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Old 13th December 2007, 03:36 AM   (permalink)
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so some day i hope to have a job in engineering of some sort like computer and or circuitry. so anyone have any career options i can consider (just started high school)??
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Old 13th December 2007, 03:46 AM   (permalink)
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Just that you take the calculus level math and all the 3 physics courses...not much else you can do in high school that you won't have to do already. It may also help to take some programming courses if your school offers them (but you will have to take them again in university anyways, so you don't have to take a course as much as you just have to be familiar with it so you slaughter the course).
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Old 13th December 2007, 03:53 AM   (permalink)
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thanks and yes i am planing on taking science physics math bio and tech classes
for grade 11 and 12

but what i really wanted was just some ideas people always ask me what i want to do and i never have an answer.
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Old 13th December 2007, 04:12 AM   (permalink)
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Well, there are product engineers, applications engineers, test engineers, product development engineers, product advancement engineers, VLSI engineers, AC power engineers, DC power engineers, MEMs engineers, a whole whackload.

If I crudely boil it down there is:

-microfab engineers (I'm not sure the exact word)- design the transistors on the silicon- not how they are arranged but the transistors themselves and the processes to manufacture chips
-VLSI/microelectronics engineers (design the transistors arrangements to make up ICs, microprocessors, RAM and all that).
-computer engineer (like the VLSI engineer except focuses on processors, RAM, buses and everything that makes them up)
-power engineers (power distribution systems and grids, generators, transmission lines, power plants)
-power engineer 2 (AC/DC motors, rectifiers, DC-DC converters, motor drives)
-control engineers (makes the stuff algorithms and hardware to control other things)
-electromagnetics engineer (lasers, magnetic fields, and atoms and crazy stuff like that)
-RF engineer (high frequency circuits like wireless and radio)
-communications engineer (I have no idea, but I know they exist I've not taken many courses in those)

And many more...

*chicks dig power engineers but my opinion is biased, but I found one that digs AI so...

Last edited by dknguyen; 13th December 2007 at 04:18 AM.
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Old 13th December 2007, 05:32 AM   (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by andynerd
thanks and yes i am planing on taking science physics math bio and tech classes
for grade 11 and 12

but what i really wanted was just some ideas people always ask me what i want to do and i never have an answer.
MY advice to you, unless you really like it for some reason, drop bio for more tech/auto mechanics. At my school at least in my auto class we learn a lot of fabrication. When people ask you what you want to do and you don't know what to say just tell them engineering, most people I have been asked that from accept that.

on a side note, hopefully without taking focus away from andy at all, does anyone know what university in western Canada is the best for electrical engineering, I have been looking into Uvic, but have been told conflicting things about it being good and it being no where near as good as UBC or Waterloo...
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Old 13th December 2007, 05:33 AM   (permalink)
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University of Alberta yo. We have NINT. I have also been told things about UVIC (or was it UBC) about engineering).

I took all the bio courses in high school, hell I don't see how you couldn't. THere's so few useful courses and so many time slots.
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Old 13th December 2007, 12:50 PM   (permalink)
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but it seems so hard to get a good engineering job in electronics
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Old 13th December 2007, 01:53 PM   (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by andynerd
but it seems so hard to get a good engineering job in electronics
That's why I second taking biology. Our existence is biology, and in a sense, everything we do worth getting paid for is related to biology. Moreover, you are approximately 14 or 15 years old. You have plenty of time to narrow your options. I suggest you just say you want to go into science and technology.

Oh, don't forget history and literature too. Those were tough subjects for me, but very useful later in life. In particular, you may not get much of a chance to take them when you go to a university in a technical discipline. John
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Old 13th December 2007, 02:00 PM   (permalink)
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If your H.S. has an electronics shop, I would suggest that you get in good with the instructor. Spend more time around him/her (polly him since most "hers" are more interested in gardening or marketing). If that teacher is dedicated, they can really boost and steer you in the proper direction for your career. Seek out your school's guidance counselor. Show them your sincere interest in your future and that you're not just another teenage-face showing up in their office.
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Old 13th December 2007, 05:10 PM   (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jpanhalt
Oh, don't forget history and literature too. Those were tough subjects for me, but very useful later in life.
I call BS.

Quote:
Originally Posted by jpanhalt
In particular, you may not get much of a chance to take them when you go to a university in a technical discipline. John
Isn't that the great thing? Don't mistake me for someone who sucked at English and literature, I ended up taking all the accelerated literature courses in high school (somehow...I'm not sure how) and although I found them to be fairly easy, I found them to be particularily useless. I found the technical writing courses far more useful than those involving literature and poetry.
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Old 13th December 2007, 06:14 PM   (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dknguyen
I call BS.

It would be interesting to get your perspective after you have been in senior management a few years. John
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Old 13th December 2007, 09:13 PM   (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jpanhalt
It would be interesting to get your perspective after you have been in senior management a few years. John
Read the quote again, and didn't see you say history. I'm not referring to the history part, just the literature part. WHich part are you referring to? I can see how history can come in handy, but...literature...ehhhh.
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Old 13th December 2007, 09:29 PM   (permalink)
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I thought you were referring to both history and literature. I feel both are important. History for all sorts of reasons. I particularly like reading about the history of science.

Literature is important also, as it teaches writing and organizational skills. When you are in management, it is not so much what you know, but are you able to convince others. Often, as in budget decisions and grant requests, the others are from different, competing areas. That is where writing and communication skills come in handy. Frankly, I believe it is better to learn those skills in high school and leave some of the science courses until college, if necessary. That belief is only reinforced from what I have seen of the level of science teaching in our local schools. John
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Old 24th January 2008, 07:26 PM   (permalink)
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I myself hate English because i have no reason to like it and i have no motivation to do well in it. Only time i got an A was when i liked a book a lot and the essay i wrote was 8 pages double spaced for my English teacher:P. Got the highest mark in the class wOO!
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Old 24th January 2008, 07:41 PM   (permalink)
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I just found English really easy, despite my not liking it. There was no pickle I couldn't explain away in English which I think was the reason. It seems you can always do well in English as long as you can explain yourself, and if you're good at that, it doesn't matter how bogus your interpretations or explanations are.
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