I'm with you lacajun. Recently I received an email with a job opportunity for a "Mechanical Engineer" to work at a big company in Florida. Although the job title had the word "Engineer", on reading the job description no four-year engineering degree was required (in fact, no degree was required). The job was clearly for a Checker/Senior Designer. Although I thought the role of "Checker" was long ago culled from the engineering office by bean counting management, this place apparently still has use for them. I tried to explain to the recruiter (who didn't know the difference between a "designer" and "engineer" as those terms are used in the USA) that this company was probably turning away many well-qualified candidates who see the word "engineer" in the title and move on without reading the job description because they associate the word "engineer" with a BS (or BE) or higher in engineering or physics. But, being a recruiter, he wasn't concerned. To him, whoever wrote that job description is an indisputable authority knowing much more than I.
Also, in my recent job hunt I found that even seasoned "technical" recruiters have never looked at the college course lineup required by engineers of any kind and go on year after year harboring false notions. For example, I've been fighting the wide belief that an "electronics packaging engineers" designs the packaging e.g. clear plastic and cardboard of electronics for shipment to end-users and retail stores. Many job descriptions were for low-paying jobs for "engineers" with a two-year degree in mechanical engineering (there isn't one in the USA). Some jobs called for a "BA" in mechanical engineering (there isn't one). Those job descriptions are all for non-STEM degree CAD jockeys, designers, and draftsmen but the employer was luring them in with the prestige of the "engineer" title.
Lastly, my oldest brother is a retired "operating engineer" which means he used to operate bulldozers, backhoes, graders, and other kinds of heavy equipment. Not to put the profession down, but IMO someone in that profession is not an "engineer". His union was
The Operating Engineers' Union or something along those lines.
People insert the "engineer" term in their job title when they certainly are not an engineer. You can bet that the minute a paralegal starts using the term "attorney" or "lawyer" in their job title the regional bar association will be on them immediately to change that tile or make them answer to the law.
The engineering profession is under assault from all directions. Bean counting corporate management wants to reduce salary costs so they lower the bar to let in high school graduates while luring them in with the title of "engineer" and, of course, promises of rapid advancement and much higher pay (NOT!). This last job hunt (my last, hopefully) showed that engineers are being reduced to a commodity for corporate consumption to be hired and fired willy nilly under the protection of "at will" employment law (in the USA at least). Whatever happened to mature management? Not everything is about money. The VALUE of the work it pays for must become an equal or higher consideration.
Yes, it is time we get organized and put a stop to the trend of unqualified people, lower pay, and the loss of the positive public perception we still enjoy with the title "Engineer".
ElectroMechanical Product Development
(Electronics Packaging)
UMD 1984
UCF 1993