zizzerzazzer
Civil/Environmental
- Nov 5, 2012
- 2
Hi all,
Backstory: I worked for several years as a Civil EIT in a consulting firm, applied for and was approved to sit for the PE, but before I took the exam I switched jobs. The new job (now 3 years in) is peripherally related to CE, but does not require a PE and does not require any 'real' engineering work. Now I'm on the fence as to whether I should study and take the PE exam, or be content that my undergrad work got me a job that I am happy in.
The voice on one shoulder says I should get my PE license: to keep as just-in-case insurance for reentry into engineering in the future (never know in these economic times what may happen), to finish what I started when I began my undergraduate program, to potentially use as a tool to increase my earnings ability (resume builder). The voice on the other shoulder says: that the last thing I want to do over the next 5 months is devote my time to re-learning everything I've forgotten (it goes Fast!), that I'm happy in my career now and shouldn't be driven by fear, that I can reenter the CE field as an EIT (albeit, older EIT) if I ever need to, that getting my license now would just be for ego, and that it would be essentially meaningless if I wasn't actually a practicing engineer and keeping my skills up.
Thoughts? Would any of you that have been in the field for awhile hire an older employee as an EIT? I've been undecided on this issue for years now and need to come to some type of resolution.
Thanks!
Backstory: I worked for several years as a Civil EIT in a consulting firm, applied for and was approved to sit for the PE, but before I took the exam I switched jobs. The new job (now 3 years in) is peripherally related to CE, but does not require a PE and does not require any 'real' engineering work. Now I'm on the fence as to whether I should study and take the PE exam, or be content that my undergrad work got me a job that I am happy in.
The voice on one shoulder says I should get my PE license: to keep as just-in-case insurance for reentry into engineering in the future (never know in these economic times what may happen), to finish what I started when I began my undergraduate program, to potentially use as a tool to increase my earnings ability (resume builder). The voice on the other shoulder says: that the last thing I want to do over the next 5 months is devote my time to re-learning everything I've forgotten (it goes Fast!), that I'm happy in my career now and shouldn't be driven by fear, that I can reenter the CE field as an EIT (albeit, older EIT) if I ever need to, that getting my license now would just be for ego, and that it would be essentially meaningless if I wasn't actually a practicing engineer and keeping my skills up.
Thoughts? Would any of you that have been in the field for awhile hire an older employee as an EIT? I've been undecided on this issue for years now and need to come to some type of resolution.
Thanks!