With respect to the number of bachelor's degrees being handed out to the students majoring in the following fields: Chemistry, Physics, Engineering at a University.
Chemistry: Rutgers University, 40/40,000, .1%
With respect to the number of bachelor's degrees being handed out to the students majoring in the following fields: Chemistry, Physics, Engineering at a University.
Chemistry: Rutgers University, 40/40,000, .1%
uh... what
Then things become depressing when we get to the statistics regarding the number of employed bachelors.
The amount of people who can afford to feed a family of three verse the amount of food available for a family of three
3/2
men to women ratio in certain countries according to wikipedia
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of...s_by_sex_ratio
I sorted mine in the 15-24 age range and the northern mariana islands have the highest number of females (compared to males) in that age range. Guess I'll head there for vacation
People argue that the future is heavily dependent on advancements from the sciences. With this idea in mind, there has been a world wide focus on education, I was curious how much colleges are turning out so called scientists to advance the modern field of knowledge for the betterment of humanity.
We have about 1% for all science only based majors, then about 10-20% each year of different engineering subgroups and then 3% major in specifically Psychology, the most popular offered major. Pool of 40,000ish students at the University of Michigan
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