[sdiy] Who Needs a Degree?
Paul Burns
paul at fitvideo.co.uk
Fri May 28 22:32:09 CEST 2010
c) here is what a college degree REALLY means:
"The number 1 thing I see different"
To me it seems they who attended just cannot construct a grammatically
correct sentence.
I always see things differently ...:-)
Regards
Paul
-----Original Message-----
From: synth-diy-bounces at dropmix.xs4all.nl
[mailto:synth-diy-bounces at dropmix.xs4all.nl] On Behalf Of Paul Schreiber
Sent: 28 May 2010 20:20
To: synth-diy at dropmix.xs4all.nl
Subject: Re: [sdiy] Who Needs a Degree?
a) full disclosure: I have BSEE/MSEE. I got the MSEE 13 years after the
BSEE. And I started off in Chemistry (in 1974 I was in the top 3 Chemistry
students in the US).
b) in my "day job" (military electronics that go into fighter aircraft) I
talk to many 'levels' of people on a program. There are QC, test, design,
program manager, buyers, programmers and probably 10 others.
After talking to any one of these people for < 1 minute, I can tell if they
are degreed engineers or not. Even if they got a degree 15 years ago and
have never soldered in their lives. I can still *tell*. It's not any 1
thing: it's a combination of "proper vocabulary", insight, thought process,
attitude.
Sure, there are always a few 'Jim Williams' tossed in the mix but he is an
*exception*.
c) here is what a college degree REALLY means:
1 - you stuck to something and didn't quit
2 - you understand how to prioritize your time
3 - you understand the value of time
4 - you think differently than other people (not WHAT you think, HOW you
think)
People that go to college and expect to learn anything *pratical* are always
dissappoionted (or quit). YOU are supposed to learn what YOU think is
pratical. YOU have to have the incentive to "go the extra mile".
The number 1 thing I see different (especially in EEs versus techs) is the
ability to:
- think abstractly
- able to easily any quickly jump from problem to problem without panicing
that the specific knowledge is not yet acquired. Many techs excel in a
*limited and specific* area of electronics, but cannot easily & seamlessly
jump from DSP to RF to FPGA to pc board layout to wiring to firmware. This
is why you take "useless" classes in college (thermo for one, I spent 6
weeks learning about steam-powered generators). The *specific knowledge* is
100% useless, the ability to walk in, learn it well enough to pass and then
move on to yet another useless class (Early American Poetry) is 100% the
reason why you are there.
Paul S.
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