The Mechanical Engineering: Technical Drawing,[3a] Descriptive Geometry,[3b] Statics,[3c] Dynamics,[3d] Thermodynamics,[3e] Strength of Materials,[3f] Fluid Dynamics,[3g] Manufacturing Engineering,[3h] Kinematics,[3i] Dynamic Systems,[3j] Machine Design,[3k] Technical Drawing,[3l] Engineering Economics,[3m][3] Pure and Applied Mathematics: Calculus I,[4a] Calculus II,[4b] Linear Algebra,[4c] Calculus III,[4d] Differential Equations,[4e] Discrete Mathematics,[4f] Linear Programming,[4g] Numerical Analysis,[4h] Probability and Statistics for Engineers,[4i] Vector Analysis: Tensor Calculus,[4j][4] Engineering Physics: Mechanics,[5a] Wave Mechanics,[5b] Thermodynamics,[5c] Electricity and Magnetism,[5d] Light and Optics,[5e] Modern Physics,[5f][5] and Material Science: [6] sections will be of interest to a select few who studied for their undergraduate degree and/or need to refresh themselves before they take the Mechanical Engineer's emphasis of the Engineer's in Training (EIT) Examination.
Extended materials for Electrical Engineering[7] that include a focus on Analog Electrical Circuits,[7a] Advanced Electric Circuits,[7b] Engineering electromagnetics,,[7c] Electronic Devices and Circuit Theory,[7d] Fundamentals of Digital Design,[7e] and Robotics and Mechatronics[7f] are included. Optional materials that will be of interest to a Mechanical Engineer are under the Computer Science[8] section that includes: Boolean Algebra,[8a] Xcode basics,[8b] LLVM Compiler basics,[8c] Blender Basics,[8d] Finite Automata,[8e] OpenCL,[8f] and OpenGL.[8g]