Should i do engineering
You will learn through a variety of teaching methods such as lectures, lab sessions and independent study that create an optimum learning environment. The engineering degrees are designed to give you an in-depth understanding of engineering before allowing you to specialise in an area you are passionate about.
Thanks to our International Foundation Year in Science and Engineering at the International College, we have seen students from a variety of backgrounds progress on to a range of engineering degrees at the University of Sheffield.
Dzikry, from Malaysia, is one of many. Discover his story below. This site uses cookies. In order to continually improve this site, we remember and store information about how you use it. Find out more. Accept and close. Any questions? An engineering degree offers you lots of freedom in finding your dream job.
It can be a launching pad for jobs in business, design, medicine, law, and government. To employers or graduate schools, an engineering degree reflects a well-educated individual who has been taught ways of analyzing and solving problems that can lead to success in all kinds of fields. Opportunities to explore the world. Field work is a big part of engineering.
You may end up designing a skyscraper in London, or developing safe drinking-water systems in Asia. Or you may choose to stay closer to home working with a nearly high-tech company or a hospital.
Make a difference. Cars are safer, sound systems deliver better acoustics, medical tests are more accurate, and computers and cell phones are a lot more fun. You can change the world.
Imagine what life would be like without pollution controls to preserve the environment, lifesaving medical equipment, or low-cost building materials for fighting global poverty. Many engineers change careers. Good luck! Engineering is a great field to go into. However, there are some downsides too. I guess is not just engineering but every profession has this mid-career crisis. Some people evolve better and continue to climb up the organization becoming successful people managers and corporate leaders, most were forced to in order to sustain the lifestyle and family needs.
A change in lifestyle is imminent after years of burn out in the same working environment. We hired a pediatrician who was a aerospace engineer for Boeing for her first career. Frankly, all the specifications are more or less the same as per my perspective. Be it engineering or other profession. I think that one can make the necessary decision towards changing profession when the interests are not longer there.
The change in professions will be hard. I believe that this can be done provided that one continues to make the effort to do so. This is depending on the determination of one and whether the interests still maintain at the prevailing point of time.
The sheer volume of comments indicates just how many financially successful engineers there are in this community. I knew at 13 and never hesitated. I took a job in my home state and was flying all over the country in a private jet after my first year.
I always felt overpaid and eventually ran the enterprise for my Fortune corporate overlords. I thought it was a great adventure and I got to do design work, project management, engineering management, lobbying and finally corporate management. I never felt burned out, Rarely felt stressed.
I felt like a lottery winner and looked forward to Monday mornings generally. I was good with math and loved problem solving with software as a kid, so it just translated through college. After 25 years of coding including the time as a kid , I got burned out. I think most kids growing up today are going to know some basics of programming not sure about hardware. Civil engineering is different from what you are describing. Women are very good in engineering because they seem to have more patience to work through problems and modeling, and in Colombia there are more girls than guys in civil engineering university programs.
I love problem-solving. I am a chemical engineer in early part of career. I guess engineering is a good platform to transition later. Also there will be no shortage of engineering jobs in USA in foreseeable future. One point to consider is if you have a personality that is compatible for engineering. If you are decently good at math and can solve quantitative problems you have a good start.
In college, engineering majors usually start with the physics and math classes before getting to any engineering. Typically, there are plenty of those. Work is what you were trained to do, what you went to school for, and hopefully is something that is related to a subject area of your interest. A job is the subjugative societal structure that enables you to get paid for your work. It includes mundane, pedestrian, and soul-leaching things such as meetings, teleconferences, deadlines, bosses, managers, presentations, reports, proposals, administrative B.
Joe, Great piece and well though-out lists! Like many careers but also with Engineering, I tend to think the most ideal career scenario is to have developed a specialty niche within the first decade and be able to offer such services independently as a consultant; ideally with schedule flexibility. It was definitely more rewarding earlier on, but over the years has become much less enjoyable.
The ridiculous schedules, workloads, meetings have just continually gotten worse. Actually have been waiting for the last few years to get a package, but it never comes. My last group actually was re-organized and they laid off half the group then moved me into an even more stressful group. After my youngest daughter 1yr had some medical issues I asked if I could work part-time for months till we got through her issues and they essentially said no.
My last day is Aug 1st. Looking forward to spending some quality time with my 4yr old and 1yr old in the near future! Engineering is a great career in the beginning.
You just need to save and make sure you can evolve into something else. I think you should ask for a severance package. At this point, some companies will start to lay off people soon. Ask to be laid off instead of quitting. That way you can file for unemployment for a while. You could also file for unpaid leave or medical leave of absence. They can prescribe time off. In short, try to milk it a bit. They owe you. Best wishes. Have you considered changing companies? Also, consider requsting a layoff and a package during layoffs, I did that during my career when I wanted to change companies anyway.
In fact, my manager suggested it when I gave notice. I feel this article of yours was kind of like that scene from Starship Troopers where the veteran asks the main character which branch of federal service he joined. Mobile infantry made me the man I am today. I agree with you and most of the responses.
However, I would point out that just about every job has burn out. It becomes monotonous or parts of it become annoying after years. At least most engineering degrees are in high demand with good income and as you stated with experience is fairly easy to migrate to something else.
Engineering is great if you have the right aptitude for it. Having some savings can help smooth out the transition. Thanks for your input. I think Engineering is a great field to go into if you want financial success and be on the path to wealth.
I believe one of the key elements of reaching FIRE is to be in a high income earning profession. Engineering definitely fits that bill as you have listed as a pro on this post. That number can increase to the high 6 figures after 15 years of work. Home Career sectors Engineering Would a career in engineering suit me? Would a career in engineering suit me? Save to save. Find out the sorts of skills you need to be a good engineer and whether you would enjoy working in the industry.
Quick links for this article Qualities and skills needed Aims and values in engineering The working hours Time for study? Key qualities and skills you need to be an engineer If you're considering a career as an engineer it helps to have the following. Reasonably good maths. You don't have to be a genius with numbers but engineers typically make calculations very frequently in their jobs. Maths will also play a big part in the qualifications you take, whether you plan to do a full-time engineering degree or combine work and study.
An interest in the physical world and how things work. Curious about how tall buildings stay upright or how satellites get into space?
Like to know how the gadgets in your home work? Or just enjoy studying physics? An interest in the material world will give you the motivation you need to work and study hard. A love of solving problems. A lot of an engineer's job typically involves solving problems. This can include creating a design that works in theory, getting it to work in practice and fixing problems when it is up and running.
Do you enjoy troubleshooting errant technology for family and friends? Or sorting out problems when working on tasks in a team, such as how to finish a group exercise in class within the time allocated?
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