zephramcochrane
Aerospace
- Nov 6, 2015
- 4
This is a problem me and my company have been struggling with for sometime now. The people who interview with us, especially straight out of school, lack the experience in taking a full aircraft design through from requirements to delivery (like a small 1 pound UAV) . I know for most schools, that is a hard problem to solve, and as such we have looked for a good solution. However, after an extensive search the best we found was a disjoint set of notes from MIT explaining some theory behind aircraft design, and the Experimental Aircraft Association (EAA) Homebuilder's Tip website. While both are fairly good at giving the user either an overview of how to design aircraft, or in the case of the EAA Homebuilder's Tip website, actionable tips, neither seamlessly integrates it to take a newbie engineer through to mastery. My company is small, and needs the engineers we hire to start work immediately, and when they can't cut it, we have to cut them loose. It is a bad problem, and now starting to affect how quickly we can work since the people with us are overworked as is.
Hence I am posting here. What do your companies do for training newbie engineers? Do you all have the problem of having to fast, on the job training for new graduates?
*By training I mean where engineers can go from requirements to a detailed design to a physical part that flies, within budget and schedule. By mastery, I mean where they can quickly gauge from the requirements stage how much money and time the project will take given current technology.
Hence I am posting here. What do your companies do for training newbie engineers? Do you all have the problem of having to fast, on the job training for new graduates?
*By training I mean where engineers can go from requirements to a detailed design to a physical part that flies, within budget and schedule. By mastery, I mean where they can quickly gauge from the requirements stage how much money and time the project will take given current technology.