Thursday, 17 July 2014

How to Become an Electrical Engineer

Have you ever dreamed of designing brand new electronics? Would you like to help create the world's fastest computer? Or do you want to build a car that runs on electricity? If you answered yes to any of these questions, a career in electrical engineering might be just right for you.

1
Study the perquisites for engineering in high school. These classes usually include physics, chemistry, math and well-rounded liberal arts courses.Study maths properly.



2
Attend Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineering (IEEE) meetings to find out more about what EEs do in their profession. You might even find a mentor to help you reach your engineering goal.




3
Study anything that appeals to you in the electronics field as a hobby.Hobbies can lead to a better understanding of how things work. Some suggested hobbies could include ham radio or audiophile work such as speaker building. You could also learn how computers work and how to fix them.




4
Go to college and get a degree in engineering. To be an electrical engineer, you will also want to excel in mathematicsscience, and computers. Engineers also need to be good problem solvers and good team members.
  • Taking a few classes in engineering can help if you are not sure whether you are fully interested in electrical engineering or not.






5
Look further into the many branches of electrical engineering. Yes, whatever branch you choose will be considered electrical engineering, but does that mean all electrical engineering jobs are created equally? No way! Explore the different directions you can go with electrical engineering and choose the one that suits you the best.






6
Make sure you have something to show on your resume. Include why you think that you are the best for the job and have the resources to back it up.
  • Include previous jobs and the amount of experience that you have with electrical engineering, or just engineering in general.
  • Focus on your achievements.
  • Don't make common resume mistakes. Pay for a resume writing service, if needed.

10 good reasons why to study Electrical Engineering

1. It's easy to get your first job

Electrical engineering students fairly easy find their first job because most employers in electrical field search for fresh mind, with fresh knowledge and at the same time they get young people they can mold to their own specific needs and make experts out of them.

2. You can work in another country

Working as electrical engineer opens you lots of opportunities in other countries. Laws of math, electricity and physics are universal and your gained knowledge doesn't limit you to only the country you studied in. There are a lot of international companies that need electrical engineers, also most of them are willing to employ people form other countries, and most of them operate on international level that offers you additional options of traveling while working. Besides, you are usually getting payed well for it!

3. Student practice can be extended to employment

Most European universities demand students of electrical engineering to get short pravtise with companies before they graduate and usually, if you perform well you can extend your praxis into employment after graduation. The employer already knows you already, they know your skills and work ethics and also they usually start to mold you in their "specific needs" profile during your practice

4. You gain a wide range of knowledge during your studies

Thinking that electrical engineering is just one dimensional is wrong. The range of knowledge gained during studies is amazingly broad and versatile. Even just basic studies gives you wide range of skills - from programming to writing reports; lets face it, reports are required on every step of electrical engineering studies and every employer will demand writing reports on different fields you work on. Even though you are studying a specific part of electrical engineering you will get basics of almost all aspects of electrical engineering and it shouldn't be a big problem to find solutions to a problem that is not strictly in your specific field of expertise.

5. Computer skills

Modern world is run by computers. Most of the people use it on regular basis, but some still struggle with some operations that demand knowledge, that goes just a little bit beyond "Click an icon". Electrical engineers are faced with computer problems on every step of their studies and also every day on a job, that's why we usually gain computer skills during studies, when we have to install different programs for our studies, run analysis and tweak components or electrical circuits. Computers become parts of us and we know that hitting them won't make them run faster but fixing might...

6. Adrenaline

Maybe adrenaline isn't first thing that pops in your mind when you think about electrical engineering, but trust me there will be a lot of adrenaline rush moments if you get in electrical engineering. Occasional jolts of electrical charge that hits you when you aren't paying attention and touch the leads of charged capacitor or when you connect 2 wires that you shouldn't or an electrical component more or less explodes in front of your eyes because you connected it on the testing board in the wrong way... Those events make you jump out of your chair and definitely raise your adrenaline level. On the other hand you won't most likely do the same mistake again!

7. DIY

DIY or "Do It Yourself" is one of more exciting reasons why to get in electrical engineering. When you know how stuff works, what usually malfunction and what are basic rules of electrical engineering you can make your own stuff that usually you need to search for and buy. It's not always cheaper, although some solutions will save you great deal of money, but it works as you want it to work and it's your own creation what gives it additional value and also nice reference in your CV if you are applying for a job. DIY creations are unlimited. You can build a 1 sensor that would cost you 10 in a store or a computer controlled cutter that costs 1000 but you just spent 200 building it.

8. Mr./Mrs. Fix-It

Not only everyday fixes, like changing a burned out light bulb or faulty fuse aren't scary moments any more - you might also be able to cope with more complex problems with your computer etc. That doesn't only save you money but also works great as a pick up line...

9. New stuff gets out all the time - it never gets boring

Electrical and electronic components are modified, invented and reinvented every day, so you will never be bored because you are using same process or component for the last 10 years. New and exciting stuff is available all the time and you will have lots of fun testing an assembling it.

10. Only few simple rules to follow

  1. Things work better when plugged to power
  2. Electrical components work on smoke - when it gets out you are in trouble
  3. If things don't work, read a manual.
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Electrical Engineering

Electrical engineering Electrical engineering is a field of engineering that generally deals with the study and application of electricity, electronics, and electromagnetism.