Which Queen's engineering discipline should you actually choose?
Built for Queen's common first-year engineering students choosing among the ten guaranteed disciplines. The advisor reads your first-year signals, workload tolerance, and problem-solving habits against the real Queen's program structures instead of treating this like a personality quiz.
The ranking considers the ten guaranteed BASc discipline choices available from Queen's common first year, not generic North American majors that Queen's does not actually offer as standalone disciplines.
The report uses Queen's first-year and second-year course structure, including programming, mechanics, chemistry, field methods, and discipline-specific core sequences.
If your interest sounds more like software, biomedical, or environmental work, the report explains which Queen's discipline paths lead there instead of pretending they are separate BASc choices.
The advisor compares only the Queen's BASc discipline choices available from common first year and explains where upper-year specializations sit inside them.
Photo: LearnLoop Live StudioThe report uses actual Queen's curriculum signals such as first-year programming, mechanics, chemistry, field methods, and second-year core courses.
Photo: LearnLoop Live StudioWhat the quiz asks and why
Calculus, mechanics, programming, chemistry, experimentation, and design questions are framed around the kinds of first-year material Queen's engineering students actually encounter.
Each Queen's discipline is compared through its second-year core, conceptual load, laboratory or field demands, and the type of technical thinking it rewards.
Career outlook is framed with directional North American demand patterns and Queen's internship reality, without fake salary claims or invented placement guarantees.
The report explains when an interest is best reached through a Queen's specialization path rather than a standalone BASc discipline choice.