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#26 |
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I'm an EE in electrical utilities.
It's important to consider the industry you want to work in. IE an EE can work in semiconductors, aerospace, biomedical, utilities, consumer electronics, etc. Each of these has a unique lifestyle and career path that can make you miserable if you're not down for it. I hated working on semiconductor equipment in Silicon Valley - long hours, a product cycle that refreshed every 18 months (meaning possibility of layoffs every 18 months). Now I'm in utilities and I'm pretty happy - stable industry, well-paid, etc. IMO engineering in the US is undervalued. Our math education sucks and unlike other countries, "engineer" is not a protected title which is why you got positions like customer service engineer and sales engineer that just throw the word engineer in the title to make them sound technical. Most engineers never break 6 figures and personally I think for the amount of work expected, most are underpaid. And in the US, professional licensing is an afterthought unless you work for the government or want to be a contractor. In other countries, it's a rite of passage (in Canada they give you a ring and you can't even call yourself an engineer unless you're licensed).
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I suppose if you count educating yourself as a "waste of time and money," this could be true.
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Of crimes---none is greater than having things that one desires; Of disasters---none is greater than not knowing when one has enough. Of defects---none brings more sorrow than the desire to attain. |
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I'm a chemical engineer so I'll throw my two cents in. I can't speak to EE since I know very little about it.
As far as pay goes, ChE and EE both pay towards/at the top of the engineering food chain, I think ChE pays a hair more but it won't matter, you'll make good money and have comparable offers in either. One serious thing to consider with ChE is that there is a 90% chance you will be put in a less than desirable location, and a very high chance you will be in operations (read: working at a plant/refinery). Think gulf coast, middle of Texas, middle of Nebraska, Iowa, etc. since that's where plants are. On the other hand that may not be the case, I happen to work in an office in downtown, or you could work at 3M headquarters in St. Paul, MN or similar. Just something to think about, most people out of college end up with great jobs but in less than desirable locations. Additionally, I don't know a single person I graduated four years ago with who is happy at a plant. Take that for what it's worth. Another thing with ChE is that very few people who aren't ChEs really have any idea what it is ChEs do; many people think it has a lot to do with chemistry, and sure it uses chemistry as a basis but ChE is a whole different field. The way I think of it is that a ChE could very likely do a chemist's job, but a chemist definitely could not do a chemical engineering job. Chemical engineering is very heavy in physics and spends most of its time educating you in abstract concepts that are counterintuitive. It's a completely different animal from chemistry. With chemical engineering, you won't REALLY know what it is until you are about halfway through your junior year, when you really are in the thick of fluid dynamics, mass transfer, diffusion, etc. Quote:
I think 50 years ago 3 out of 4 graduates went into petroleum, now it's 1 in 4. That's still a lot and those jobs aren't going anywhere; distillation is and always will be a staple of ChE. There now is a very large focus in renewable energy, so ChE is by no means a dying field; it's changing as society's needs change. For what it's worth, I'm working on a renewable energy project for a major oil company client, so there you go. When you think of oil companies, don't just think of cracking and gasoline production and big bad oil companies in your wallet at the gas pump. They do so, so, so much more than just make gasoline and refine oil. It would be very easy to spend your entire career working for Exxon and never once doing anything with oil/gas. Quote:
I do wish we didn't throw around the term engineer, sound engineer, sanitation engineer, recording engineer, etc. etc...not really the same as a chemical, electrical, mechanical engineer, etc.I don't think I would agree that most engineers never break six figures though; I think most wind up around there. It's also important to note though that most engineers will not end their careers as engineers, but rather in management or something else. I wouldn't expect to get rich overnight in engineering though; some do if they are brilliant, most don't--most spend years with steady income and steady raises and promotions. There will be no $1M bonus for shorting a stock sale like there is on Wall Street, keep that in mind. |
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#31 |
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my roommate in college did chemical. He said the homework pretty much destroyed his social life.
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http://www.yourpoetic.com/ |
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#32 |
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Do you even like chemistry? If so, talk to some people who have taken organic.
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MBP 15",SR 2.2GHz,4gb RAM,320gb HDD,NVIDIA 8600M 128MB |
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Combine them both together and you get Soil Environmental Chemistry - one of the craziest classes I have ever taken.
How about flight engineer, train engineer, and my favorite - access control engineer! |
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Bitching about organic is standard practice for all the weak sauce "premed" kiddies getting lab tech biology degrees since all they do is memorize crap in their programs. "Ohhhh organic is SO HARD! I have to memorize all these things and barely have to actually use my brain!"
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Yes to the ring (still got mine.... somewhere), no to the title. Professional Engineer (PEng) is what you are thinking of. Plenty of Sanitation Engineers around here. In Spain you can title yourself like a doctor using Engineer has an honorific instead of Mister.
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Get an experience instead. Working for 2-3 years in different sectors will not waste your time but it will make you able to choose the most suitable field for you and you will have some experience of doing that so getting further education in that will not be a difficult task. I saw many students spent a lot of time in universities but don't show the performance practically that a less educated but an experienced person shows. However study is still important, it polish your skill and helps you to boost up quickly.
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I majored in mechanical engineering with the idea that I'd work in power generation - engines, turbines, that sort of thing. I ended up designing HVAC systems. Go figure.
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I would scream just to be heard, as if yelling at the stars - I was bleeding just to feel. You would never say a word, kept me reaching in the dark - always something to conceal. |
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We're allowed to disagree.
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Of crimes---none is greater than having things that one desires; Of disasters---none is greater than not knowing when one has enough. Of defects---none brings more sorrow than the desire to attain. |
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Just for starters, I checked Broadcast Engineers and found that Broadcast Operators were lumped in with them. Broadcast Maintenance Engineers were also lumped in with those two at the same salary (and if that is the median, I guess I'm pretty lucky, but in reality that is very inaccurate). These are very different jobs requiring very different skill levels; A Broadcast Maintenance Engineer designs and installs systems and maintains and repairs them, while a Broadcast Operator pushes buttons. A Broadcast Engineer is also quite a different thing from an AV guy at the local Hyatt, but all are lumped together here. TV Directors, who make much less than Engineers at the local TV level, were lumped in with those who direct TV programs for Hollywood studios, and so their median salary was listed as higher, not lower, and at nearly twice what it really might be, and seriously less than those who direct top shows. Market ranking is also not taken into account; a top-ten local TV market pays quite differently than what they might in market 200. So, bottom line, do not take the advice from this link literally. You will either end up being seriously misled, surprised, or disappointed. Maybe a bit of all three. There was little due diligence done here; the government drones who slapped this together did not do their homework first. |
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Most people I've gone to school with are either apathetic or ignorant. You'll have much better discussions engaging in debate on political forums or elsewhere on the internet than you do in college. But also, your original point was not to "critically engage with others" but to "educate yourself". |
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Engineering is just a different beast than a lot of fields. The goal isn't always to get A's which I found frustrating. However, I cannot name any of my classmates in college who aren't currently employed. Add to that the fact that the last generation of engineers is in its late fifties (some of the age difference numbers from ExxonMobil are staggering) and Engineering looks like a prosperous field.
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Victory ILLINOIS Varsity
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As for what people in college actually do, many don't take advantage of the opportunities I talk about. They do exist, however, and are way more accessible than most other options. |
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http://www.yourpoetic.com/ |
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). To start with think heat exchange, fluid dynamics, phase change, separations, computational fluid dynamics (CFD), fluid flow and then you've got the chemical reactions to look at...
I do wish we didn't throw around the term engineer, sound engineer, sanitation engineer, recording engineer, etc. etc...not really the same as a chemical, electrical, mechanical engineer, etc.

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