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  • Replies 13 replies
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College or work experience

salesm21
salesm21 over 7 years ago

Dear friends,

I have a big decision ahead of me and wish to have the community input. I am applying to Florida Tech and they have two education paths available to travel. One is called the protrack option and it involves a co-op between you and another local company where you have a paid internship. This is a 3-4 ratio of semesters in class. So you spend 3 in the internship and 4 in college yet still finish in 4 years with a bachelors. (Mine will be a dual major in electrical engineering and computer science) The other option is called the FastTrack and is where you can obtain your masters in 5 years in an accelerated education plan. Is a masters weighed heavier or is experience weighed more. I cant do both (I asked) and with the FastTrack I could do internships but they would be after school and cut into homework time. I could do it but itd be grueling and I dont know how serious they would take an unpaid intern. Any advice would be great.

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  • jw0752
    jw0752 over 7 years ago +4 suggested
    Hi Mitchell, The actual answers have to come from you but here are some questions that might help you decide. What do you want to do with the degree? Do you envision your future work as primarily theoretical…
  • genebren
    genebren over 7 years ago in reply to salesm21 +4 suggested
    Mitchell, I my case it was a combination of things that limited my career. Location, over specialization and a desired to balance work and lifestyle. Location - I settled in a area that looked to have…
  • james.flynn
    james.flynn over 7 years ago +4 suggested
    First off, congrats on going to Florida Tech (I am biased, I graduated from there when it was called Florida Institute of Technology). As to the 'should I co-op while getting a degree', my experience is…
Parents
  • jw0752
    0 jw0752 over 7 years ago

    Hi Mitchell,

    The actual answers have to come from you but here are some questions that might help you decide. What do you want to do with the degree? Do you envision your future work as primarily theoretical or will you get into actual hands on design and prototyping? Are you the type of student that is perfectly happy in the academic arena or do you like the lab work and the designing experiments better? What have you done to this point to to self educate? What type of company would you intern with? Will they provide a wide range of experience or will you be used in a fairly narrow technology band? You can see the difference between getting through the internship with the experience to go in multiple directions or just as a specialist in fixing and programming the company's product. In the final analysis you will have to evaluate yourself and what you will enjoy doing for the next 4 or 5 years. Whether it is the fast track to a Masters Degree or the Bachelor Degree with a dose of practical experience it has to be fun for you or you will loose interest and drop out. I am not an engineer myself. I took the path of working in electronics and self educated with respect to the theory and physics that were needed to prosper at my profession. This worked for me as I liked to get my hands dirty and take things apart, fix them, and put them back together. Most of the guys on here are excellent engineers and they may have different experiences and be able to give you more insight into what lies ahead. In any case best of luck to you and stay on the forum so you can share what you learn along the way. There was a guy a while back who really lit up the forum with his participation while he was in electrical engineering school. Before he was done he had written a great book and was highly in demand. Check out some of the things he did while he was here. Here is a link to the book announcement on element 14 a few years ago. https://www.element14.com/community/docs/DOC-55378/l/arduino-and-element14-community-expert-jeremy-blum-launches-new-book-exploring-arduino?sr=search&searchId=15b8190b-04c7-42ea-a34b-f64d80161adc&searchIndex=5

     

    John

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  • jw0752
    0 jw0752 over 7 years ago

    Hi Mitchell,

    The actual answers have to come from you but here are some questions that might help you decide. What do you want to do with the degree? Do you envision your future work as primarily theoretical or will you get into actual hands on design and prototyping? Are you the type of student that is perfectly happy in the academic arena or do you like the lab work and the designing experiments better? What have you done to this point to to self educate? What type of company would you intern with? Will they provide a wide range of experience or will you be used in a fairly narrow technology band? You can see the difference between getting through the internship with the experience to go in multiple directions or just as a specialist in fixing and programming the company's product. In the final analysis you will have to evaluate yourself and what you will enjoy doing for the next 4 or 5 years. Whether it is the fast track to a Masters Degree or the Bachelor Degree with a dose of practical experience it has to be fun for you or you will loose interest and drop out. I am not an engineer myself. I took the path of working in electronics and self educated with respect to the theory and physics that were needed to prosper at my profession. This worked for me as I liked to get my hands dirty and take things apart, fix them, and put them back together. Most of the guys on here are excellent engineers and they may have different experiences and be able to give you more insight into what lies ahead. In any case best of luck to you and stay on the forum so you can share what you learn along the way. There was a guy a while back who really lit up the forum with his participation while he was in electrical engineering school. Before he was done he had written a great book and was highly in demand. Check out some of the things he did while he was here. Here is a link to the book announcement on element 14 a few years ago. https://www.element14.com/community/docs/DOC-55378/l/arduino-and-element14-community-expert-jeremy-blum-launches-new-book-exploring-arduino?sr=search&searchId=15b8190b-04c7-42ea-a34b-f64d80161adc&searchIndex=5

     

    John

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