Well, I'm going to chalk it up to international standards. In the US you have to take the FE and PE exams (fundamental of engineering, professional engineering) before you can call yourself Engineer.
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Computer, Material Science, and Petroleum. Wild Card: Structural.
That sounds strange, as engineering is such an enormously wide concept, how could you on earth make a standartized exam for it. It's not like a Mechanical Engineer knows the same as a Biomechanical Engineer. Unless that exam is so basic (skill-wise) that they both know it already.
But I've had exams in EE, ME, and the such, so perhaps it was just inserted into my curriculum.
But you've made me curious, how do you define the rest of the sciences (Physics, math, chem majors) if not as Engineer?
Scientist and Mathematician? :bigsmile:
Scientists.
More on the FE: Fundamentals Exams - NCEES
It's definitely not a basic test. My senior friends have been drilling away at review sessions and packets. Some of the stuff they haven't even thought about since freshman year xD Anyways, eight hours of ._. Supposedly they pass the top 40-60%, regardless of how they score, so I plan to take it with a bunch of dunderheads :}
Computer science, electrical engineering, compiter engineering. And structural engineering as a wildcard.
Ah, as such. Well, I guess such a term would be more correct for research scholars (that was what I was called on my visa application form last time).
The FE almost sounds like a bar exam for lawyers. Sounds awful. But then again, in the final 6 months I'm in now, I have to work on a research project, such as can be found in business and such, to see if I measure up to work in a research enviroment. Maybe it's the exam form of that, a combination of everything you've learned.
If I became a computer engineer, I'd make sure not to give Pro Tools 50 different preferences.Quote:
Computer Engineering (also called Electronic and Computer Engineering or Computer Systems Engineering) is a discipline that combines both Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. Computer engineers usually have training in electrical engineering, software design and hardware-software integration instead of only software engineering or electrical engineering.
>>> A good for nothing engineer.
in other words I got the "you are not be suited to engineering"..
I pressed "Skip this question" for EVERY question and I still got Computer Science. Funny stuff. :bigsmile:
Computer Engineering / Biomedical Engineering / Computer Science
Wild card - Structural Engineering
I should count myself lucky that it thinks I'm fit to be any kind of engineer.