OK,! its the 2 yrs college i want to know about, what did you learn in each year, as in ohms law, transistors, amps, IC's?
.........and what kinda job could you get without the university?
and what kinda job could you get without the university?
You could come up here and get a Class A commercial drivers license, for about $35 if your testing goes well, and then pull down $50,000 to $100,000+ driving tanker trucks or other heavy transport trucks in the oil fields.and what kinda job could you get without the university?
for my second year its been all english, writing and junk ,,, they got me in things like science fiction and psychology right now, and this is to get my electronics engineering diploma(is that right?)
So, are you saying that you think that a good grasp of the use of language and the ability to express your thoughts in both spoken and written form is unimportant?
If so, you need to think again.
Just look at some of the posts here on this board, badly worded, don't state the problem clearly, etc... I could go on all day.
Clear communication is vital in the technical world.
JimB
PS, if it is any consolation, I had similar thoughts to yourself 40 years or so ago, since then experience has taught me otherwise!
If you have studied English, writing and junk (did that include the rules of grammar?) for a whole year, you've managed to hide it well in your communications in this thread.thats great!! see , i knew my degree was cracker jacks! For my 2 yr program at college i'v learned the first 9 things u listed, for my second year its been all english, writing and junk ,,, !
I have encountered a few fresh computing graduates who did really well in their exams, got mostly A, but don't know what XML is. Similarly I have seen some other electrical engineering graduates, who again did really well in their studies, but could not handle what was a fairly simple micro controller assignment. Here in Singapore, another friend of mine, a PhD student, had been using M1 (a local mobile operator) for 2 years and never knew what M1 really stands for. One day after unsuccessfully trying to activate Google Calendar SMS notification on his phone, he looked up Google help page and concluded that Google does not support his mobile operator. FYI, on its website, Google lists "MobileOne" (the full name of M1) in the list of supported operators for Singapore. (It later turns out that the required settings were switched off in his Google account)
I wonder how these people could have passed all their exams and just forgotten everything once the exams were over...
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