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Best study strategies and advice for an incoming engineering major?

I am a high school senior planning to major in Electrical Engineering in college. I want to start build good habits now so I can make college a little bit easier.

What study techniques work best for engineering students, especially for math, physics? Are there specific routines, tools, or habits you wish you had started before your freshman year?

I am also looking for general advice on time management, staying organized, and avoiding burnout during the first year of college.

Any insight from current engineering majors or professionals would help.


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Teklemuz Ayenew’s Answer

To excel in Electrical Engineering, focus on truly understanding concepts rather than memorizing formulas. Build a strong foundation in circuits, electronics, devices, and engineering design, and practice problem-solving consistently using focused study sessions of about 50–60 minutes followed by 5–10 minute breaks to maintain concentration and avoid fatigue. Strength in math and physics is essential, as these subjects form the basis for modeling and analysis in engineering. Participate actively in class, ask questions whenever something is unclear, and work on exercises immediately after examples to reinforce understanding. Keep organized notes, review material after each class, summarize ideas in your own words, and complete assignments on time.

Familiarize yourself with tools like MATLAB, Arduino, microcontrollers, and Python. Explain concepts to classmates, form study groups, tackle challenging problems beyond assigned homework, and connect ideas across different courses to strengthen intuition. Get involved in lab exercises, workshops, projects, and personal experiments to apply knowledge practically and develop real-world skills. Seek mentorship from professors or senior students, and stay curious by exploring new ideas and small projects on your own.

Stay organized, prioritize tasks, and maintain a healthy balance of sleep, exercise, study, and hobbies to avoid burnout. Building strong proficiency in math, physics, programming, lab work, and hands-on project experience will boost your confidence and make your first year in Electrical Engineering much smoother. If you need more detail or guidance on any of these tips, do not hesitate to ask me!
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Eric’s Answer

Hello Noah. Great choice!
Electrical Engineering is an exciting career to pursue. My son is a Software Engineering Major and a sophomore here in New Jersey.

My best advice is to get an accountability partner during your Freshman year. Someone that you trust that you can be honest with about how you're feeling about your student experience, classes, professors, as well as where you're having success or need help. This partner can be a parent, family member, friend, teacher, school counselor, or clergy that can meet 2-3 times a month with you to "check-in" and see how things are going. College can be difficult to manage alone and having a partner that can support you is a really useful college hack.

Good luck on the path and keep moving forward. Never backward, always forward.
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Steward "Tony"’s Answer

Impulse Control is very important, especially in a campus environment. When in class, its fun & exciting. as you yourself are electrically enginered. Much like your study, every circuit has functionality when given the proper source . There are harmonic frquencies in music that can disrupt or enhance your knowledge retension and focus. Seek out Scalar Fequency music as todays music is produced within a fequency spectrum designed to cause reslessness. If you live the subject matter you will become the SME (Subject Matter Expert) Study Study Study Break Study Study Study Excercise Study....& Keep The Brain Music Playing.
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Steward "Tony"’s Answer

​Impulse Control is very important, especially in a campus environment. When in class, it's fun & exciting. as you yourself are electrically engineered. Much like your study, every circuit has functionality when given the proper source . There are harmonic frequencies in music that can disrupt or enhance your knowledge retention and focus. Seek out Scalar Frequency music as today's music is produced within a frequency spectrum designed to cause restlessness. If you live the subject matter you will become the SME (Subject Matter Expert) Study Study Study Break Study Study Study Exercise Study....& Keep The Brain Music Playing.
PS: I'm No Rocket Scientist But I've Hired So Many Of Them In My Career.
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