engineering graduate school question

An interesting technique, but no more difficult than Laplace or rotations of the Complex Reimann Sphere. All are extensions of analytic geometry (in the form that includes projective geometry), a nominal pre-calculus course.

--
 JosephKK
 Gegen dummheit kampfen die Gotter Selbst, vergebens.  
  --Schiller
Reply to
joseph2k
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I didn't start college until I was 21, and that was after a career re-assessment prompted by slicing the tip of a finger off in the jointer in the millwork shop I was running.

Even then, I concentrated my EE electives in materials science and microelectronics for silicon fab, as I kind of thought that that was what I wanted to do. I was very fortunate in that my first job was heavy in DSP, I got to do a lot of very interesting and educational stuff and my specialty focus changed completely. After three years of that I returned to grad school with a lot better idea of what I was really good at and wanted to do.

By then I was 28.

So some people are a little slower than others at sorting things out and take different routes at getting there. I've also known people who just took a year to travel and see the world or whatever either right after high school or right after college. I have no criticism about that as it can give a person a very valuable perspective on life and what really matters to them.

A person's value/morals/work ethics are already pretty well in place by the time they get out of high school, so I don't think taking a trip and not working for a year or so (if they have that privilege available to them) is going to turn them into a bum. If they turn into a bum because of it I wouldn't blame it on the trip necessarily.

One has an entire lifetime to work and develop a career, but opportunities to travel and expand one's perspective are often limited. If one gets that opportunity as a young person, more power to them, and I'd say go for it. Even doing some other job or something can be enriching. I have no regrets about working as a skilled laborer for several years, even though I actually didn't like most of it at the time. It's a lifestyle that I can understand and relate to because I lived it.

I wish life was longer as I think it would be fun to try a career as a lawyer, cartoonist, musician, racing, etc. Dang, there just ain't enough hours in a day... ;)

Eric Jacobsen Minister of Algorithms Abineau Communications

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Reply to
Eric Jacobsen

Maybe you don't understand the literal translation of the phrase "self-taught". If she reads books then the books are probably teaching her something. If she talks to/works with the best in the field, I'm sure they give her some sort of useful assistance. Now, what hasn't been discussed, is that she probably reads the exact same books that a college student reads. Oh, but she doesn't have a teacher to paraphrase the book to her during a lecture, so that makes her self-taught, or not. Seems like it would be a lot easier to learn in her enivronment, than in a school. She has theory in books and practice in her peers, what a perfect environment.

Many engineers could. There is a whole newsgroup that could in comp.arch.fpga. What she did wasn't complex and there was a lot of previous work done by others in the community that she used to build from.

---Matthew Hicks

Reply to
Matthew Hicks

That sounds like a somewhat technical activity. At least you'd focussed yourself getween arts and sciences. Some teenagers seems unable to even do that.

At college I was most interested in making computation go fast. The first job I got was to make the computations in signal processors go fast. Colleges didn't generally have courses on DSP at that time. I got Rabiner and Gold, and taught myself what I needed to diversify my work from pure logic architecture. I don't consider that a major shift in direction. Pretty minor fine tuning, really.

By 28 I had been working 7 years, and I'd done a fairly diverse range of things, but all in the same general area.

If you are just going take a year's holiday between school and college I doubt it serves any purpose at all.

I should hope their values and morals are in place. I'm not sure about work ethic, though. I've seen a lot of people get their act together after a short time in the working world, because for the first time they've actually figured out *why* they needed an education. The *why* is sadly something the educators have generally not figured out, and so are unable to pass on to youngsters.

This is a luxury few can afford. I really doubt be a tourist serves any purpose beyond being a holiday. When I travel for work I make a point of never being a tourist, unless I'm dragged into seeing things by people trying to be kind.

I'd be interested in how you ended up there, considering you appear to have the intellectual capacity to succeed in something more mentally demanding.

Given an opportunity to relive my life, I would steer clear of engineering, or anything that interests me. Life has taught me that working for a living in any activity will suck all the joy out of it. Better to do something that seems dull from the outset, and offers better career prospects.

Regards, Steve

Reply to
Steve Underwood

I know a guy like this. College degree. Worked as Union laborer in road construction to pay his way through school. It was a pretty sweet deal. VERY high pay, only work in the warm months. Work requires basically no skill, just union suction. When he graduated. (biology zoology etc.) kept the job. Boss moved him to supervisor. Now VERY VERY high pay. Same working benefits. Spends off work time traveling to rain forests in central America and doing bird-chasing all over the country. Not a total success as you still spend half your life doing stupid things for money, but still better than having a job and hating it and not being able to do anything else.

Then you should just DO it! I used to work for Professor A.H. Benade (author of the famed music physics books). One day he says to me: "Do you know what "success" is?" No, say I. "Success", he said, "is thinking of what you'd rather be doing than anything else in the whole world and then finding someone who will PAY you do do it!" He lived that.

And I sort of have. My view has always been that when I take a job, I ALWAYS ask myself the key question: Would I take this job if it paid NOTHING? If the answer is "yes", I sign on! If you have wide interests like me, you'll find that finding jobs like that is not as hard as you might think. But you have to have the guts if you want to be a cartoonist, musician, lawyer etc. to actually go HANG with the group you want to join and start developing the relationships that will make it work. I've seen WAY too many engineers who are in it because it pays well. Feh! I can't think of a worse punishment than doing engineering if you hate it!

This was Einstein's theory. He said that if he had it to do over again, he'd rather be a plumber. A plumber makes decent cash. The work is not mentally taxing. So you get to eat well and still have time to think about the problems that interest YOU. The problem Einstein had was that once you get a job as a physicist, they keep coming around asking when you are going to put out your NEXT world-changing theory!

Of course one does have to understand that the reason some people pay other people money to do certain jobs is because the job is a pain in the ass. But on the other hand, IF you want an education, a pain in the ass job may be just the ticket. What better way to start to learn about sanitary engineering than shoveling gob at the bottom of a manhole?

Reply to
Benj

I think you're really short-changing yourself there, and you're an unusual business traveller if that's really what you do. You learn a lot about the world and about other people and yourself when you're in a foreign environment (and by foreign I mean anything other than you're usual surroundings). I always look forward to being in different places for that reason. When you're in some place you've never been then everything around every corner is new and fresh.

I'm from a fairly small town in the rural midwest; it was a looong way to go to get to any real civilization where there were opportunities other than the sort that I took. It just seemed the natural thing to do at the time.

It's just good fortune that we also had a very, very good engineering college in the same town. A problem for that state is that they have good technical education, but the vast majority of graduates leave the state since there are few local jobs.

Eric Jacobsen Minister of Algorithms Abineau Communications

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Reply to
Eric Jacobsen

In every entity i have ever worked for, liability containment was always part of the equation. restaurants, civil service, aerospace.

--
 JosephKK
 Gegen dummheit kampfen die Gotter Selbst, vergebens.  
  --Schiller
Reply to
joseph2k

Each to their own, it took me 14 years to complete my BSEE, I was working full time as an engineer throughout same time. In the end it opened (bureaucratic) doors for me. The MSEE may or may not have the same magic.

--
 JosephKK
 Gegen dummheit kampfen die Gotter Selbst, vergebens.  
  --Schiller
Reply to
joseph2k

The first is alive, and very much so. (Doing what rabbits like to do.) The second is dinner.

Jeroen Belleman

Reply to
Jeroen Belleman

As a business traveler I get to meet ordinary people in their daily lives. I get to drink and eat what they eat (I'll eat almost anything, and I'm crazy enough to have drunk the tap water in rural India). Often to be invited to their homes. This is a far richer experience that I could ever have in tourist mode.

I was lucky enough to attend a world class engineering school in my home town too - London :-)

Steve

Reply to
Steve Underwood

This really depends on a lot of things...

There are many scholarships and other financial offerings that are designed to be used by a student going directly from high school to college. You need to apply for them WHILE IN HIGH SCHOOL! (and sometimes, in your junior year!) or you can't get them. To many, this financial support is just about required if they are going to go to college, so a year off is just going to mean they don't go at all... :-(

Charlie

Reply to
Charlie Edmondson

If you're familiar with her history you'd know that for a significant part of it she didn't have the money to be purchasing textbooks (although some people did donate a few, and she was always happy to receive them).

I don't think she'd describe it as "perfect" at all. But Jeri was never one to complain much -- I think that's part of what made her successful: She did the best she could with what she was able to obtain, and always seemed to keep making some progress even when she was very low on resources. But that progress was slow going: She took a *lot* longer to learn about contemporary digital design than someone taking the traditional college route: You can find plenty of evidence that she often *seriously* underestimated how long various development efforts were going to take her. :-)

Ah, but they didn't now, did they? As they say, "the proof is in the pudding."

"Complex" is subjective. I think it's "reasonably complex," considering that it was largely a single-person project. (After all, if it's so simple, why hadn't anyone else done it before? Clearly it was a successful product...) Have other individuals done things as or more complex? Sure, of course -- their articles show up monthly in various magazines and on-line -- But that in no way devalues the work she did.

Heck, I wrote an entire thesis on a topic that arguably has very little application in the real world (although my professor would probably disagree :-) ), and they gave me an MSEE for it. How's that compare? Give the woman a little credit, would you?

---Joel

Reply to
Joel Kolstad

Ah, I misunderstood what you meant by "tourist mode". I took your statement to mean that you weren't getting out and seeing things, not that you weren't using the usual "tourist" means or venues.

Eric Jacobsen Minister of Algorithms Abineau Communications

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Reply to
Eric Jacobsen

These things are not mutually exclusive. I remember when applying for colleges, a couple of them offered me a place "to be taken in the next academic year, or the one following, at your choice". So, it is often possible to get college settled while at school, and still take a year out to work or hatch evil plots to take over the world.

Steve

Reply to
Steve Underwood

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