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What are they currently studying in universities?
Hello, I’m going to take the ZNO (EGE) soon and I need to choose subjects, I thought it would be nice to enter it (I liked software engineering according to the description), and so, I need to score points in such subjects as:
1. Ukrainian language and Literature
2. Mathematics
3. English language or physics
Here it is very difficult in the 3rd grade, I study English and it comes to me more than physics) Should I devote time to studying an uninteresting subject or will I go deep into English?
But here another question arises, what do they study in universities? No matter how hard I tried, I couldn’t find any information on this, but someone knows, right? I would be grateful if you could tell me about physics in universities and what subjects they generally study there. Thank you.
*It's just that if I give up on physics now, then perhaps in the future this action will have a negative impact on my learning.
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The admissions committee of the universities of interest knows. There, upon request, they will give you the entire curriculum and give the necessary explanations.
In fact, I can say frankly - at the moment I myself am a student of the university, and they do not give anything but extensive knowledge of mathematics and some technical subjects. They can throw sticks at me, saying:
- "It's not like that, you just don't study shit, etc."
Alas, but that's how it is. You will be given really great knowledge in mathematics, but for special subjects I can say this - people do not have practical experience in applying certain things (for example, the same teachers who teach C #, Python, PHP, C ++, etc.). For a second - this is MTUCI. The funny thing is that I had an opinion, they say, having come from the army, I will lose absolutely all my skills. But no, it turned out to be even more practical skills than the average teacher of a university or technical school (where I studied earlier).
Briefly summarizing:-Everything is in your hands, and you yourself must study the whole thing.
English in IT is in demand about 100 times more than physics.
You will need physics only if you deal with some kind of iron, and then not all, but only electronics / electrical engineering.
The rest of the physics may be needed only by process control engineers, and this is already a very narrow specialization.
But here another question arises, what do they study in universities?
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