Anonymous wrote:A career shouldn’t be just about money. If you’re lucky, you will live a long life. Do something you love. It makes life much more pleasant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because even a below average engineering graduate can land a stable job with a good pay. An above average English or art graduate? Not so much.
Not anymore with AI taking away lower-level engineering jobs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know a single unhappy engineer.
I’m one. There’s plenty of us unhappy enough to have quit or changed fields.
Doctors and Lawyers as well. Hence, such is life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because it’s so much more fun and interesting than liberal arts. Engineering gives you real knowledge to actual solve problems- not just talk/debate about them as nauseum and get nothing done. Engineering is collaborative, not argumentative. The writing is straightforward, to the point, says what you mean. The classes are so interesting. The work is impactful and rewarding. Know anyone with a pacemaker or clean water running to their house? Or internet or a car? All that is engineering. Engineers overall are collaborative, smart, open-minded, and tolerant. They aim to make the world better.
I'm sorry, but that sounds unbearably boring. I'd much rather discuss literature or politics and I'm so glad none of my children had any interest in engineering.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know a single unhappy engineer.
I’m one. There’s plenty of us unhappy enough to have quit or changed fields.
Anonymous wrote:I don't know a single unhappy engineer.
Anonymous wrote:Engineering students have so many more options than other majors. There's the tech industry. There's the energy industry. There's defense. There's aviation. Every Fortune 500 company in every sector recruits and values engineers. And increasingly, that includes finance and consulting. Everyone from McKinsey to Goldman Sachs are recruiting engineering majors. Because that's where the talent is today.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:engineering is kinda great because it hardly matters where you go - and it doesnt require a masters or further degree. and it's not that hard to get into a place like Purdue, which is maybe not "elite" but very good program.
If within the Top 10 - the school absolutely does matter especially for the recruitment from top employers for internships and that first job. I can attest to this. After that I would agree with you.
my nephew just graduated from MIT - which has to be among the best, if not the best - and first job out is 90k plus benefits.
depends on what kind of engineering, but I bet kids from Purdue in same field are getting same (ish) salary
Why not go into consulting or quant if he’s top of the class? Traditional engineering is a waste of a career.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because it’s so much more fun and interesting than liberal arts. Engineering gives you real knowledge to actual solve problems- not just talk/debate about them as nauseum and get nothing done. Engineering is collaborative, not argumentative. The writing is straightforward, to the point, says what you mean. The classes are so interesting. The work is impactful and rewarding. Know anyone with a pacemaker or clean water running to their house? Or internet or a car? All that is engineering. Engineers overall are collaborative, smart, open-minded, and tolerant. They aim to make the world better.
I'm sorry, but that sounds unbearably boring. I'd much rather discuss literature or politics and I'm so glad none of my children had any interest in engineering.
Anonymous wrote:Because it’s so much more fun and interesting than liberal arts. Engineering gives you real knowledge to actual solve problems- not just talk/debate about them as nauseum and get nothing done. Engineering is collaborative, not argumentative. The writing is straightforward, to the point, says what you mean. The classes are so interesting. The work is impactful and rewarding. Know anyone with a pacemaker or clean water running to their house? Or internet or a car? All that is engineering. Engineers overall are collaborative, smart, open-minded, and tolerant. They aim to make the world better.