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What Second Year Electrical Engineering Students at Umass Amherst can Expect Academically

By Madison Wang, published Jul 10, 2007
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This is a continuation of my 'What to Expect Academically as a First Year Electrical Engineering Student at Umass Amherst' Article. After completing freshman year, a student should have a very good idea of what is coming next. They should be familiar with digital logic as well with Java or C++. Sophomore year is much more difficult than the year before.

Sophomore Year

As a sophomore, EE students have much less choice in what classes they take than during their freshman year. This is mostly because there is not much room for general education courses during this year. Sophomores have to take as many as three more math classes (Calculus III, Linear Algebra, and Ordinary Differential Equations), before they are allowed to continue onto junior level courses. Students in their second year will also begin to focus on a 'thematic elective'. This is a direction the student chooses to take along with engineering classes. The choices for a thematic elective are business, biology, chemistry, math, physics, and a general science thematic, which combines chemistry, math, and physics.

Circuit Analysis

Remember learning about circuits in Physics II for about one or two weeks? Circuit Analysis is a two-semester course that deals solely with the analyzing of analog circuits. The first half of the fall semester course deals with learning all of the circuit analysis techniques such as nodal, mesh, thevenin equivalence, etc. as well as the most basic principles such as Kirchoff's current and voltage laws. In this course we learn that Ohm's law (V = IR) is one of the most important laws in engineering and physics and we use it over and over again. During the second half of the semester, capacitors and inductors are introduced which give a wild spin on things.

During the spring semester, Circuit Analysis becomes a bit more complicated. The circuits are now all in alternating current (AC) as opposed to direct current (DC), so we have to analyze them in different ways while using the same techniques we learned in the fall. Complex numbers and logarithms become very important at this time.

Programming

University of Massachusetts at Amherst
Neigborhood: UMass Campus
Amherst, MA 01003 USA
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