4 Years of Electrical Engineering in 26 Minutes

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Electrical Engineering curriculum, course by course, by Ali Alqaraghuli, an electrical engineering PhD student. All the electrical engineering classes are laid out in this video.

Timestamps:

0:00 Electrical engineering curriculum introduction
1:15 First year of electrical engineering
5:05 Second year of electrical engineering
14:00 Third year of electrical engineering
23:35 Fourth year of electrical engineering

#electricalengineering
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As a 5th year EE student I would highly recommend anyone that is interested to pursue this degree it may be difficult but if it was easy than everyone would do it !

TmoneyProductions
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This has me hyped! I’m a bit anxious because I’m starting school a little late (27 because I joined the military first). However, I’m also excited since I’m super passionate about this kind of stuff. I appreciate you taking the time to make this video!!

nnedots
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While in college my buddy/roommate got his EE degree. Watched that kid do 2-6 hours of homework every single night. He graduated in 4 years due to immense determination and hard work. Quite a sight to see really.

SlimMilli
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As a EE grad, this is such a great explanation of the degree and what all the courses teach you. I can see some comments worried about being able to make it through. I took 6 years to get my degree, but I kept pushing, made it, and it was so worth it.

jonnycap
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This is memory lane for me. I graduated in 1969 where there was still much about electron tubes. We used FORTRAN which was welcomed after having to use machine language. It's good to see the statistics course.

Larry
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From a 10 year professional, this has to be one of the best summaries out there. The guy explained every aspect in a way that would appeal to high school students and motivate them to take BEE as an education path

maazawan
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That was a fantastic synopsis. Thank you. I studied EE in the 70’s and I am surprise how little has changed. Of course we didn’t have MatLab and we spent more time on the drafting board. We also had to take cross fertilization courses like ME for EE’s, Statics, Dynamics, and Thermodynamics.

houstongalloway
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Calc I usually does limits, differentiation, and integration, while Calc II usually covers more advanced methods of integration along with sequences/series convergence/divergence and Taylor series to approximate functions.

michaelhoefler
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im pursuing EE in community college rn and im so HYPED up watching this video. The thought of having to take Calculus and physics classes intrigues me so much and learning about how electricity processes through devices

louieavila
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hey man just wanted to drop some support on your channel
you've inspired me alot you can't even imagine. Finally an engineer on youtube who actually likes what he's doing *gasp* most other youtubers give awful advice, focused on money and how hard it is and now one actually talks about it with enthusiasm thanks for sharing your experience!
what other YouTubers do you know that don't suck lol

blitzer
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Ain't go lie this got me a little scared of electrical engineering

geraldwesley
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Calculus is really important because it allows you to understand Fourier and Laplace. These are essential for time series analysis which is critical for comms engineering and especially digital signal processing. I think people who haven’t studied EE don’t appreciate what a complex and rich branch of engineering it is.

rolandcook
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At 53, I went back to school to get my Associates degree in Electronics. We don't have a four-year college on Kaua'i. 7am to 7pm, while living in a tent, for three years, with my wife. It's never too late. Get a support group (students in your class that you can connect with).

kenposney
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I graduated in 1986, my classes include Control Systems Engineering & Microprocessors Development (Both Intel & Motorola), Assembly Languages . . .

freelunchforchildren
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Clarification:
At 7:12, in the Ampere-Maxwell law (4th Maxwell equation), J current density which is caused by the flow of charges.
At 9:08 an OR gate is shown since any non-zero inputs from each side result in 1.

alithedazzling
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This gave me motivation to solve my Problem set in Physics (I'm still a freshman) that has a lot of integrals since I realized from this video that these integrals are still probably basic stuff if compared to the future Maths I'll be taking later on lol. Thanks! I also became really excited about Electrical Engineering because of this video.

colorx
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I am finishing high school and I have been interested in Electrical Engineering since long ago. I am also graduated with some technician degree before finishing my highschool, and I just realised that I have done most of the courses for the career, lol. Of course in a lower level (we did not have the mathematical knowledge to properly go fully in-depth), but we were working a lot with amplifiers and more! I did some research in active filters. I am pretty excited to finally do all of this in the proper level. Thanks for doing this video :)

liu
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The MAIN thing is, you need to be truly interested in science and at least somewhat interested in applied math to do well in electrical engineering. I say this because I saw so many students who weren't interested in science and had no curiosity about how and why the universe works like it does. These students mainly learned by rote - they never understood the big picture and mostly got by via memorization in order to pass exams. Then I saw some of these people after getting jobs and working in engineering for a few years. Most of them either quit and went to work in something completely unrelated or they ended up becoming program managers, or getting into middle management. LOL! And none of them were very happy with their jobs and often felt insecure because they felt they were a dime a dozen - and they are! So follow your passion and don't get into engineering unless science and engineering truly are your passions.

LaBamba
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Good job bro, you remember so many details about your classes. I am still in college and can't even explain my math class that I had last semester.

apollomedia
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Got my degree in EE a year ago and watched this video to relive it all in half an hour. This guy did a great job explaining everything! And if you're thinking about doing this major: it's honestly not that hard if you're interested in the material. It's a very interesting field with great job prospects

danielfonseca