electrical and computer engineering info image

Yoga
Hello, I need to interview an engineer.
Name, contact info(you can e mail me the address.)
please briefly describe your job.
What skills are required for your job?
Which one is the most important?
How long have you been with your company?
what do you like most about your job?
what do you like least?
please briefly tell me your education history.
what do you wish you had learned more about in college?
Thank you very much for your time!
Answer
You may wish to contact Dell, Intel, or Sargent & LUndy.
You may wish to contact Dell, Intel, or Sargent & LUndy.
What could be a good career choice for me?

Benjamin
I like math( not the homework). Electronics fascinate me. I find history , government and economics quite interesting. I also like hands on things like working on cars. I find biology , chemistry , anatomy and physiology interesting.
Haven't really tried in school lately but I have potential to do whatever I set my mind to. Mainly cause I just show up to school and get decent grades.
I've thought about being an electrical engineer or computer hardware engineer. My class of anatomy and physiology gives me interest in medical field. And I just recently got braces and like how it was.
Answer
@Anya, I'm one of those. I don't have a clue what I'm really interested in. I also don't have a whole lot of motivation as I don't have the interest. These are tied back to back, so that sucks.
I'm probably going to be totally useless as I'm only explaining possible routes from engineering.
Engineering is a nice way to go. Electrical engineer, computer hardware engineer or even info-tech is never a bad career path as these are always needed. If you go the path of engineering, I suggest aiming for a college/university that have a generic first year. At my university, University of Toronto, there is a program called Track One. As you might know, first year engineering is rather generic either way but there are still some specialization courses. If you took chemical engineering first year, you can switch to mechanical or civil engineering easily but not necessarily electrical without taking additional courses. So what Track One does is basically take all the core specialization courses and fit it so that you can branch to any engineering specialization on second year. If you do take the electrical/computer hardware engineering route, maybe you should aim for a program such as this to open your windows. Depending on the university, there are a vase variety of engineering, so another might interest you.
Are you interested in the medical field like doctors and vets? These occupations are a long journey as you need to do grad school of it and it's not just 1 or 2 years. And these grad schools usually require very strong academic history. I'm not saying you're not qualified as I know nothing about you, but I'm just saying that many people who wanted to pursue a medical degree ended up doing so in a random university because it's easier to get into that. So if you do choose that route, it'll be anything but easier than the engineering route since you really need to keep those marks up and might end up going somewhere random. Oh, one last thing. Some people, like myself, cannot stand looking at another person's mouth or teeth. I feel disturbed. If you have anything similar like another person's body, you should think it through again. Like if you're a massagist or a physician and you have a patient with smelly feet, are you perfectly fine with it and deal with it in a professional manner? Or are you a germaphobe who can't stand such thing?
I studied engineering so I can only be bias and know the most about it. As a graduate engineering student, many of us take a second degree after a bachelor degree in applied science or engineering. As a matter of fact, it branches quite nicely to what you might be interested in. You can definitely stop or continue more engineering related education. You can also pursue a MBA for your business/economic related interest. Many of my "industrial professor" (lecturers from the industry) tend to build their own businesses after a few years. Some kept it engineering like, some does really innovative things like a not for profit organization, or some created their own companies. Another route is biomedical engineering, which is nothing like a doctor but part of the backbone of the doctors out there. The last route you can do is med school after an engineering degree as med school is type of graduate school.
At the end of the day, the best way to deal with this is consult with a PROFESSIONAL counselor or someone similar. Don't listen to any of those from your school, I got tricked into chemical engineering. >=(
@Anya, I'm one of those. I don't have a clue what I'm really interested in. I also don't have a whole lot of motivation as I don't have the interest. These are tied back to back, so that sucks.
I'm probably going to be totally useless as I'm only explaining possible routes from engineering.
Engineering is a nice way to go. Electrical engineer, computer hardware engineer or even info-tech is never a bad career path as these are always needed. If you go the path of engineering, I suggest aiming for a college/university that have a generic first year. At my university, University of Toronto, there is a program called Track One. As you might know, first year engineering is rather generic either way but there are still some specialization courses. If you took chemical engineering first year, you can switch to mechanical or civil engineering easily but not necessarily electrical without taking additional courses. So what Track One does is basically take all the core specialization courses and fit it so that you can branch to any engineering specialization on second year. If you do take the electrical/computer hardware engineering route, maybe you should aim for a program such as this to open your windows. Depending on the university, there are a vase variety of engineering, so another might interest you.
Are you interested in the medical field like doctors and vets? These occupations are a long journey as you need to do grad school of it and it's not just 1 or 2 years. And these grad schools usually require very strong academic history. I'm not saying you're not qualified as I know nothing about you, but I'm just saying that many people who wanted to pursue a medical degree ended up doing so in a random university because it's easier to get into that. So if you do choose that route, it'll be anything but easier than the engineering route since you really need to keep those marks up and might end up going somewhere random. Oh, one last thing. Some people, like myself, cannot stand looking at another person's mouth or teeth. I feel disturbed. If you have anything similar like another person's body, you should think it through again. Like if you're a massagist or a physician and you have a patient with smelly feet, are you perfectly fine with it and deal with it in a professional manner? Or are you a germaphobe who can't stand such thing?
I studied engineering so I can only be bias and know the most about it. As a graduate engineering student, many of us take a second degree after a bachelor degree in applied science or engineering. As a matter of fact, it branches quite nicely to what you might be interested in. You can definitely stop or continue more engineering related education. You can also pursue a MBA for your business/economic related interest. Many of my "industrial professor" (lecturers from the industry) tend to build their own businesses after a few years. Some kept it engineering like, some does really innovative things like a not for profit organization, or some created their own companies. Another route is biomedical engineering, which is nothing like a doctor but part of the backbone of the doctors out there. The last route you can do is med school after an engineering degree as med school is type of graduate school.
At the end of the day, the best way to deal with this is consult with a PROFESSIONAL counselor or someone similar. Don't listen to any of those from your school, I got tricked into chemical engineering. >=(
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