Locrian said:
It's easy to get engineer envy when you look at all the people who want to employ them. Take a second look at most of the jobs they're offering though. 90% of entry level engineering jobs are ones I wouldn't take a second look at anyways. Sometimes I forget there was a good reason I switched degrees, long long ago.
These are my feelings exactly. I want to continue doing R&D work that is both physics and electronics related. I have already had an entry level position, and jobs that seem to most strictly require an ABET-accredited BSEE are the ones I am least likely to want. I have decided that an MSEE can supplement my BS in Physics well to continue in this line of work, and have accepted the facts that I will never be a PE and probably always run into people who take offense at having a coworker who "didn't pay his dues."
That being said, I think the importance of a network and relevant experience are often understated. If the network doesn't come through though, you're on your own. The questions will remain:
1) Will you make the cut made by the HR person (or parser script) looking for the letters "BSEE" in a resume? I think that for R&D jobs requesting a "BSEE or equivalent" a BS in Physics has a very small chance of making it through depending on experience and relevant coursework, and a BS Physics plus MSEE has a much better chance. What about for "BSEE required, MSEE preferred" or "MSEE required"? I would think at that level that experience is even more important. Again, the more the job seems amenable to an applicant with a physics background, the more you would be likely to want it.
2) Assuming you make the cut, will the hiring manager balk at the sight of a BS Physics despite your MSEE? I would think at that point that experience and graduate coursework would matter the most for experienced positions, and where they don't you probably wouldn't want to be hired anyway.
3) Can you make it through the interview? I think only you can answer this question. I use two methods for doing this. I like to look through college catalogs to see what courses I have missed from a BSEE, check out the textbooks and lecture notes and decide if I know the material, and use that to determine which other classes to take, books to read, or projects to undertake. I also like to look at job requirements by talking to people or looking at postings and see what knowledge is needed for the type of work I am interested in. These methods work not just for getting jobs but also for personal education in general. Actually caring about knowledge versus credentials is what matters once you make it to this stage.
So those are my thoughts. I think the short story is that with a BS in Physics you are "able to do anything, trained to do nothing," and you will constantly have to prove your abilities through experience and relevant coursework. I think an MSEE goes a long way towards this. You may never be a PE or a "real engineer," but you will probably be employed.