cthia wrote:The basic course is called...
Statics - Study of forces acting in equilibrium on rigid bodies.
Pass it, then comes the wind up and the pitch...
Strength of Materials (simply Strength to students) you keep the assumption of bodies in equilibrium, but you drop the "rigid" assumption. Because, well, life moves. Cables stretch, buildings sway, joists bend, etc.
Strength is anything but basic. It is a very difficult course to grasp and pass. More students flunk Strength than any other engineering course. It's a grave digger. A career changer. There's a joke - Strength is a very strong course as strong as the strength it teaches. It has to be, because it is the most dropped course! lol
You can take mechanics before statics. Or simultaneously.
One, Statics is not correct. Statics is not required unless you are designing a buildings complete structure. In this case, one only has to understand that a hollow structure uses less material for the same strength. Statics is nothing except: can you add and do basic algebra. Rather mechanics is required for basic structures. Section Modulus, Buckling, and deflection. Any high school kid can grasp Mechanics if they are willing to read. Nothing difficult to it. Open Eishbach and read in the super simple sense. Well, the most basic of understanding of calculus is required for deflection curves, if one does not just ignore that aspect entirely as structures this aspect does not matter one iota. Rather only total deflection is required. Don't have to calculate a thing, just look up your common beam in tables.
Heck, back in my youth, I took Statics, Mechanics, Strength of Materials Science, Circuits and some gen ed class which I forget which, all in the same quarter. Easiest was Statics/Mechanics. Memorize a few equations and the rest is simple if you can do addition and basic algebra that is. Mat Sci, just requires the ability to read and memorize. All three classes are easy B+/A- territory without much sweat. If one actually studied, easy A.
And what piss poor college has student engineers failing Mechanics? Dynamics? Sure. Calculus? Sure. Differential Equations? Sure. Mechanics? Uh, no. Most All the failed engineers vanish before Mechanics class. They vanish during Calculus. At least Dynamics course is hard. Mechanics is easy. All you have to do is follow the yellow brick road of easy algebra. Not quite as easy as plug and chug Thermo or Statics, but damned easy.
I think the class you are thinking of where quite a few so called engineers fail is Machine Design when you have to combine, Statics, Dynamics, Vibrations, Fatigue, and Strength of Materials, often including Materials Science along with Heat Transfer. Now that is hard as there are so many iterations that one simple mistake can doom you, as creating a WAG first, is pretty tough as there are a huge number of variables.
Standard Commercial Building Architecture is lead pipe simple. Anyone can do it. All you have to do is follow spec. It is bloody foolproof. Sure, there are a few exceptions such as large atrium's with suspended catwalks, and curving stair, or curved glass facades, but otherwise... Lead pipe simple. Why architects still have a job is quite puzzling to me. It should be automated by now. Today all they basically do is just hit "print", then rubber stamp the same damn drawing day after day that often they never even drew or calculated with a minor tweak here and there and get paid handsomely for it. Spend far more time on traffic control, logistics, and HVAC, than they do the actual structure of the building. Of course the other half of their time they spend as expensive interior designers.