That is not true; however it is important to have good writing skills in these professions as you must document on paper your work and conclusions. Don't neglect courses on writing and humanities as it will make you a better person all around and help you and compliment you in your science skills, particularly if you go on to college.
No. You do not suck. You can truly . . . whatever the opposite is.
No, it is not true. It is false.
Math is used to describe nature. Chemistry and physics are described by math and engineering is the application of these sciences. Computer science requires math because code writing and design of parts all require math to be proficient. If you study engineering at university you will take 2 years of calculus before you can get into pro school.
No, you have to be good at physics and engineering to be good at it. Engineering would require you to write reports, but to write a 2500 word report? It's about quality, not quantity. If you can write a good essay, then you should have no problem writing up reports for when you do engineering work - assuming you know what you're doing. If you're hopeless at writing essays, physics and engineering, then you're going to be bad at it.
yeah
No. You do not suck. You can truly . . . whatever the opposite is.
It's absurd to draw such a general correlation.
No. You do not suck. You can truly . . . whatever the opposite is.
No. It is an absurd falsehood, to which no credence should be paid.
They may do OK in physics, chemistry or engineering but it is unlikely that they will do particularly well. In their career, there will be times when they need to write up reports on their work. Or they may need to "sell" their ideas for research funding, or for business finance. Their audiences will be busy people, receiving many such reports or applications and will not wish to spend time reading poorly presented work.
No, it is not true. It is false.
No
Math is used to describe nature. Chemistry and physics are described by math and engineering is the application of these sciences. Computer science requires math because code writing and design of parts all require math to be proficient. If you study engineering at university you will take 2 years of calculus before you can get into pro school.
Yes
No it isn't.
A person who has dyslexia but who is good at math can succeed in the sciences. Science depends much more on math, than it does on writing.
Not necessarily. They may be difficult for you if you're the sort of person that thinks this question makes sense, though.