I'm willing to follow a concise curriculum of material that will cover knowledge an engineering undergrad would possess at the end of schooling. I'm going to a really shitty eng. school, and I have one too many gaps in my knowledge, and I'm overwhelmingly self-taught, since we don't even use books in class, but are taught through professors' scriptures and their PP presentations. I'm a third year now, and passed most of my tests with knowledge I got mostly from YT.
Basically, I was and am able to pass tests by using internet, but I feel my knowledge is shaky af, because it's rare to find a complete set of lectures on YT covering an engineering subject topic fully, and on a uni level at that. I don't feel confident that I'll be an asset to the company.
Basically, I've got a year left, where I'll be writing my final paper, and have most of my time free. I'm looking to fill the gaps in my knowledge, and solidify it. I know a lot of shit, but most of it I know superficially. My current plan was to watch the entire Khan Academy Physics playlist, to fill the physics gaps, then finish watching prof. Leonard's calc 3 playlist (literally one of the best sources on math there is, detailed AND complete), then go through Serway's Physics book.
If anyone's got a better suggestion, please let me know. TLDR; looking for complete, detailed, university level lecture playlists, books, or materials, that cover most of the curriculum, or at least the absolute musts to be a competitive engineer, and be able to manipulate physics and mech. eng. branches of it with ease.
Basically, I was and am able to pass tests by using internet, but I feel my knowledge is shaky af, because it's rare to find a complete set of lectures on YT covering an engineering subject topic fully, and on a uni level at that. I don't feel confident that I'll be an asset to the company.
Basically, I've got a year left, where I'll be writing my final paper, and have most of my time free. I'm looking to fill the gaps in my knowledge, and solidify it. I know a lot of shit, but most of it I know superficially. My current plan was to watch the entire Khan Academy Physics playlist, to fill the physics gaps, then finish watching prof. Leonard's calc 3 playlist (literally one of the best sources on math there is, detailed AND complete), then go through Serway's Physics book.
If anyone's got a better suggestion, please let me know. TLDR; looking for complete, detailed, university level lecture playlists, books, or materials, that cover most of the curriculum, or at least the absolute musts to be a competitive engineer, and be able to manipulate physics and mech. eng. branches of it with ease.
