If you wish to get familiar with some branches of engineering, beyond what's available in physics class, don't go to websites, go to a college library. If the library uses the Dewey Decimal System, you want to browse books in the numeric ranges 620-630 and 660-680. These are various engineering and technology branches. If the library uses the Library of Congress cataloguing system, you want classifications TA through TP, inclusive.
A public library or a school library won't do, and it would help if the college whose library you visit is one that offers engineering programs.
1. Decide what kind of engineering you would like to learn.
2. Go into a university website and look at the classes they are taking for the engineering you would like to learn.
3. Use the internet to find and research the specific class tops..etc.
ex: here is my university link for electrical engineering http://www.ecs.csun.edu/ece/bselectrical...
go buy Sedra/Smith microelectronic circuits sixth edition. 1400 pages, learn that book and you'll know a lot of electrical engineering (of course you will not have any hands on experience without a lab.)
anyways, good Luck!
Yea it's call 4 years of unverstiy college
PLTW
edX.org
I'm taking a class in motion physics and intro to calculus for foundation, does anyone know a free (or very cheap) good site where I can learn engineering?