offcenter
Electrical
- Aug 13, 2011
- 2
My goal is to find stability and direction to help facilitate personal future growth. I am hoping I may be privileged to receive advice from this established community relating to potential paths of education and possibly a following career.
My aspirations and creativity lead me to want to work with advanced and future technology. My assumption is this entails taking the PhD route, possibly several times. On the flip side my pragmatism pushes me to take a grounded approach and specialize in an area currently in demand so I can find a well paying job. No matter which direction I find myself in, a personal demand is to work hands on.
Is a natural path leading to working with advanced and future technology attaining a BS/MS, finding work for a few years or a decade, going back to academia and achieving a PhD, then finding grants and facilities to set up a research laboratory? Or do many scientists mostly go the pure education route which immediately leads to an entry level R&D position either for the private sector or educational institutions? Will there be great financial difficulties going with the second path of pure education?
The second part of the advice I am seeking is practical uses of my current time while I am in school and potential future career paths. I am 28 and just beginning my formal education starting at the local community college. (just a HS diploma currently) As it stands now, it looks like I will have five to six years until I complete a BSEE. So with this extra time in mind I am looking for something to learn hands on which will benefit either my R&D path or my career path.
Currently I the sole owner and operator of a small manufacturing firm designing, fabricating, and e-retail selling illuminated wall art. With this I am experienced with several CAD programs, operating a CNC router, efficiency planning, material procurement, facility layout, website design including SQL/PHP/HTML, customer service, marketing, branding, general ecommerce operations, blah blah blah. Please let me qualify my previous statement by saying it’s a very small one man operation with low production volume. Also, I taught myself how to develop firmware for 8bit MCUs, circuit board layout, and general digital electronic design. Some completed projects include wirelessly controlled RGB LED lighting systems, USB driven BCD clocks, water-cooled PC GLCD UI controlled interfaces, etc. Other interests include IP networking, RF communications, PC hardware and server setup, etc.
The reason why I mentioned my experience to convey my natural talents and the areas I find of interest so they can be translated into a fulfilling research path or career. My thinking is if I specialize in single area I would simply go mad because the way I am built; I like doing everything, especially hands on. If swayed towards MCU systems development I might be stuck in a fluorescent illuminated cubical all day. =( However, from my gathering a jack of a trades is a derogatory term for a generalist and they have little value, while on the flip side I hear jack of trades being described as integrators and are highly valued as managers understanding and facilitating the combination of several branches of technology into a single project.
Are there any suggestions into areas/careers that may take advantage of my multifaceted talents and interests? Are there suggestions along the same line that at the end of the day (50% of the week) I am covered in oil and filth with a big smile on my face? (that’s not a technician’s job) Are there technologies I should begin working with or researching while I have the next five years? (example would be learning PLC ladder programming, simple pneumatics, low level RF communications...) Would being an owner of a manufacturing firm, albeit small, be considering valuable work experience on an engineering resume?
Thanks and my apologies for the partial soliloquy.
My aspirations and creativity lead me to want to work with advanced and future technology. My assumption is this entails taking the PhD route, possibly several times. On the flip side my pragmatism pushes me to take a grounded approach and specialize in an area currently in demand so I can find a well paying job. No matter which direction I find myself in, a personal demand is to work hands on.
Is a natural path leading to working with advanced and future technology attaining a BS/MS, finding work for a few years or a decade, going back to academia and achieving a PhD, then finding grants and facilities to set up a research laboratory? Or do many scientists mostly go the pure education route which immediately leads to an entry level R&D position either for the private sector or educational institutions? Will there be great financial difficulties going with the second path of pure education?
The second part of the advice I am seeking is practical uses of my current time while I am in school and potential future career paths. I am 28 and just beginning my formal education starting at the local community college. (just a HS diploma currently) As it stands now, it looks like I will have five to six years until I complete a BSEE. So with this extra time in mind I am looking for something to learn hands on which will benefit either my R&D path or my career path.
Currently I the sole owner and operator of a small manufacturing firm designing, fabricating, and e-retail selling illuminated wall art. With this I am experienced with several CAD programs, operating a CNC router, efficiency planning, material procurement, facility layout, website design including SQL/PHP/HTML, customer service, marketing, branding, general ecommerce operations, blah blah blah. Please let me qualify my previous statement by saying it’s a very small one man operation with low production volume. Also, I taught myself how to develop firmware for 8bit MCUs, circuit board layout, and general digital electronic design. Some completed projects include wirelessly controlled RGB LED lighting systems, USB driven BCD clocks, water-cooled PC GLCD UI controlled interfaces, etc. Other interests include IP networking, RF communications, PC hardware and server setup, etc.
The reason why I mentioned my experience to convey my natural talents and the areas I find of interest so they can be translated into a fulfilling research path or career. My thinking is if I specialize in single area I would simply go mad because the way I am built; I like doing everything, especially hands on. If swayed towards MCU systems development I might be stuck in a fluorescent illuminated cubical all day. =( However, from my gathering a jack of a trades is a derogatory term for a generalist and they have little value, while on the flip side I hear jack of trades being described as integrators and are highly valued as managers understanding and facilitating the combination of several branches of technology into a single project.
Are there any suggestions into areas/careers that may take advantage of my multifaceted talents and interests? Are there suggestions along the same line that at the end of the day (50% of the week) I am covered in oil and filth with a big smile on my face? (that’s not a technician’s job) Are there technologies I should begin working with or researching while I have the next five years? (example would be learning PLC ladder programming, simple pneumatics, low level RF communications...) Would being an owner of a manufacturing firm, albeit small, be considering valuable work experience on an engineering resume?
Thanks and my apologies for the partial soliloquy.