trueblue221
Mechanical
This is more or less a continuation of the discussion in this thread, but I moved it here to get some more feedback from a wider audience.
I am struggling with what my career goal should be and the path I need to take to get there. I would appreciate any advice you can give me.
I am looking for a career change for something that has most of the following characteristics:
-A salary not too far off what I would be making with my math degrees
-My shop skills are an asset, if not because I use them everyday, at least they give me insight into what happens after I send my work on to the next group
-Similarly, my math skills are an asset, even if they are not constantly used.
-A “good enough” solution is acceptable, and maybe even preferable (in my undergraduate research field we “knew” what the right answer was, but had trouble proving it, because it was difficult to characterize all other possible candidate solutions)
-Frequently something new to learn
-Opportunity to reduce some problems to a decision tree that can be automated once the mechanism is understood
-Involves geometry (my math field, and I am a very visual person)
-Involves less talking to other people than my teaching position currently does. Not none, just less.(I have a moderate to severe hearing loss, and while I am functional with hearing aids, listening to other people talk is a bit like constantly playing Mad Gab). Probably not hard to do because I spend over 30 hours a week in an open tutoring lab currently
-I am philosophically more inclined towards making “useful things”(i.e. Physical objects, but also in my mind, if I were to go more towards Data Science, Amazon’s recommendation engine is more useful to the everyday consumer than predictive analytics in the stock market are)
Like any wish list, I know it is probably difficult to meet all of these criteria, but it should give you a rough idea of what I’m after. My “first draft” of a career plan to meet this is the field of control engineering, but I am open to other suggestions that I may not have thought of. It appears that the general feeling is that the Master’s in Measurement and Control Engineering at Idaho State University is not going to be considered adequate in today’s job market, and that I would be better served by a post-baccalaureate program in engineering.
It also seems probable that I have made the mistake of assuming that the only way to prove that I really have a skill that I claim on my resume, is a degree. Part of the reason for this is that it seems that all of the engineering positions I have looked at require a “degree in engineering,” and usually it specifies a bachelor’s degree. It seems like people are saying that it doesn’t necessarily matter how I get the knowledge (whether that’s independent study, non-degree coursework, or “University of YouTube”), so does that mean it’s tested in the interview, or is it assessed in the first couple weeks in the job? How does this work?
I am struggling with what my career goal should be and the path I need to take to get there. I would appreciate any advice you can give me.
I am looking for a career change for something that has most of the following characteristics:
-A salary not too far off what I would be making with my math degrees
-My shop skills are an asset, if not because I use them everyday, at least they give me insight into what happens after I send my work on to the next group
-Similarly, my math skills are an asset, even if they are not constantly used.
-A “good enough” solution is acceptable, and maybe even preferable (in my undergraduate research field we “knew” what the right answer was, but had trouble proving it, because it was difficult to characterize all other possible candidate solutions)
-Frequently something new to learn
-Opportunity to reduce some problems to a decision tree that can be automated once the mechanism is understood
-Involves geometry (my math field, and I am a very visual person)
-Involves less talking to other people than my teaching position currently does. Not none, just less.(I have a moderate to severe hearing loss, and while I am functional with hearing aids, listening to other people talk is a bit like constantly playing Mad Gab). Probably not hard to do because I spend over 30 hours a week in an open tutoring lab currently
-I am philosophically more inclined towards making “useful things”(i.e. Physical objects, but also in my mind, if I were to go more towards Data Science, Amazon’s recommendation engine is more useful to the everyday consumer than predictive analytics in the stock market are)
Like any wish list, I know it is probably difficult to meet all of these criteria, but it should give you a rough idea of what I’m after. My “first draft” of a career plan to meet this is the field of control engineering, but I am open to other suggestions that I may not have thought of. It appears that the general feeling is that the Master’s in Measurement and Control Engineering at Idaho State University is not going to be considered adequate in today’s job market, and that I would be better served by a post-baccalaureate program in engineering.
It also seems probable that I have made the mistake of assuming that the only way to prove that I really have a skill that I claim on my resume, is a degree. Part of the reason for this is that it seems that all of the engineering positions I have looked at require a “degree in engineering,” and usually it specifies a bachelor’s degree. It seems like people are saying that it doesn’t necessarily matter how I get the knowledge (whether that’s independent study, non-degree coursework, or “University of YouTube”), so does that mean it’s tested in the interview, or is it assessed in the first couple weeks in the job? How does this work?