snarkysparky
Electrical
- Jul 11, 2007
- 49
It seems to me that technically challenging jobs requiring math and applied physics are becoming rarer each day. Is this a globalization thing or a factor of technology saturation. It is becoming more the norm for engineering jobs to be bureaucratic paperwork shuffling positions. But somewhere, somebody has to be doing the science. I speak from an Electrical Engineering viewpoint so maybe the downturn in that sector fuels my inquiry.
I know there are many who can vouch for the availability of good jobs but these reported here are are taken from a very small subgroup of the engineers. The reason to care is to know what the trends portray even for those who are satisfied now. I have watched the engineering expectation decrease in my part of the country for years now. Many positions are posted for technical degree or just experience and a high school degree with preference for a college degree but not required. I think it very unlikely that a self taught high school graduate will have real engineering analytical skill on average. This indicates to me that the jobs available don't offer challenge and the profession is in decline.
I know there are many who can vouch for the availability of good jobs but these reported here are are taken from a very small subgroup of the engineers. The reason to care is to know what the trends portray even for those who are satisfied now. I have watched the engineering expectation decrease in my part of the country for years now. Many positions are posted for technical degree or just experience and a high school degree with preference for a college degree but not required. I think it very unlikely that a self taught high school graduate will have real engineering analytical skill on average. This indicates to me that the jobs available don't offer challenge and the profession is in decline.