+1 I also graduated aerospace and EE master many years ago. I worked in the industry for a bit and ended up in IT for the last 25 years. Also, few women in the old days in engineering but much more in IT. |
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My daughter is finishing her third year in Systems Engineering and my son is in his first year and looking at mech or electrical. We are not rich but comfortable and they know that they need to come out of college with marketable degrees.
As a contrast, my well off family members have kids in college in Art History and Liberal Arts. They are planning on getting their MRS’s or living off their parents when they finish. |
| Check out indeed or linkedin... then try finding a job after your bs/ba without an engineering degree |
My 2 daughters went to all-girls HS. So helpful, in my opinion. They gained a lot of academic confidence in HS that they took to college. Now both at T10s in STEM- one engineering. Both doing great. |
This can be very helpful for girls planning to go into STEM. |
Premed and Econ and many other courses at rigorous colleges are like this, not just engineering. The point is to challenge the kids with hugely difficult application qs beyond what is taught. Then the average grade(which could be 40% correct) is curved to a B at most T20s /ivies. Cs are reserved for the well below average. Not so different from some of the APs, such as AP physics, where a “5” is achieved by getting around 70% correct yet only 5-10% of kids get that score. At the uber elite schools, most kids are very intelligent so the top25-30% may get an A, even though that could correspond to 65% correct. This is how stem classes have been curved at elites since back in my day, though the average then was set to a b-/C+ not a B. Grades are inflated now but the tests are still very challenging. |
DP married to an engineer. “Cs” get degrees was their undergrad mantra - for all engineering majors. |
| I’m a female engineer who graduated in 1998. My class was about 25% female. Of my friends that l kept in touch with, only 1 changed careers and became a math teacher. We all like it. It’s an interesting career, pretty well paid, no grad school required to get a good job, women are not treated worse than in the rest of society. |
Well, aren’t you lovely. My humanities kids have graduated and had no issue getting well-paying jobs. Engineering isn’t the end-all, be-all you seem to think it is. DP |
DP. It is great that you have the connections and influence to make those outcomes possible. A typical MC kid or with a humanities degree will not have that kind of success. Have you not been following the numerous news articles about humanities kids overwhelmed by college debt and are also either poorly paid (E.g., barista job) or unemployed ? By contrast, anyone who graduated with an engineering degree, even if not from a name brand E School and even if not a 3.0 GPA will find a job which pays well enough for MC QoL and ability to repay college debt without struggling. This difference really is fundamental. |
| Just wondering. Is software engineering considered engineering? |
The best explanation I got for this when I was an engineering undergrad in the 90s was “If you want to measure something properly, the measuring tape needs to be longer than the thing you’re measuring.” I will say that the one class where I routinely rocked the tests and the novel application questions was a subject I really understood. Also, FWIW, I, and most of my female classmates in both my BS and MS programs, did not end up working in engineering. |
Opinions will vary. I would very happily hire a MS Software Engineering from CMU if they had a background in the right technical electives for my jobs. |
Depends on the school - was it a state flagship or a top school? Many students who currently have engineering as their major, was so determined by their parent/s. Those who could not manage the maths, chose an IT field. |
I'm sorry to hear that. I work in the auto industry in Michigan. Women engineers do pretty well at the large auto companies. Many have moms who were highly educated, sometimes groundbreaking engineers. Implicit bias exists but is fading somewhat due to generational change. In the engineering meetings I'm in, it seems about 70/30 male female, with women in leadership and decisionmaking roles. |