In the first couple of years of academic life, mechanical engineering students are focused on gaining a scientific understanding of the universe. They will typically study physics, calculus, thermos dynamics, fluids, etc., and then transition to the practical application of the principles they learned by gaining skills in various disciplines like material science, CAD and the basics of design. All the study culminates with a capstone project that helps them begin to move from theory to practical application. It is a stepping stone toward becoming a professional engineer. They apply what they learned to the process of ideation, prototyping, and building something in the real world, and if they are successful they graduate with a degree in mechanical engineering.
Graduation is the halfway point toward becoming a professional engineer. During the second half of the journey a newly graduated engineer works under the supervision of a licensed engineer for a minimum of four years and must pass two rigorous exams. The process models ancient apprenticeship programs and is a proven way of ensuring a new engineer has a firm grasp of not only the concepts but the real-world application of them.
Working engineers move beyond the theory of good design and begin to learn the ‘soft skills’ of creating something for the marketplace. They now must consider time, manufacturability, material cost, tradeoffs and risk analysis. It is a much more complicated set of variables, many of which that are not pure design decisions, and these are on top of the need to create a safe, working end product.
Working engineers must adapt a new mind set. Below are four tips to help ease the transition from student to working engineer:
Making the transition from academia to working engineer is not easy but it is an exciting journey that very few have the discipline and focus to undertake. And if you keep these four tips in mind it will be a little easier.