers focus on how to create 5 tonnes of the drug (per day). That being said, chemical engineers can also design new products (similar role to scientists). Chemical engineers combine chemistry, physics, maths, and a lot of soft skills - such as project management/basic economics.
Chemical engineers:
1. Figure out how to produce products at LARGE levels.
2. Design new products
Why Chemical Engineering?
1. It pays a shit load & really strong demand of chemical engineers http://money.cnn.com/2009/07/24/news/economy/highest_starting_salaries/index.htm
(I know it US but couldn't really be bothered to find an AUS source)
Chemical engineering ranked #1, with petroleum engineering ranking #2 (which is essentially a specialisation of chemical engineering)
edit: Extra AUS data (take it for what you will)
FT Weekly earnings (comparison):
Chemical Engineers $2250: http://joboutlook.gov.au/pages/occupation.aspx?search=alpha&tab=stats&cluster=&code=2331
GP $1800: http://joboutlook.gov.au/pages/occupation.aspx?search=alpha&tab=stats&cluster=&code=2531
Surgeon: $2600
Phamarcy: $1300
Civil: $1600
Solicitors: ~$1600 http://joboutlook.gov.au/pages/occupation.aspx?search=alpha&tab=stats&cluster=&code=2713
2. For an engineering discipline - IT ACTUALLY HAS GIRLS
At the university of sydney, I would say theres about half girls half guys.
3. Very uncompetitive
Law has an cut off of ~99.5. Starting median salary - fairly average.
Chemical Engineering has a cut off of <~90? Starting median salary - one of the best.
If you are technically (math/science) gifted. You can easily get into the cream of the crop in chemical engineering and get IN THE TOP 10 percentile of job/salaries. If you do law, commerce, med, you're going to find it really hard to make it to the top 10 percentile (unless you're exceptional.
Why Chemical Engineering @ USYD (as opposed to UNSW)
First of all, to everyone that says UNSW is better for engineering - just no: http://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/world-university-rankings/2011-2012/oceania.html
1. ONE OF THE BEST COURSE STRUCTURES/Easy as shit to pass
The course structure is made up like this:
Year 1: Standard fundamental pure science courses (E.g. First year maths/chem/intro engineering subjects common to all streams/computing)
Year 2,3: 3 Cores, 1 elective.
Out of your three cores, TWO are pass/fail ONLY - no grades.
When half of your subjects are pass/fail it takes a SHITLOAD of pressure off of studies AND leaves heaps of times for job/societies/gaming/whatever floats your boat.
Year 4: Thesis, design, MIPPS.
In the fourth year, typically the top 25% of students are GIVEN A WORK EXPERIENCE PLACEMENT with a scholarship. Work experience + Money. GIVEN. A lot of my other friends in other streams are trying really hard to find work experience on your own. The average skill of the cohort is low, so making the top 25% is easy if you actually try.
2. Advanced Engineering
If you score 98+ UAI (or distinction average) you get invited to the advanced engineering stream (which is basically just advanced engineering electives). These are AMAZING.
Have a look at some stuff I personally did:
First year - A random design project - we built an electric car (from scratch/real size)
http://www.smh.com.au/environment/t...ust-escape-from-the-garage-20090922-g0ml.html
Yes the wheels are made of foam, most of the budget went into the lithium battery + construction of the motor (battery was bought commercially, motor was created from scratch, a civil engineering did the electronics for the motor too)
Second year - Business Planning - we pitched a business plan to real life VCs
Third year - I went to St. Aloysius high school to teach.
Once you complete three years in the advanced stream you get an advanced bachelor (apparently)
Who belongs in Chemical Engineering
1. If you like maths/chemistry/physics
2. If you're about 80-99 ATAR equiv intelligence (my subjective opinion)
3. If you want a really relaxed uni life, and enjoy your friends stressing the hell out!
I have 1 exam this semester - and it's pass fail NOT GRADED.
Who shouldn't do Chemical engineering at USYD
1. If you hate maths/chemistry/physics
You don't belong in science or engineering
2. If you're EXCEPTIONALLY TALENTED. If you're a genius, you belong in something where your gifts can flourish. I recommend IT if you're interested in becoming a billionaire, or Science if you made it into olympiad (look into PhB (science) @ANU)
In conclusion,
If you are talented in science/math and you want a stable, well paying career. Consider chemical engineering. (@USYD)
Why Engineering?
Engineering brings together a wide range of different disciplines into something that is physicall conceivable in the real world. If a scientist discovers the photo electric effect, engineers actually apply it to real world products.
It's on average one of the highest paying careers paths. (Chemical esp.)
What is Chemical Engineering?
Chemical Engineering is commonly called 'process engineering' in industry. The main role of chemical engineers is to design systems for producing things on a big scale. E.g. If a scientist produces a new drug, chemical engineers focus on how to create 5 tonnes of the drug (per day). That being said, chemical engineers can also design new products (similar role to scientists). Chemical engineers combine chemistry, physics, maths, and a lot of soft skills - such as project management/basic economics.
Chemical engineers:
1. Figure out how to produce products at LARGE levels.
2. Design new products
Why Chemical Engineering?
1. It pays a shit load & really strong demand of chemical engineers http://money.cnn.com/2009/07/24/news/economy/highest_starting_salaries/index.htm
(I know it US but couldn't really be bothered to find an AUS source)
Chemical engineering ranked #1, with petroleum engineering ranking #2 (which is essentially a specialisation of chemical engineering)
edit: Extra AUS data (take it for what you will)
FT Weekly earnings (comparison):
Chemical Engineers $2250: http://joboutlook.gov.au/pages/occupation.aspx?search=alpha&tab=stats&cluster=&code=2331
GP $1800: http://joboutlook.gov.au/pages/occupation.aspx?search=alpha&tab=stats&cluster=&code=2531
Surgeon: $2600
Phamarcy: $1300
Civil: $1600
Solicitors: ~$1600 http://joboutlook.gov.au/pages/occupation.aspx?search=alpha&tab=stats&cluster=&code=2713
2. For an engineering discipline - IT ACTUALLY HAS GIRLS
At the university of sydney, I would say theres about half girls half guys.
3. Very uncompetitive
Law has an cut off of ~99.5. Starting median salary - fairly average.
Chemical Engineering has a cut off of <~90? Starting median salary - one of the best.
If you are technically (math/science) gifted. You can easily get into the cream of the crop in chemical engineering and get IN THE TOP 10 percentile of job/salaries. If you do law, commerce, med, you're going to find it really hard to make it to the top 10 percentile (unless you're exceptional.
Why Chemical Engineering @ USYD (as opposed to UNSW)
First of all, to everyone that says UNSW is better for engineering - just no: http://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/world-university-rankings/2011-2012/oceania.html
1. ONE OF THE BEST COURSE STRUCTURES/Easy as shit to pass
The course structure is made up like this:
Year 1: Standard fundamental pure science courses (E.g. First year maths/chem/intro engineering subjects common to all streams/computing)
Year 2,3: 3 Cores, 1 elective.
Out of your three cores, TWO are pass/fail ONLY - no grades.
When half of your subjects are pass/fail it takes a SHITLOAD of pressure off of studies AND leaves heaps of times for job/societies/gaming/whatever floats your boat.
Year 4: Thesis, design, MIPPS.
In the fourth year, typically the top 25% of students are GIVEN A WORK EXPERIENCE PLACEMENT with a scholarship. Work experience + Money. GIVEN. A lot of my other friends in other streams are trying really hard to find work experience on your own. The average skill of the cohort is low, so making the top 25% is easy if you actually try.
2. Advanced Engineering
If you score 98+ UAI (or distinction average) you get invited to the advanced engineering stream (which is basically just advanced engineering electives). These are AMAZING.
Have a look at some stuff I personally did:
First year - A random design project - we built an electric car (from scratch/real size)
http://www.smh.com.au/environment/t...ust-escape-from-the-garage-20090922-g0ml.html
Yes the wheels are made of foam, most of the budget went into the lithium battery + construction of the motor (battery was bought commercially, motor was created from scratch, a civil engineering did the electronics for the motor too)
Second year - Business Planning - we pitched a business plan to real life VCs
Third year - I went to St. Aloysius high school to teach.
Once you complete three years in the advanced stream you get an advanced bachelor (apparently)
Who belongs in Chemical Engineering
1. If you like maths/chemistry/physics
2. If you're about 80-99 ATAR equiv intelligence (my subjective opinion)
3. If you want a really relaxed uni life, and enjoy your friends stressing the hell out!
I have 1 exam this semester - and it's pass fail NOT GRADED.
Who shouldn't do Chemical engineering at USYD
1. If you hate maths/chemistry/physics
You don't belong in science or engineering
2. If you're EXCEPTIONALLY TALENTED. If you're a genius, you belong in something where your gifts can flourish. I recommend IT if you're interested in becoming a billionaire, or Science if you made it into olympiad (look into PhB (science) @ANU)
In conclusion,
If you are talented in science/math and you want a stable, well paying career. Consider chemical engineering. (@USYD)
Last edited: