Don't panic! Once you start working on a particular project or activity, you can home-in on which areas of your existing knowledge are going to be most useful. You might want to revise them and/or pursue additional areas of study, but you'll have the underlying general resources and familiarity in your mental toolkit already. Depending on what area you are working in, you might find it all very easy.
My first proper engineering job used barely 1% of what I had learned at university and actually very little maths. What was more important was judgement; I needed to be able to say "I have a new and better approach to solving this problem," or "let's review this policy because it doesn't seem to be cost-effective." It was not until a later, different job that I actually had to start crunching numbers and equations
Don't panic! Once you start working on a particular project or activity, you can home-in on which areas of your existing knowledge are going to be most useful. You might want to revise them and/or pursue additional areas of study, but you'll have the underlying general resources and familiarity in your mental toolkit already. Depending on what area you are working in, you might find it all very easy.
My first proper engineering job used barely 1% of what I had learned at university and actually very little maths. What was more important was judgement; I needed to be able to say "I have a new and better approach to solving this problem," or "let's review this policy because it doesn't seem to be cost-effective." It was not until a later, different job that I actually had to start crunching numbers and equations.
Thank you for sharing this. I now have a better understanding.