MarcoGreengineer314
Electrical
- Jun 3, 2023
- 2
Good afternoon people from Eng-Tips.com. My name is Marco but you can refer to me as Marcus or Mark. I'm an engineer from Mexico and I resort to this forum for some advice about how to apply for a graduate engineering school in the U.S.
Background
I'm 26 and currently work at a local pump manufacturing company in my hometown. I'm currently employed as a manufacturing automation engineer and I've been working for almost a year. I have to say that I don't fulfilled with my job. I work with PLCs and restoring old machinery back to life. I regret getting into this job because of how monotonous and boring it is. I got bored working with relays and ladder logic because of how easy and simple it is. Most of my job revolves working on site with electricians and PLC technicians and reading product catalogues all day. I would like to be involved more on the research, design, and implementation of the new product instead.
The problem is that most job positions for undergraduates in my country are manufacturing-related, or quality-related, but not so much related to engineering. It's so frustrating because I'm applying almost nothing of what I learned in school. I graduated as a mechatronics engineer and in my college studies I took courses of many subjects, including electronics (analog, digital, and power), control theory (classical and modern), mathematics (calculus, differential equations, signals and systems, algebra), robot control, modeling, etc. I get that PLCs and relays are the daily bread in manufacturing and automation, and the thing is that it's virtually so different from I was taught in university. To say it in a humorous manner: it's all switches and some feedback and that's it. Everything is a variation of that.
In college my love was focused on researching and designing new things, mostly in electronics and robotics (e.g. drones, mobile robots, signal processing, and power electronics). My job involves nothing even remotely similar to that. It's all about wiring relays/PLCs to buttons/switches, setting some timers, and occasionally designing HMIs when I'm working on the plant, and back in the office it's all about doing spreadsheets and reading catalogues for searching more relays/contactors. As a reminder, I do not need people to tell me that grass is always greener on the other side and that I should be grateful for my job. I'm simply not happy with my job and I don't see any positive aspects for it, so avoid that.
I have to admit that I made a bad mistake by accepting the job offer. I was pressured by my family because they couldn't afford to help me with a master's degree (MSEE) for continuing my education, and I don't blame them because their economic situation was strained back then. I was also told that accepting the job was a good move because I could learn and get experience, but it's been the same exact thing since I got in: putting out fires again and again. Now I'm stuck in a job that I don't love, that I don't have a passion for. I hate myself over how much of a failure my career has become, and the worst part is that I can't leave my job right now because I have to bills to pay, so essentially I'm trapped.
What I'm looking for in my career
As I explained above, my passion is to design and innovate (to actually use my degree). I've been looking to work for a company like Tesla, Boeing, Ford, NASA, SpaceX, Boston Dynamics, or the like at an R&D/Eng/Tech job, but the thing is that some jobs are requiring people to have at least a master's degree or many years of professional experience. For example, this job at Tesla (Power Electronics Engineer, Inverter), they're soliciting a Master's Degree or equivalent job experience. Many of the jobs that I would like to apply for are advanced and require a MS or many years in experience. My job will definitely not help me to go for these advanced roles, and will only land me into more manufacturing and automation roles. So the sooner I get out the better for me.
I'm looking for a grad school in the USA because of the prestige this country has on its engineering programs. I'm looking for public research universities like UT Austin or UC Berkeley, but I'm also looking for private universities like MIT or Caltech. For private universities like those, what are my odds of getting accepted under my current situation? Is it a pipedream? If it's not, is it very hard? If it is, how could I fix my situation to get into one?
My GPA
I get that in order to get into some universities, especially prestigious ones, they require a minimum GPA in order to be accepted. The thing is that I'm from Mexico and we don't use GPA. Instead we use an average between 0-100. My overall average I had in university was 86.4. I don't know if that roughly equates to 3 out of 4 in GPA, and I would like to know if there are any necessary procedures for having my undergrad degree and average validated in the USA.
TL/DR. I'm currently working in industrial automation (manufacturing) and I don't like my job. I would like to be in engineering/R&D in more advanced roles that either require MS or years of experience, so I'm looking for a grad school in the USA (preferably a private university) and I don't know my chances of getting in under my situation.
Background
I'm 26 and currently work at a local pump manufacturing company in my hometown. I'm currently employed as a manufacturing automation engineer and I've been working for almost a year. I have to say that I don't fulfilled with my job. I work with PLCs and restoring old machinery back to life. I regret getting into this job because of how monotonous and boring it is. I got bored working with relays and ladder logic because of how easy and simple it is. Most of my job revolves working on site with electricians and PLC technicians and reading product catalogues all day. I would like to be involved more on the research, design, and implementation of the new product instead.
The problem is that most job positions for undergraduates in my country are manufacturing-related, or quality-related, but not so much related to engineering. It's so frustrating because I'm applying almost nothing of what I learned in school. I graduated as a mechatronics engineer and in my college studies I took courses of many subjects, including electronics (analog, digital, and power), control theory (classical and modern), mathematics (calculus, differential equations, signals and systems, algebra), robot control, modeling, etc. I get that PLCs and relays are the daily bread in manufacturing and automation, and the thing is that it's virtually so different from I was taught in university. To say it in a humorous manner: it's all switches and some feedback and that's it. Everything is a variation of that.
In college my love was focused on researching and designing new things, mostly in electronics and robotics (e.g. drones, mobile robots, signal processing, and power electronics). My job involves nothing even remotely similar to that. It's all about wiring relays/PLCs to buttons/switches, setting some timers, and occasionally designing HMIs when I'm working on the plant, and back in the office it's all about doing spreadsheets and reading catalogues for searching more relays/contactors. As a reminder, I do not need people to tell me that grass is always greener on the other side and that I should be grateful for my job. I'm simply not happy with my job and I don't see any positive aspects for it, so avoid that.
I have to admit that I made a bad mistake by accepting the job offer. I was pressured by my family because they couldn't afford to help me with a master's degree (MSEE) for continuing my education, and I don't blame them because their economic situation was strained back then. I was also told that accepting the job was a good move because I could learn and get experience, but it's been the same exact thing since I got in: putting out fires again and again. Now I'm stuck in a job that I don't love, that I don't have a passion for. I hate myself over how much of a failure my career has become, and the worst part is that I can't leave my job right now because I have to bills to pay, so essentially I'm trapped.
What I'm looking for in my career
As I explained above, my passion is to design and innovate (to actually use my degree). I've been looking to work for a company like Tesla, Boeing, Ford, NASA, SpaceX, Boston Dynamics, or the like at an R&D/Eng/Tech job, but the thing is that some jobs are requiring people to have at least a master's degree or many years of professional experience. For example, this job at Tesla (Power Electronics Engineer, Inverter), they're soliciting a Master's Degree or equivalent job experience. Many of the jobs that I would like to apply for are advanced and require a MS or many years in experience. My job will definitely not help me to go for these advanced roles, and will only land me into more manufacturing and automation roles. So the sooner I get out the better for me.
I'm looking for a grad school in the USA because of the prestige this country has on its engineering programs. I'm looking for public research universities like UT Austin or UC Berkeley, but I'm also looking for private universities like MIT or Caltech. For private universities like those, what are my odds of getting accepted under my current situation? Is it a pipedream? If it's not, is it very hard? If it is, how could I fix my situation to get into one?
My GPA
I get that in order to get into some universities, especially prestigious ones, they require a minimum GPA in order to be accepted. The thing is that I'm from Mexico and we don't use GPA. Instead we use an average between 0-100. My overall average I had in university was 86.4. I don't know if that roughly equates to 3 out of 4 in GPA, and I would like to know if there are any necessary procedures for having my undergrad degree and average validated in the USA.
TL/DR. I'm currently working in industrial automation (manufacturing) and I don't like my job. I would like to be in engineering/R&D in more advanced roles that either require MS or years of experience, so I'm looking for a grad school in the USA (preferably a private university) and I don't know my chances of getting in under my situation.