Is there a way to self-teach Elec Eng? At least on a basic level, which scientific-specific fields would you recommend to study? All Calc, some Physics?
Actual electrical engineering to the level of a qualified degree-holding professional is not attainable alone. You need lots of lab experience to supplement book learning.
You need calc 1-3, Differential Equations (big time), linear algebra wouldn't hurt
You need to know electromagnetism (obviously) and kinematics is a good idea.
I'm a senior about to graduate in ECE btw.
If I had to recommend a self learning flow I would go differential calc -> integral calc -> kinematics & electromagnetism -> multivariate calc ->circuit analysis (hard to really get into without a lab), diffy Q (maybe in tandem with analysis)
This will bring up to roughly a fresh Sophomore level EE student.
>>9151487
Thank you! Since your a senior I have to ask, do you like it? I hear too many people bitch about it and switching later on
>>9151492
At my university my incoming class in ECE was roughly 7,000 and now as a senior we are roughly 1,000. You sink or swim, you're passionate about it or you're not. That's all there is to it.