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The gang discusses how one acquires the skills most frequently used by engineering professionals.
- Brian knows that parliamentary procedures are described in Robert’s Rules of Order, but he has not had to use such procedures in the course of his engineering career.
- A quorum is the minimum number of voting members from a deliberative group allowed to make decisions on behalf of that group.
- This episode covers the skills commonly used by practicing engineers.
- In 2001, Edward F. Crawley of MIT published a report that discussed engineering skills, titled “The CDIO Syllabus: A Statement of Goals for Undergraduate Engineering Eduation.” (pdf)
- The top-level skill categories identified by Crawley were:
- Technical Knowledge and Reasoning
- Personal and Professional Skills
- Interpersonal Skills
- CDIO (conceiving, designing, implementing, and operating)
- In 2003, Catherine Kelly studied the career paths of MIT undergraduates over a span of 35 years, producing a report titled “Some Trends in the Career Paths Followed by Alumni of the MIT Mechanical Engineering Department”. (link)
- According to the Kelly report, approximately two-thirds of each graduating class from MIT’s Mechanical Engineering Department will find employment as engineers and managers. As the number of years beyond graduation increases, the percentage of engineers decreases, while the percentage of managers increases.
- Georgetown University’s Center on Education and the Workforce published a 2011 study on STEM careers, noting that 10 years after graduation, 46 percent of STEM graduates have left the field.
- Brian references a 2014 article from the ABA Journal claiming that 24% of those who passed the bar in 2000 were not practicing law a dozen years later.
- Kristen Wolfe authored a 2004 thesis, “Understanding the careers of the alumni of the MIT Mechanical Engineering Department,” in which she surveyed MIT alumni about the skills they used in day-to-day engineering practice.
- Brian notes that a good deal of his work involves trying to fight his own confirmation bias.
- In 2015, Kelly Wang produced a thesis, titled “Study on the Careers of MIT Mechanical Engineering Undergraduate Alumni.” This report confirmed many of the findings from the 2004 Wolfe study.
- In response to an email from listener Andrew, we’ve generated the following list of recommended YouTube channels:
Thanks to TechCrunch for use of the photo titled “TechCrunch Disrupt Europe Hackathon.” Opening music by John Trimble, and concluding theme by Paul Stevenson.