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What To Choose Between Engineering Or Law

How do I chose between engineering, law, and medicine?

I wouldn't know how or presume to know how to make a decision like this for someone else. I guess simplicity is best here. What is your passion here for out of these 3 things. Remember this choice, this career is going to be a lot of your life and last a pretty long time. I would think what calls to you most or is there one that comes natural to you or that you are just good at. Something that you enjoy never seems quite like work as something you don't like. I hope what you choose is what you were meant to do and that it brings you happiness. Good luck with your decision my friend.

How can I choose between engineering and law?

Those are very different paths to choose and to be honest I don't understand the question. Since a Law degree is by definition a post graduate degree and engineering can be an undergraduate degree, why would you have to choose? I know engineers who have gone on to Law School, and honestly if you can handle the workload from an engineering curriculum you can handle law school, and there are specialties that you can only do after law school if you have a technical background like the one that engineering would provide (such as patent law).My advice for you would be to take or at least start an engineering degree and evaluate how much you enjoy the courses and the work of engineering first. As an internship or even just as a learning experience, shadow both engineers and lawyers in various fields and levels if you can to understand what the daily life of both would be. If you decide you want to be a lawyer, great. If you decide that law school isn't right for you, at the very least you will have a great degree that will allow you to get a great job right out of school.

What should I choose, engineering, law, or science?

mostly it depends on ur interest ,u r comparison is too wide.But i will answer to you according to my view.1.I have seen many people taking science because of fear of maths. engineering is not about maths it is one of the subject among all.suppose if u r in that situation go for engneering.2.And i have seen some people taking science thinking that engineering students wont get jobs.But many people in india doing engineering just for namesake .And many of them dont even know the basic concepts and they used to have backlogs.This is the reason for their unemployement .so if want to do engineering read properly clear all the subjects without any backlogs with good concepts on subjects and with good cgpa. you will get a job for sure.if possible try to do internship.3.when compared to all above engineering students have more jobs when compared to remaining.bot private and govt sec.coming to science…..1.you need to study more time because it contains more theory part when compared to engineering .And u need to rememeber more terms.2.science field also contains good job oppurtunities.there are many programmes in science choose one of them of ur interest .3.if u have any interest in science field go for it.Coming to law….It's better not to choose this , bcoz it does not have good job oppurtunities.Most of lawyers will be unemployed unless u get the cases.It better to choose above two.

Why should i choose Law over Engineering?

The only time you should pick Law over Engineering or Engineering over Law is when you like one over the other.Those are 2 totally different fields.I suggest you do more research on the career options for Law and Engineering and know what each career is like.LawLawyersLaw clerksArbitrators and conciliatorsJudges and magistratesEngineeringAerospace engineersCivil engineersMechanical engineersEngineering managersChemical engineersArchitectural draftersFind out what the day to day life on each career is like, what their work environment is like, what's their pay, etcSource: Jobs With This Degree

Should i do law, vet, or engineering?

i finished yr 12 last year with a TER of 99.55 and have now started studying electrical engineering. i used to like maths a lot, but after doing it day after day, am starting to find it a little dry, and i don't like the practical component of engineering. So i was thinking of changing to law (i got an 18/20 for english studies last year), but i'm not sure if it would be any better. The other option i was considering was becoming a vet. any advice on which is a better career and which i should choose would be greatly appreciated :)

Law,Medicine or Engineering?

i am getting an idea for your mental dilemma.
i am an Engineer (Metallurgical & Material Science Engineer).

here is my view, hope it might help you,

before choosing any field, better to say any career, you must have an idea about it.
you can get an idea from you peers, parents , teachers, internet, magazine books & bla bla.
it never matter, what you have chosen as career option; you can become a doc , engineer or layer, but what matters most is what you like.
if you like helping people and cant see them in pain, go become a doc.
or if you are angry with the lawyers or wanted to change something in society, you think that some rules should be incorporated as Law for preventing such and such act; the Court Room is waiting for you.

else if you wanted to develop/create something, you enjoyed in developing/using new item.
the world of Engineering needs you.

these are some example, that may be a reason to choose a career in any field.

but before taking any step, you need to talk to yourself and make a firm decision what you wanted to be.

as far as job opportunities concern, never even think about it.
there are plenty of jobs floating in market, you just need to be good enough to grab.
Remember, ran for the excellence , success will follow you.

mail me on my ID sushantkumar321@yahoo.co.in if you have any more doubt.

If I am a good debater, what should I choose: engineering or law from NLU?

While most of the people will suggest you that you should become a lawyer if you are good at speaking, or particularly debating ,I would give you a reality check.In advocacy, 90% of the work goes without speaking. Research and drafting consists of 90% of work and only 10% is about arguing in the court. That too, usually lasts, 5 minutes if it is High court and 2 minutes or even less than 2 minutes before the lower court. You will never ever get a chance to give eloquent speeches like that of courtroom drama shown in movies. Real life advocacy is about being good with communication skill with common people.Now, coming on to your question. Let me answers it by comparing engineering and life of a law school culture.In law school, you are expected to posses good speaking skill as a very standard norm, like it's a sine qua non of being a law student. If you are good at debating you are not someone extraordinary. For a simple reason that you have to be. Because almost everyone is.Now, imagine in engineering college, you have public speaking skill ( debating in particular) which is very uncommon for an engineering student to posses. You would be looked up to. You will have a rare but a desirable trait which the recruiters look forward to. There is a dearth of engineering students with good communication skills but if you do engineering you will have an edge over others just because of a quality that you posses naturally. But if you join a law school, it would be a regular thing.So, only because you are good at debating will not help you in becoming a good advocate but it would certainly help in having a distinct personality as an engineer.lastly, I would say it's very childish to decide career on the basis of just one quality. Debating is just a part of personality. Your career should be decided according to the subjects to which you are inclined and according to the cause you think you should contribute in the society.That's it from my side.Thanks for reading!! :

Which is better law or engineering?

Ha, since I have both a law degree and an engineering degree, please allow me. In the US, person with a law degree is a dime a dozen. However in emerging markets, a law degree is highly sought after and respected. A person with an engineering degree is needed in almost everywhere, some places more than others of course. And some engineering degrees are worth more than others, i.e., petrochemical engineering, biomedical engineering, nuclear engineering, etc.IF you are really smart, then combine both and practice IP law. I tried, but I found it very boring.I have owned a law practice (yes, with a law partner, associate attorneys, paralegals, and secretaries and the crystal chandeliers). And I have also owned an engineering consultancy. Well, I still run the consultancy and it is sustaining a pretty decent lifestyle.

If I have a choice between studying law or engineering, which one should I study and why?

Lawyer, higher paid provided you get a good job and to get a good job you need contact or very good grades, otherwise you end up as counselor or investigator at a insurance company etc. Lawyers make a lot more but the “unemployment” is high. Very protective. The fancy jobs are usually located in the big cities. Although smaller cities have opportunities they are usually not as fancy. Experience counts and you will be more valuable with age.Engineer, depends on what type of engineer but in general if you are specialized you need to move to change jobs, since companies know that they will press your salaries downward. Engineering jobs are spread out some are in the cities but most are on the outskirts and smaller cities. Salary are alot lower for engineer than lawyers. Lawyer reach their peak at around 40–45 from there on your salary will go down. but the cost of living in smaller cities are lower so it can be quite good in total.So in short if you want a well paid job in a or near a big city choose law. If you want a low paying job in a smaller city choose engineering. If you want a interesting job I would say they can be equal. If you want to afford an expensive hobby choose law.If you think you got the contacts to become a lawyer go law. If you think you are the next bill gates. . .go law.

Why choose chemical engineering as a major?

It's the most versatile engineering major, so you can quickly pick up on the other engineering majors if you decide to transfer except for maybe electrical and computer engineering depending on how intelligent you are. Like the person before me said, it's the best background to have. Even if it doesn't work out, you can easily move on to anything else. There is actually a good number of people who switch from chemical engineering to law school (go figure). It's possible for chemical engineers to switch to other engineering majors, but not the other way around. Why? Because chemical engineering studies calculus and math beyond any of the other majors. It's the only engineering major that goes up to non-linear differentials. And the workload is so heavy that switching to another major is like a walk in the park. The con to this, obviously, is that you'll be working your butt off as you hear other people in other majors complain about their "heavy" workloads.

In terms of career, I don't exactly agree with the person above. Yes, chemical engineers can pretty much apply themselves to any job. However, they are expensive, so companies are not always so willing to hire them. Usually, it's only the wealthy and popular industries or companies that can afford chemical engineers, so it becomes pretty competitive. And with the lousy economy today, chemical engineering jobs are actually predicted to decrease over the next decade relative to the other engineering jobs like civil and computer. But like I said, if it doesn't work out, you can alway add on to your focus like business, law, psychology, etc. With this strong background in math and analytical skills combined with your focus, you would make a very competitive candidate. Also, the pro to this if you do get the job is that you'll be making 70 K to start.

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