Anonymous wrote:The market for entry level jobs is shifting so fast that most kids are going to have a very difficult time landing anything, internships or permanent jobs post graduation. If you sit in on some of the investor calls at the Fortune 100s, most have publicly said they're reevaluating the hiring and retention plans given the shifting landscape in AI. If you have connections, use it. Otherwise, all kids should think really creatively for what happens post graduation. Start planning now, even as a sophomore. Don't assume the Ivy/Ivy+ degrees automatically confirm employment status ... not in this sort of changing landscape.
Anonymous wrote:My mech engineering kid at a T20 had a great internship after sophomore year at Fortune 200 energy company. Was invited back for the junior year internship. But DC wants aerospace as a career so took a pass. Has been having a tough time landing an internship in that field. Still has a couple of interviews this month, but it's been tough.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Which specific major?
Deciding between electrical and mechanical engineering.
Not sure what you can do with an EE bachelor degree. The typical path is to get a PhD in EE. I would suggest looking for research opportunities.
Anonymous wrote:Sorry in advance, I don't know where else to ask. If your dc is at an ivy, ivy plus, or ivy adjacent, do they have something lined up? Is it basically over and it's time to get in with a professor? I thought this was the benefit of being at a top school, but seems like the career center fall back is to connect with an alum and they don't seem to respond. (seem is the operative word as I only talk to my dc about it). Is it unusually quiet? Is this common? Is it this year? Or has it always been this way? I didn't go to a top school so I'm not trying to be obnoxious, I thought this was supposed to be a benefit? Should I be offering any specific advice? Thanks
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Which specific major?
Deciding between electrical and mechanical engineering.
Not sure what you can do with an EE bachelor degree. The typical path is to get a PhD in EE. I would suggest looking for research opportunities.
Really? Not OP, but my kid wants to do EE, and I’ve never heard this before.
Anonymous wrote:Not a current sophomore but since you asked whether it has ways been like this — yes! I’ve watched my kid and/or their friends struggle and stress over this. It all works out, but lean on connections if you have to!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Which specific major?
Deciding between electrical and mechanical engineering.
Not sure what you can do with an EE bachelor degree. The typical path is to get a PhD in EE. I would suggest looking for research opportunities.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, and most DC’s classmates have internships after sophomore year. Majority of them self applied via job sites. Career center is only for resume reviews etc. The school name boosts resume values (hopefully). I think that’s the main benefit.