Quick question about the power industry?

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In the power industry, mechatronic students with minimal power coursework can secure jobs typically held by electrical engineers (EEs) who have completed extensive power courses. The industry prioritizes any engineering degree over specific coursework, leading to a realization that much of what is learned in college is not directly applicable in practice. Job tasks often involve practical applications, such as referencing wiring standards, rather than complex theoretical calculations. This situation highlights that while an EE degree provides foundational knowledge and skills, the industry values adaptability and the ability to learn on the job. Ultimately, the distinction between an electrician and an electrical engineer lies in the level of responsibility and decision-making in the application of standards.
Ian_Brooks
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I was shocked to learn that any old mechatronic student with one power course can get the same job in the power industry as an EE who did well over 4-5 courses in power. How does that work?

Why aren't EE;s given any extra preference?
 
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As soon as you hit industry you realize exactly how little those 4-5 courses covered.

And although you can derive the phasor diagram for a three phase supply your task is going to be "look up in the wiring standard which type of wire we use for a circuit of X current and order some" rather than, model the heat loss rate of the cable under these conditions and calculate the optimal diamter.
 
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:(

So with my EE degree - its basicly just a choice of what I want to learn. In the end - the Industry is just looking for any engineering degree and nothing we learned in College is relevant.

...

I think I'm even more shocked now with this realization
 
Ian_Brooks said:
In the end - the Industry is just looking for any engineering degree and nothing we learned in College is relevant.
I think I'm even more shocked now with this realization
But that's a GOOD thing - if you only needed what you learned in your degree then;
1, You wouldn't need to learn anything in the next 40 years in your job - doesn't sound that interesting.
2, As new technologies/methods/regulations come out they would fire you and hire a new crop of graduates who had learned that stuff in their degrees.

Your degree will be more useful than someone who has just done a short course - you learned how to study, you learned some useful numercial/statistical techniques but most importantly you learned the background to understand WHY something behaves the way it does. So when you come across something that no one has seen before you have the tools to deal with it.
 
mgb_phys said:
As soon as you hit industry you realize exactly how little those 4-5 courses covered.

And although you can derive the phasor diagram for a three phase supply your task is going to be "look up in the wiring standard which type of wire we use for a circuit of X current and order some" rather than, model the heat loss rate of the cable under these conditions and calculate the optimal diamter.
Your job description sounds just like that of an electrician, so, what's the difference between an electrician and an electrical engineer in the power industry?
 
Defennnder said:
Your job description sounds just like that of an electrician, so, what's the difference between an electrician and an electrical engineer in the power industry?

An electrical engineer engineer reads the wiring standard and tells the electrician which wire to install.
 
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