Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NTSB.Anonymous wrote:Work for the government - DARPA, Army Research Lab, NIST and more...
Also alot of the contractors to NASA and USGS (LandSat) are engineers -- Aerospace Corp. and others. Sometimes you are a true engineer and sometimes you are a systems engineer or program coordinator. I have a friend who has a PhD and he is an investigator at NTSB.
Anonymous wrote:Thanks for the input! His list so far as of now: UMD Purdue Michigan
Anonymous wrote:NTSB.Anonymous wrote:Work for the government - DARPA, Army Research Lab, NIST and more...
NTSB.Anonymous wrote:Work for the government - DARPA, Army Research Lab, NIST and more...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Boy, this got off-track quickly. Back to the OP's question, I have relatives that got engineering degrees at Union College in upstate New York and Bucknell in Pennsylania. All of them loved their college experiences and went on to very prestigious engineering PhD programs. Good luck to your son!
slight s/o here: What do people with engineering PhDs do besides teach? (I'm curious b/c 2 of my kids will be getting BS degrees in engineering, so DH and I -- both history majors -- are trying to educate ourselves about this profession.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Boy, this got off-track quickly. Back to the OP's question, I have relatives that got engineering degrees at Union College in upstate New York and Bucknell in Pennsylania. All of them loved their college experiences and went on to very prestigious engineering PhD programs. Good luck to your son!
slight s/o here: What do people with engineering PhDs do besides teach? (I'm curious b/c 2 of my kids will be getting BS degrees in engineering, so DH and I -- both history majors -- are trying to educate ourselves about this profession.)