shredator
Civil/Environmental
- Jul 24, 2008
- 5
I am currently a Civil PE working for a municipal water department. My primary responsibilities are all pretty much project-management related. I am quite content with my job, as i am allowed a large amount of freedom in determining how much design, contract prep and even inspection I perform myself. If I desire, I am allowed to tackle all of these tasks on my own, which is great because I love design work, and I am sure that being intimately involved in projects start to finish has made me a better engineer.
There is one desire that has been nagging at me for quite a while though, and that is the desire to become competent in structural design. If I were confident and competent enough, there would be plenty of projects for me to tackle here, but I lack experience designing structures under the supervision and guidance of someone that knows what they are doing, and there is no one within my organization that can provide that.
When I took the PE exam, I decided to do the structural depth section, and I also rocked the CA Seismic section, so I know that I 'can' do this stuff.
So my question is, Is there a path that I can take to become a SE? or am I delusional in thinking that I can become competent while keeping this job? I have considered pursuing a graduate degree in structural at a local university while working, and I suppose that I could hire consultants to peer review my designs, but would that be enough? What do folks think?
There is one desire that has been nagging at me for quite a while though, and that is the desire to become competent in structural design. If I were confident and competent enough, there would be plenty of projects for me to tackle here, but I lack experience designing structures under the supervision and guidance of someone that knows what they are doing, and there is no one within my organization that can provide that.
When I took the PE exam, I decided to do the structural depth section, and I also rocked the CA Seismic section, so I know that I 'can' do this stuff.
So my question is, Is there a path that I can take to become a SE? or am I delusional in thinking that I can become competent while keeping this job? I have considered pursuing a graduate degree in structural at a local university while working, and I suppose that I could hire consultants to peer review my designs, but would that be enough? What do folks think?