homeomorphic said:
Amen. As you say, though, it is normal to forget the basics--it's just that it shouldn't be normal. It's refreshing to hear someone say that engineering isn't just about memorizing and plugging and chugging and just practical skills alone. That's what I've always believed, although I've never had the chance to work as a practicing engineer, so I can't be too sure.
On a side note, this kind of proves my point on that other thread about how it would make sense to hire me, the topology PhD with an EE background who excels at understanding concepts over someone with the full BS EE degree. HR will have none of it, though. Or maybe it's just that I suck at getting jobs. But they sure don't make it easy if you don't have the degree.
I still remember KVL and KCL and all that after like 10 years since I used it in my EE classes. Maybe it gets hammered into you enough with repetition by the time you've taken several circuits classes, but it does help to have a picture in mind my of the electrons flowing like water, such that you have to have the same amount come in as go out for KCL (or to put it another way, if you add up all the current coming into a node, it should be zero, or else there would be charge building up at that node). If you just think of it as dry facts, just the symbols in the equation, it's not going to be memorable. It won't stick, so you're mostly wasting your time learning it because you'll forget it all in 2 seconds, anyway.
Not to take away from all the effort and knowledge gained getting a degree, Think about how many try and don't make it for so many reasons. Not the easiest challenge.
But looking back, School was just a stepping stone to tweak my brain some to think a little differently. Late nights working on crazy problems and all of that.
I was lucky enough to get into a engineering job for many years where I was surrounded by PhD physicists , engineers of all types, Material scientist , chemist, talented machinist, E techs, and model makers to name a few.
We were given tight timelines and plenty of money to design and make our OEM equipment. Some of the challenges we had we stiff, but we always seemed to make the impossible work. After a big project, I would always scratch my head and think WOW it actually works. A solid team of many types of people was key to this, Applied Engineering in the Free Market is where I really got my education. At this point in my career many think I'm actually a Mechanical Engineer, which is a little funny, I sure have had my hand held many years by my network.
I know I was lucky with the job that I had, kinda thought of it as a large sand box to play in. I'm sure there are many engineering jobs where one doesn't get to work on so many different types projects.
One of the best EE candidates I interviewed was a Physicist. Boy could he do circuits. The day I interviewed him, I was working on this PCB card that was designed before I worked there. I couldn't figure out why there were 3 different NOT gates on the card. It was just an enable signal to trip a IC relay. I gave this the candidate, he went thru all of the logic and each Gate that was totally different. But anyway he got the question right, no logic at all to have 3 gates, he said "I have no clue." I told him CORRECT. Later I figured out why, 3 different EE's worked on the PCB, and each designed their own NOT gate. Go figure, keeping them all happy all 3 were put on card.
Guy didn't get hired, even though the whole group wanted him. Boss said he wouldn't stay long in our group before another would steal him from us, and we would be back where we started looking for an EE. We were ticked off, we could have trained him up, and then when he bailed he would come back to us as an internal customer who knew how we worked...
Anyway, sorry for long story, but just an example that not getting the job, sometimes it is not you.